Poland offers access to a skilled, EU-based talent pool with competitive labor costs and a well-established regulatory framework aligned with European Union employment standards. The country requires strict compliance with the Polish Labour Code (Kodeks pracy), statutory minimum wage requirements, mandatory social insurance contributions through ZUS (Social Security System), registration with Polish tax authorities, and statutory benefits including annual paid leave (20-26 days), statutory sick pay, maternity/paternity leave, and protective employment termination procedures. EORs must comply with registration requirements and avoid misclassification risks that could trigger joint-employer liability.
Currency: Polish Zloty (zł PLN)
Language:Polish (primary); English (business context)
Regulatory Authority: Ministry of Labor and Social Policy, Central Statistical Office (GUS), Social Insurance Institution (ZUS), Tax Authority (KAS/Urząd Skarbowy)
National minimum (annual); approx. PLN 4,242/month (2024)
Written contract required; indefinite, fixed-term, or probationary
Up to 3 months standard; must be documented separately
Employer burden ~20-22% (ZUS pension 9.76%, disability 0.67-3.33%, accident 1.4%, Labour Fund 2.45%, FGŚP 0.1%, health insurance ~9%)
20 days (under 10 years service); 26 days (10+ years service)
40 hours/week standard (8 hours/day); overtime capped at 150 hours/year
ZUS social insurance ~20-22% of gross salary (variable by component)
Progressive withholding (12% up to PLN 120,000; 32% above)
150-200% of regular rate depending on day/time and collective agreement
Employee 9% withheld; employer does not directly pay (via ZUS)