Bank of Portugal opens 76 proceedings, fines €1.46m in Q4
The Bank of Portugal initiated 76 administrative proceedings and concluded 184 in Q4 2025, imposing fines totalling €1.46 million, ECO reports. Of the new cases, 43 relate to prudential infractions, 21 to behavioural issues and eight to anti-money‑laundering duties, signalling continuing regulatory scrutiny of banks and financial firms. Businesses and customers should watch for regulatory guidance affecting services and compliance.
Update: RTP confirms BdP figures and case breakdown
RTP and ECO both report the same Q4 figures: BdP opened 76 new proceedings and applied €1.46 million in fines, with the 43/21/8 split across prudential, behavioural and anti‑money‑laundering topics. Companies in the financial sector should monitor any follow-up guidance from the regulator.
Banco de Portugal is Portugal's central bank, founded in 1846. It is a member of the European System of Central Banks (ESCB) and the Eurosystem, working alongside the European Central Bank (ECB) to implement monetary policy in the euro area.
Its main functions include supervising banks and financial institutions, ensuring financial stability, managing Portugal's gold and foreign currency reserves, and producing economic research and statistics. It also operates the payment systems infrastructure and issues banknotes.
Banco de Portugal is led by a Governor — currently Mário Centeno (since 2020) — who also sits on the ECB's Governing Council. For residents, the central bank matters because it regulates the banks they use, sets macroprudential rules (such as mortgage lending limits), and provides a complaints mechanism for banking disputes.


