Capital
Warsaw
Currency
Polish Zloty
Language
Polish
Population
37,846,611
GDP Growth
4.81%
GDP World Share
0.65%
Payroll Frequency
Monthly
Working Hours
40 hours/week

See how hiring works with an Employer of Record in Poland

MBRemote is your Employer of Record in Poland — hire locally in 5 business days, no entity needed.

Why Poland

Why companies use an Employer of Record in Poland

MBRemote's Employer of Record Poland service lets you hire Polish employees without establishing a local entity — fully compliant from day one. Poland is one of Central Europe's most dynamic hiring destinations, combining a large, highly educated workforce with a cost base significantly below Western EU markets. With major business hubs in Warsaw, Kraków, Wrocław, and Poznań, Poland offers deep talent pools in software engineering, finance, shared services, and manufacturing — all within a stable EU legal framework since 2004.

Large Talent Pool

38M population, 500,000+ IT professionals, and graduates from top technical universities across Warsaw, Kraków, and Wrocław.

Cost-Competitive

Salaries 40–60% below Western European benchmarks — skilled engineers and specialists at a fraction of the cost.

EU Member Since 2004

Full EU compliance, GDPR by default, stable Schengen-area legal framework, and strong IP protection.

Thriving Tech Ecosystem

Poland hosts 1,500+ tech companies and is Europe's #3 outsourcing destination — home to R&D centers for Google, Samsung, and Allegro.

Minimum Wage in Poland

From January 1, 2025, the statutory gross minimum wage is PLN 4,666 per month and PLN 30.50 per hour. These rates apply to all full-time employees regardless of sector and are reviewed annually by the Polish Government.

As your Employer of Record in Poland, MBRemote ensures all compensation arrangements meet or exceed the statutory minimum, including automatic updates following any government revisions.

Individual Income Tax — Poland

Poland operates a progressive income tax system with two main brackets and a generous tax-free allowance that reduces the effective rate for lower and mid-range earners.

  • Tax-free amount: PLN 30,000 per year (tax reduction of PLN 3,600/year — PLN 300/month)
  • Basic rate: 12% on annual income up to PLN 120,000
  • Higher rate: 32% on annual income above PLN 120,000
  • Solidarity surcharge: 4% on income exceeding PLN 1,000,000
Annual Income BracketTax RateNote
Up to PLN 30,0000%Tax-free allowance
PLN 30,001 – PLN 120,00012%Basic rate band
Above PLN 120,00032%Higher rate band
Above PLN 1,000,000+4%Solidarity surcharge

Employer Payroll Cost — Poland EOR

The total employer cost above gross salary is approximately 19.48% of gross salary plus applicable fixed costs. As your Poland Employer of Record, MBRemote calculates, withholds, and remits all contributions on your behalf.

Employer Contributions:

  • Pension (Emerytalna) — 9.76% of gross salary*
  • Disability (Rentowa) — 6.50% of gross salary*
  • Accident insurance (Wypadkowa) — 0.67% of gross salary
  • Labor Fund (Fundusz Pracy) — 2.45% of gross salary
  • Guaranteed Employee Benefits Fund (FGŚP) — 0.10% of gross salary
  • Employee Capital Plans (PPK) — 1.50% of gross salary (mandatory if employee opts in)

Fixed Additional Costs:

  • Pre-employment medical examination — PLN 200 (one-time)
  • Telework allowance — PLN 100/month (where remote work applies)
  • PFRON disability fund contribution — variable monthly amount

*Pension and disability contributions are capped at an annual salary ceiling of PLN 260,180. Above this threshold, these contributions no longer apply.

Note: These figures are estimates for general informational purposes. Actual costs depend on specific employment terms, applicable sector agreements, and employee circumstances. Contact our Sales team for a precise quote tailored to your hiring needs.

Overtime Pay & Maximum Working Hours

Standard working hours in Poland are 8 hours per day, 40 hours per week. Overtime is mandatory to compensate and subject to strict annual limits:

  • Maximum daily overtime: 8 hours
  • Maximum weekly working time (including overtime): 48 hours
  • Maximum annual overtime: 150 hours (may be increased by collective agreement)

Overtime premium rates (in addition to regular wage):

  • 100% premium — overtime worked at night, on Sundays, on public holidays, on a designated day off, or when weekly working time is exceeded
  • 50% premium — all other overtime hours not covered by the 100% rate
  • 20% of hourly minimum wage — additional supplement for each hour worked during night hours as defined in internal company regulations

Alternative compensation: Instead of overtime pay, employers may grant compensatory time off — provided the employee agrees. If time off is granted on the employee's initiative, no premium applies. If granted at the employer's initiative, one additional hour off must be given for each hour of overtime worked.

