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How to Register a Company in Poland 2026: Choosing the Right Company Form, Costs, Grants and AI Act Compliance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Understanding how to register a company in Poland has become a strategic priority for tech founders eyeing the European market in 2026. Poland offers a compelling mix of competitive operating costs, a deep engineering talent pool and generous non-dilutive grant programmes, but incorporation decisions made today carry longer-term regulatory consequences that were far less relevant even two years ago. The EU AI Act’s phased obligations are now reaching operational reality, and Poland is actively developing national implementing measures under its “Policy for the Development of Artificial Intelligence” roadmap.

This guide walks tech founders through entity selection, the two available registration routes and their precise costs, the grant and R&D incentive landscape, and the minimum AI Act compliance actions worth embedding into a startup from day one.

Choosing the Right Company Form for a Tech Startup in Poland

The entity you select at incorporation shapes fundraising capacity, founder liability, tax treatment and, increasingly, the compliance infrastructure you will need under EU technology regulation. Polish commercial law offers several vehicle options, but for most tech ventures the choice narrows quickly.

Common Entity Types

The Polish Commercial Companies Code (Kodeks spółek handlowych) provides for a range of corporate and partnership forms. The most relevant for technology founders are:

  • Spółka z ograniczoną odpowiedzialnością (sp. z o.o.). Poland’s private limited liability company and by far the most common vehicle for startups. Requires minimum share capital of PLN 5,000 and offers full liability shielding for shareholders.
  • Jednoosobowa działalność gospodarcza (JDG). A sole proprietorship registered through the Central Register and Information on Economic Activity (CEIDG). The simplest structure, but the founder bears unlimited personal liability.
  • Prosta spółka akcyjna (PSA). The “Simple Joint-Stock Company” introduced specifically to facilitate startup fundraising. Allows share capital as low as PLN 1 and supports tokenised share registers, though market adoption remains limited.
  • Partnership forms (spółka jawna, komandytowa). Used occasionally for multi-founder ventures but rarely optimal for external investment rounds.
  • Branch of a foreign company (oddział). Permits market entry without a separate Polish legal entity but requires a local representative and ties compliance to the parent company.

Practical Tradeoffs for Tech Startups

When choosing between sp. z o. o. vs sole proprietorship in Poland, or any other form, founders should weigh five practical factors. First, fundraising mechanics: the sp. z o. o. and PSA both allow equity issuance to investors; a JDG does not. Second, liability: unlimited personal liability under a JDG can be disqualifying once a product handles user data or integrates AI outputs. Third, payroll and employment: only corporate entities can directly employ staff and grant employee stock option plans (ESOPs) that meet investor expectations. Fourth, tax efficiency: the sp. z o. o.

is subject to CIT (currently 9 % for small taxpayers, 19 % standard rate) while the JDG allows a flat 19 % personal income tax or scaled rates. Fifth, regulatory surface area: as AI Act compliance obligations crystallise, industry observers expect corporate entities with formal governance structures to be better positioned for demonstrating conformity than sole-trader arrangements.

Entity Comparison: sp. z o.o. vs Sole Proprietorship vs Branch

Entity Type Key Pros & Cons Reporting, Timeline & Compliance Notes
sp. z o.o. (private limited company) Pros: limited liability, investor-familiar structure, ESOP-ready, separate legal personality. Cons: minimum share capital PLN 5,000, formal reporting, double-taxation risk on dividends. Formation 1–6 weeks (S24 faster). KRS filings, annual financial statements, CIT returns, payroll obligations. Best-positioned for AI Act conformity documentation.
Sole proprietorship (JDG) Pros: simplest registration, lowest cost, immediate CEIDG entry. Cons: founder personally liable, cannot issue equity, limited scalability. CEIDG registration in 1–3 business days. Simplified accounting permissible below revenue thresholds. Personal income tax. AI governance harder to formalise.
Branch of foreign company Pros: quick market entry, no separate capitalisation. Cons: parent carries all liability, limited operational autonomy, restricted to parent’s scope of activity. KRS registration required plus local representative appointment. Compliance dependent on parent entity. Formation 3–8 weeks.

Recommended default for tech startups: the sp. z o.o. remains the standard choice. It balances investor expectations, liability protection and the governance infrastructure that technology regulation increasingly demands.

Can Foreigners Incorporate in Poland?

Yes. Citizens of EU/EEA states and Switzerland can register a company in Poland on the same terms as Polish nationals. Non-EU founders can also establish an sp. z o.o. or a branch without restriction. The key practical hurdle is the electronic signature requirement for the S24 online route, founders without an eIDAS-compliant qualified electronic signature or a trusted ePUAP profile typically need to use the notary route or grant a power of attorney to a Polish representative. Residence permits are a separate matter: incorporation alone does not confer a right to reside, though a business visa or temporary residence permit for business purposes can be pursued in parallel.

