Mr Guterres was born in Lisbon in 1949. He studied engineering and physics at the Instituto Superior Tecnico, before going into academia after graduating in 1971.
But academia only held the fervent Catholic's interest for a couple of years. He joined the Socialist party in 1974 - the same year five decades of dictatorship came to an end in Portugal - and soon became a full-time politician.
In 1995, three years after being elected the Socialist party's secretary general, he was voted in as prime minister, a position he held until 2002.
Then Mr Guterres, fluent in Portuguese, English, Spanish and French, turned his attention to the world of international diplomacy, becoming the UN's high commissioner for refugees in 2005.
Under his guidance, the numbers working in the UNHCR's Geneva head office were slashed, while its capacity to respond to international crises by deploying more staff closer to hotspots was improved.
However, it was his tireless attempts to get the world's richest countries to do more for those fleeing conflict and disaster around the world that people remember.
"We can't deter people fleeing for their lives," he wrote in Time magazine last year. "They will come. The choice we have is how well we manage their arrival, and how humanely."
Prior to his nomination, he said that his work at the UNHCR had been excellent preparation for a secretary-general.
"I think we are living in a world where we see a multiplication of new conflicts, and you see an enormous difficulty in solving the conflicts," he said.
"There is a clear lack of capacity in the international community to prevent and to solve conflicts."
Mr Guterres, 67, has two children from his marriage to his first wife, who died in 1998. He remarried in 2001.
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