Maternity Leave

Pregnant employees are entitled to paid maternity leave beginning automatically on the day of childbirth. The statutory duration depends on the number of children born:

  • Single birth — 20 weeks
  • Twin birth — 31 weeks
  • Triplets or more — 37 weeks

After the mandatory 14 weeks, the mother may transfer the remaining leave to the father. Leave is paid by the Social Insurance Institute (ZUS) at 100% of the sickness allowance basis. Alternatively, if the employee declares within the first 21 days of maternity leave, the entire period of maternity and parental leave combined can be paid at a flat rate of 80%.

Paternity Leave

Employees are entitled to 2 weeks of paid paternity leave, which can be taken in up to two separate parts at any point within 2 years of the child's birth.

Leave is paid by the Social Insurance Institute (ZUS) at 100% of the employee's average salary. The leave cannot be extended beyond the statutory entitlement.

Parental Leave

Following maternity leave, both parents are entitled to additional paid parental leave:

  • Single birth — 32 weeks total parental leave
  • Multiple births — 34 weeks total parental leave

Both parents can decide how to split the leave between them. Parental leave can be used flexibly until the child reaches age 6. The Social Insurance Institute (ZUS) funds the leave at:

  • 100% of average salary for the first 6 weeks (reserved exclusively for the second parent and non-transferable)
  • 60% of average salary for the remaining weeks

Non-transferable weeks: 9 weeks of parental leave are individually reserved for each parent and cannot be transferred. If one parent does not use their reserved weeks, those weeks are forfeited — they cannot be taken by the other parent.

Sick Leave

Employees are entitled to paid sick leave for up to 182 calendar days per year. Employees who fall ill during pregnancy are entitled to an extended entitlement of 270 days.

Payment responsibility is split:

  • Days 1–33: paid by the employer (days 1–14 for employees aged 50+)
  • Day 34 onwards: paid by the Social Insurance Institute (ZUS)
Reason for IncapacitySick Pay Rate
Illness or non-work accident80% of sick pay basis
Work-related accident100%
Accident commuting to/from work100%
Occupational disease100%
Illness or accident during pregnancy100%
Organ donor-related situation100%

Termination Framework — Poland EOR

Terminations must respect complex rules and the regulations of the employee's employment country. Off-boarding is always handled by the Employer with the primary stakeholders and may include ad-hoc fees as well as required or recommended steps specific to each termination case.

There is no at-will termination in Poland outside the probationary period. Employer-initiated terminations must be based on just cause and follow specific procedural requirements under the Polish Labor Code (Kodeks Pracy). As your Employer of Record in Poland, MBRemote manages the full termination process in compliance with local law.

Valid grounds for compliant termination:

  • Voluntary resignation by the employee
  • Mutual agreement of both parties
  • Natural expiration of a fixed-term contract
  • Unilateral employer termination on the basis of:
    • — Termination during or at the end of the probationary period
    • — Objective operational or organizational grounds (redundancy)
    • — Disciplinary dismissal (gross misconduct)
    • — Documented unsuitability or underperformance

Protected employees: Employees on sick leave, maternity leave, or parental leave cannot be dismissed during those periods. Employees nearing retirement age (within 4 years of pension eligibility) are also protected from termination. Trade union members may require prior union consultation before dismissal.

Notice Period Requirements

Notice periods for indefinite-term and fixed-term contracts are determined by the employee's length of service with the employer:

  • Less than 6 months of service — 2 weeks notice
  • Between 6 months and 3 years of service — 1 month notice
  • Over 3 years of service — 3 months notice

Notice period during probation:

  • Probation period up to 2 weeks — 3 working days
  • Probation period over 2 weeks but under 3 months — 1 week
  • Probation period of 3 months — 2 weeks

Garden leave: During the notice period, the employer may release the employee from the obligation to work while continuing to pay full salary. This is common practice for senior or sensitive roles where immediate departure is preferred.

Severance for Employees

Statutory severance pay applies only to companies employing at least 20 employees, and exclusively in cases of group dismissal (collective redundancy). Individual dismissal outside of collective redundancy does not trigger a mandatory severance obligation.

Severance entitlements for collective redundancy are based on the employee's length of service with the employer:

  • Less than 2 years of service — 1 month's salary
  • Between 2 and 8 years of service — 2 months' salary
  • Over 8 years of service — 3 months' salary

Additional severance obligations may apply upon employee retirement or in the event of the employee's death during employment.