How to Register a Company in Poland: S24 (Online) vs Notary Route

Poland offers two distinct paths to register a company in Poland as a limited liability entity. The choice between them affects costs, speed and the level of customisation available in the founding documents.

S24 Online Registration

The S24 system (System Teleinformatyczny) allows founders to establish an sp. z o.o. entirely online through the Ministry of Justice portal. It uses standardised template articles of association, which are sufficient for most early-stage startups but limit bespoke governance provisions. Each founder must sign electronically using a qualified electronic signature (eIDAS-compliant) or a trusted ePUAP profile.

The typical S24 flow proceeds as follows:

  1. Create an account on the S24 portal and complete the template articles of association, specifying share structure, registered office and management board composition.
  2. All founders apply their electronic signatures to the founding documents within the system.
  3. Pay the S24 registration fees directly through the portal.
  4. The system generates a KRS (National Court Register) application, which is submitted electronically to the competent registration court.
  5. The court processes the application, S24 submissions are typically handled within one business day, though registration court backlogs can extend this.
S24 Fee Component Approximate Amount (PLN)
KRS court registration fee 250
First announcement in Monitor Sądowy i Gospodarczy 100
Total S24 registration fees 350

Notary Route and Power of Attorney Options

The traditional notary route is required when founders need customised articles of association (e.g., detailed ESOP provisions, drag-along/tag-along clauses or multi-class share structures) or when foreign founders lack eIDAS-compliant signatures. A notary prepares and authenticates the founding act, after which the application is filed with the KRS, now mandatorily via the electronic Portal Rejestrów Sądowych (PRS). Notary fees for a standard sp. z o.o. formation typically range from PLN 800 to PLN 1,500 depending on the complexity of the articles and the share capital amount. Foreign founders not present in Poland can execute a notarised power of attorney in their home country, apostilled or legalised for use in Poland.

Practical Tips: Bank Account, NIP/REGON and VAT Registration

Once the sp. z o.o. is entered in the KRS, several administrative steps follow. The company automatically receives a REGON number (statistical identification) and an NIP (tax identification number) through the KRS filing process. A Polish corporate bank account must be opened to deposit the minimum share capital and conduct business operations, most banks require an in-person visit by at least one management board member, although some fintech-friendly banks now offer remote onboarding. VAT registration is a separate step filed with the relevant tax office (Urząd Skarbowy); it is not mandatory for all new companies but is typically advisable for tech startups providing B2B SaaS services or cross-border digital supplies.

How long does it take to register a company in Poland? Via S24, the KRS entry can be completed within one to several business days. The notary route, including document preparation, notarisation, and court processing, typically takes three to six weeks. Factor in additional time for bank account opening, VAT registration and any foreign document legalisation.

Company Formation Poland Cost: Stepwise Costs Table and Document Checklist

How much does it cost to set up a company in Poland? The total company formation Poland cost depends on the registration route, whether foreign documents need translation, and the complexity of the articles of association.

Cost Item S24 Route (PLN) Notary Route (PLN)
KRS court registration fee 250 500
Monitor Sądowy i Gospodarczy announcement 100 100
Notary fees (articles of association) N/A 800–1,500
Minimum share capital (sp. z o.o.) 5,000 5,000
Bank account opening 0–200 0–200
VAT registration (administrative costs) 0 (no fee) 0 (no fee)
Sworn translation of foreign documents (per page) 50–80 50–80
Apostille / legalisation (foreign documents) Variable Variable
Estimated total (excl. share capital) 350–430 1,400–2,380

Note: legal advisory fees for structuring the articles, shareholders’ agreement or IP assignments are additional and vary by scope.

Documents Checklist for Polish and Foreign Founders

  • Identity documents. Passports or national ID cards for all founders and proposed management board members.
  • Articles of association. Template (S24) or bespoke notarised founding act.
  • Power of attorney. If any founder is not present, notarised, apostilled, and sworn-translated into Polish.
  • Proof of registered office address. Lease agreement or owner’s consent letter for the company’s Polish address.
  • Bank KYC documents. Typically includes UBO declarations, source-of-funds statements, and corporate documentation for any corporate shareholders.
  • Management board specimens of signature. Required for KRS filing, either notarised or submitted electronically via PRS.

Startup Grants Poland: Non-Dilutive Funding and Tax Incentives for Tech Startups

Poland’s public funding ecosystem provides some of the most accessible non-dilutive capital available to early-stage tech companies in Europe. Structuring for grant eligibility at incorporation, rather than retrofitting later, can unlock significant financing advantages.

Key Grant and Support Sources

  • PARP (Polish Agency for Enterprise Development). Administers EU-funded programmes targeting SMEs and startups, including innovation vouchers, digitalisation grants, and internationalisation support. Applications typically open in annual competitive rounds.
  • NCBR (National Centre for Research and Development). Funds applied R&D projects, including the flagship “Fast Track” (Szybka Ścieżka) programme for innovative technology development. Tech startups with novel AI, cybersecurity or deep-tech products are prime candidates.
  • PFR (Polish Development Fund). Operates venture capital fund-of-funds programmes and co-investment vehicles; also manages PFR Ventures, which channels EU and national capital into VC funds backing Polish startups.
  • Regional Operational Programmes. Each of Poland’s 16 voivodeships administers its own EU cohesion fund allocations, often including startup-specific measures for prototype development and market validation.
  • Horizon Europe / EIC Accelerator. EU-level instruments available to Polish-registered entities. The EIC Accelerator provides blended finance (grant plus equity) of up to EUR 2.5 million in grant and EUR 15 million in equity.

R&D Tax Relief and IP Box

Poland’s R&D tax relief allows qualifying companies to deduct eligible R&D costs a second time from their tax base, effectively creating a superdeduction of up to 200 % for certain cost categories. Eligible costs include employee salaries attributable to R&D activity, materials, equipment depreciation and subcontracted research (up to defined limits). Separately, Poland’s IP Box regime taxes qualifying income derived from eligible intellectual property rights (patents, software copyrights, utility models) at a preferential 5 % rate instead of the standard CIT rate. Both reliefs require meticulous contemporaneous documentation, a point worth embedding into accounting practices from day one.

Practical Steps to Increase Grant Readiness at Incorporation

  • Separate R&D cost centres. Set up dedicated accounting codes for personnel, materials and services attributable to R&D activities from the first month of operations.
  • Maintain a project log. Document research objectives, methodologies, milestones and results in a format that aligns with NCBR and PARP application requirements.
  • Prepare a technology roadmap. Grant applications consistently require a multi-year development plan with measurable KPIs, having this ready accelerates future applications.
  • Engage with the startup ecosystem. Participation in PFR-backed accelerators and PARP-funded incubation programmes provides both funding and institutional credibility for later rounds.

AI Act Compliance Poland: A 2026 Readiness Checklist for Tech Startups

If your product develops, deploys or distributes AI systems that place outputs on the EU market, the EU AI Act applies to your startup regardless of where it is headquartered. Classification under the Act’s risk-based framework determines the scope and intensity of your obligations.

Quick Classification Flow: Prohibited, High-Risk, Limited and Minimal Risk

The EU AI Act establishes four risk tiers. At incorporation, founders should perform a preliminary self-assessment:

  • Prohibited practices. AI systems that deploy subliminal manipulation, exploit vulnerabilities of specific groups, perform real-time remote biometric identification in public spaces (with narrow exceptions), or implement social scoring. If your product falls here, it cannot lawfully operate in the EU.
  • High-risk systems. AI used in areas enumerated in Annex III of the Act, including employment and worker management, creditworthiness assessment, critical infrastructure management, and certain law-enforcement or migration applications. High-risk classification triggers the full conformity assessment regime: risk management systems, data governance, technical documentation, human oversight and post-market monitoring.
  • Limited-risk systems. AI that interacts with natural persons (chatbots), generates synthetic content (deepfakes), or performs emotion recognition or biometric categorisation. These require transparency obligations, users must be informed they are interacting with AI or that content is AI-generated.
  • Minimal-risk systems. All other AI applications. No mandatory obligations under the Act, though voluntary codes of conduct are encouraged.

Most early-stage SaaS and developer-tool startups will fall into the limited-risk or minimal-risk categories initially. However, product pivots, new client verticals (e.g., HR-tech, fintech lending, health-tech) can rapidly escalate classification to high-risk, making it prudent to build compliance infrastructure early rather than scrambling later.

Minimum Compliance Actions to Take at Incorporation

  • Assign a compliance lead. Designate a founder or early hire responsible for AI governance. This person maintains the Model Inventory, a running record of all AI models, training datasets, intended use cases and known limitations.
  • Adopt risk assessment templates. Even at minimal-risk stage, document a baseline risk assessment for each AI component. Include data provenance logging for training data and bias monitoring protocols.
  • Prepare technical documentation and version control. High-risk systems require comprehensive technical documentation under Article 11 of the AI Act. Starting structured version control and documentation practices at incorporation avoids costly retrospective compliance work.
  • Align with GDPR through DPIAs. Where AI processes personal data, Data Protection Impact Assessments remain mandatory under the GDPR. Integrate DPIA workflows with AI risk assessments to avoid duplicative processes.
  • Include AI-specific contractual clauses. If your startup relies on third-party foundation models or API-based AI services, negotiate supplier warranties covering model performance, data handling, bias testing and audit rights. These clauses are increasingly standard in enterprise procurement.
  • Establish monitoring and incident response. Set up basic logging for AI system outputs and a documented procedure for identifying, reporting and remediating AI-related failures or unintended harms.