Severance reserve: To protect against unforeseen financial exposure from terminations, MBRemote applies a Severance Accrual to all Poland employment agreements. Calculations are based on prevailing statutory entitlements and local best practices. Any unused reserve amounts are returned to you if the employee resigns or is not entitled to severance.

Paid Annual Leave

Paid time off entitlement in Poland is linked to the employee's total cumulative work experience (including all prior employers and periods of education), not just tenure with the current employer:

  • Less than 10 years of total employment — 20 working days per year
  • 10 or more years of total employment — 26 working days per year

University education counts as 8 years of seniority for this calculation — meaning a newly hired graduate with 2+ years of work experience typically qualifies for 26 days immediately.

Leave accrues monthly: 1.67 days/month (20-day entitlement) or 2.17 days/month (26-day entitlement). Part-time employees receive the same entitlement pro-rated to their working time. Employees may take accrued leave from their first month of employment.

Public Holidays in Poland

Poland observes 14 national public holidays per year. Employees are entitled to paid time off on all public holidays. Work on a public holiday must be compensated with a day off in lieu or with overtime pay at the applicable premium rate.

National public holidays:

  • New Year's Day — 1 January
  • Epiphany (Trzech Króli) — 6 January
  • Easter Sunday — variable
  • Easter Monday — variable
  • Labour Day — 1 May
  • Constitution Day (Święto Konstytucji) — 3 May
  • Pentecost Sunday (Zielone Świątki) — variable
  • Corpus Christi (Boże Ciało) — variable
  • Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary — 15 August
  • All Saints' Day (Wszystkich Świętych) — 1 November
  • Independence Day (Święto Niepodległości) — 11 November
  • Christmas Eve — 24 December
  • Christmas Day — 25 December
  • Second Day of Christmas — 26 December

Onboarding Timeline — Employer of Record Poland

The Poland Employer of Record onboarding process is completed within 5 business days following client execution of the Master Service Agreement (MSA) and receipt of the deposit payment.

Required Documents

MBRemote collects and verifies all required documentation prior to contract issuance. Standard onboarding documentation for Poland includes:

DocumentRequired FromPurpose
Valid ID card or passportAll employeesIdentity verification and contract registration
PESEL numberPolish residentsTax registration and ZUS enrollment
NIP (tax identification number)All employeesIncome tax processing
Proof of right to workNon-EU nationalsWork authorization compliance
Polish bank account (IBAN)All employeesSalary disbursement
Pre-employment medical certificateAll employeesMandatory occupational health check
Occupational health & safety training confirmationAll employeesStatutory BHP training compliance

BHP training: Polish law mandates that all employees complete occupational health and safety training (szkolenie BHP) before starting work. MBRemote coordinates this training as part of the standard onboarding process — no additional action required from the client.

Work Authorization

Employee OriginWork Authorization RequiredProcessing Time
EU / EEA / Swiss nationalsNo permit required — free movement of workersImmediate
Ukrainian nationalsSimplified procedure under Temporary Protection — registration only1–5 days
Non-EU nationals (general)Work permit (Type A–E) + residence permit required30–90 days
Highly skilled non-EU workersEU Blue Card via Voivodeship Office30–60 days

Ukrainian talent: Poland hosts the largest Ukrainian diaspora in the EU. Temporary Protection status grants Ukrainian nationals immediate right to work — no permit required. MBRemote handles registration and compliance for Ukrainian employees as part of standard onboarding.

Employment Contract Requirements

Employment contracts in Poland must be written in Polish. Bilingual contracts (Polish + another language) are permitted and standard practice for international organizations. Contracts must be signed by both parties before or on the first working day.

Mandatory contract elements:

  • Monthly gross salary and payment deadline
  • Notice period obligations for both parties
  • Working hours (daily and weekly schedule)
  • Contract type — fixed-term or indefinite
  • Contract commencement date
  • Place of work
  • Job title and position description

Fixed-term contract limits: Under Polish law, fixed-term contracts between the same employer and employee are limited to a maximum of 3 consecutive contracts or a combined duration of 33 months. After this threshold, the employment relationship automatically converts to an indefinite-term contract.

Probationary Period

Probationary periods are not mandatory in Poland but are widely used. The maximum probationary period is 3 months (90 days) for all contract types. There is no statutory minimum probationary period.

During the probationary period, either party may terminate the contract with a shortened notice period (see Termination tab). No severance applies during probation terminations.

A probationary period may be agreed only once with the same employee for the same type of work. Re-hiring an employee for a substantially different role may allow a new probationary period.

GDPR & Data Privacy

Poland is subject to full EU GDPR jurisdiction, enforced by the Personal Data Protection Office (Urząd Ochrony Danych Osobowych — UODO). As the legal employer of record, MBRemote acts as Data Controller for all employee personal data and ensures:

  • Documented lawful basis for all HR data processing activities
  • Data Processing Agreement (DPA) provided to all clients as standard
  • Employee data retention limited to legally required minimum periods
  • Cross-border data transfers handled under Standard Contractual Clauses (SCCs)
  • Employee privacy notices provided in plain language at onboarding

GDPR fines in Poland can reach €20 million or 4% of global annual turnover — whichever is higher. MBRemote's employment infrastructure is fully GDPR-compliant by design, eliminating this exposure from your Polish hiring operations.

Total cost of employment

What does an Employer of Record in Poland really cost?

Based on a full-time employee earning PLN 10,000/month gross (≈ €2,320/month). Estimates only — contact MBRemote for a precise quote.
Cost Component Monthly Annual
Gross salary PLN 10,000 PLN 120,000
Pension — Emerytalna (9.76%) PLN 976 PLN 11,712
Disability — Rentowa (6.50%) PLN 650 PLN 7,800
Accident insurance — Wypadkowa (0.67%) PLN 67 PLN 804
Labor Fund — Fundusz Pracy (2.45%) PLN 245 PLN 2,940
FGŚP — Employee Benefits Fund (0.10%) PLN 10 PLN 120
PPK — Employee Capital Plans (1.50%)* PLN 150 PLN 1,800
Fixed costs (medical, telework, est.) PLN 117 PLN 1,400
Total employer cost ≈ PLN 12,215 ≈ PLN 146,576

This does not include the MBRemote service fee. *PPK contribution applies only if the employee opts in — employees may opt out after enrollment. Pension and disability contributions are capped at the annual PLN 260,180 threshold. Total employer-side cost represents approximately 22% above gross salary. Contact MBRemote for a custom quote based on the specific salary, role, and work arrangement.

Compliance risks

Hiring in Poland without an Employer of Record — what can go wrong

Polish employment law combines strong employee protections, a multi-layered social contribution system, and strict procedural requirements. Non-compliant hiring exposes your company to significant financial penalties and legal liability. Using a Poland Employer of Record eliminates these exposures entirely.

Permanent Establishment Risk

Employing staff in Poland without a registered entity may inadvertently create a taxable corporate presence, triggering Polish corporate income tax obligations and cross-border reporting requirements with the National Revenue Administration (KAS).

ZUS Non-Compliance

Failure to correctly register employees with the Social Insurance Institute (ZUS) or miscalculating contributions triggers back-payments, statutory interest, and penalties — enforceable retroactively for up to 5 years.

Unlawful Termination Claims

Poland's strict just-cause termination requirements mean procedural errors or missing documentation can result in court-ordered reinstatement and full back-pay for the entire litigation period — often 12–24 months.

Misclassification Liability

The National Labor Inspectorate (PIP) actively audits B2B contractor arrangements. Reclassification as employment triggers retroactive ZUS contributions, income tax, and fines — going back up to 5 years.

Ready to use an Employer of Record in Poland?

Get your employee onboarded in 5 business days via MBRemote's Poland Employer of Record service — fully compliant, no local entity required.

EU-compliant entity 5-day onboarding ZUS registered GDPR ready

How it works

Your Global Hiring Process

We take care of employing your team, so you can focus on growing

You choose the talent

You select the candidate you want to hire, anywhere in the world.

We employ them for you

MB Remote becomes the legal employer and handles contracts, payroll, and local labor laws.

Your team starts working

Your employee works directly with you, just like an in-house team member.

We manage compliance

We ensure ongoing payroll, taxes, and legal compliance in the employee’s country.

Frequently Asked Questions

These are the most commonly asked questions about the Employer of Record Can’t find what you’re looking for? Get in touch with an expert

Is it free to contact MB Remote?

Yes. Contacting us is completely free and without obligation. We’ll discuss your needs and explain how our EOR solution works before anything else.

Hiring can usually be completed within a few days, depending on the country and local requirements.

An Employer of Record is a legal entity that employs workers on your behalf. MB Remote handles contracts, payroll, taxes, and local labor law compliance, while you manage the day-to-day work.

MB Remote is the legal employer, but the employee works exclusively for you as part of your team.

We support hiring in multiple countries. Contact us to check availability for a specific location.

We manage payroll, taxes, and social contributions in compliance with local regulations. You receive one simple monthly invoice.

Yes. You manage tasks, schedules, and performance. We handle the legal and administrative side.