Industry observers expect Poland’s national implementing legislation to add sector-specific supervisory designations and market surveillance procedures during 2026, building on the country’s “Policy for the Development of Artificial Intelligence” roadmap. Startups registering now should plan to review their compliance posture once Poland publishes its final implementing rules.

Territorial scope note: the EU AI Act applies to providers placing AI systems on the EU market and to deployers located within the EU, but also to providers and deployers located outside the EU where the output of their AI system is used within the Union. A startup incorporated anywhere in the world whose AI product serves EU users falls within scope.

AI Act Readiness: What to Have at Launch vs Before Scaling

Compliance Element At Launch (MVP Stage) Before Scaling / Series A
Model Inventory Basic register of models, datasets, use cases Full inventory with version history, lineage and risk ratings
Risk assessment Preliminary self-classification under AI Act tiers Formal risk management system per Article 9 (if high-risk)
Technical documentation README-level documentation and version control Comprehensive Article 11 technical file; conformity assessment readiness
DPIA / data governance GDPR-compliant DPIA where personal data is processed Integrated AI + data governance framework; automated logging
Contractual clauses Basic vendor terms covering data handling Full AI-specific warranties, audit rights and liability allocation
Incident response Manual logging and escalation procedure Automated monitoring, defined SLAs, regulatory reporting protocols

Step-by-Step Checklist: Registering and Launching a Tech Company in Poland

The following ten-point checklist consolidates the registration process and early compliance setup into an actionable timeline for founders planning to register a company in Poland in 2026.

  1. Choose your entity type. For most tech startups: sp. z o.o. Confirm share structure and management board composition. (Week 1)
  2. Obtain an eIDAS-compliant electronic signature or appoint a Polish representative under a notarised power of attorney. (Week 1–2)
  3. Draft or select articles of association. Use S24 templates for speed, or engage a lawyer for bespoke governance provisions. (Week 2)
  4. Submit via S24 or execute at a notary. Pay S24 registration fees (PLN 350) or notary fees (PLN 800–1,500) plus KRS fees (PLN 600). (Week 2–3)
  5. Open a Polish corporate bank account. Deposit minimum share capital (PLN 5,000 for sp. z o.o.). (Week 3–4)
  6. Register for VAT with the local tax office (Urząd Skarbowy) if your services trigger immediate VAT obligations. File VAT-R form. (Week 4)
  7. Register for startup grants Poland programmes. Create accounts on PARP, NCBR and PFR portals; set up grant-tracking alerts for upcoming calls. (Week 4–5)
  8. Set up foundational legal documents. Terms of service, privacy policy, GDPR data processing agreements, IP assignment agreements for founders and early hires. (Week 4–6)
  9. Begin AI Act compliance groundwork. Complete preliminary risk self-classification, start Model Inventory, and conduct initial DPIA where applicable. (Week 5–6)
  10. Establish payroll, social security registration and IP/ESOP structure. Register with ZUS (Social Insurance Institution), set up employment contracts or B2B arrangements, and implement IP assignment mechanisms. (Week 6–8)

Early indications suggest that founders who complete steps 7–9 concurrently with company formation, rather than deferring them, gain a meaningful advantage in both grant application competitiveness and investor due diligence readiness.

Conclusion: Start Right, Scale Confidently

Knowing how to register a company in Poland is only the first step. The founders who gain a lasting advantage are those who treat incorporation as the starting point for a properly structured, compliance-ready and grant-optimised business, not merely a bureaucratic formality. Poland’s combination of accessible formation procedures, robust public funding programmes and a maturing technology regulation environment makes it one of Europe’s strongest bases for AI-driven startups in 2026. The regulatory landscape is evolving; building governance and documentation practices into your company from day one is the most cost-effective insurance against future compliance debt.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jakub Koziol at The Heart Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Biznes.gov.pl, Registering a Business in Poland
  2. Dudkowiak & Putyra, Company Incorporation in Poland
  3. EUR-Lex, EU Artificial Intelligence Act (Consolidated Text)
  4. CMS Expert Guide, AI Regulation Scanner: Poland
  5. Polish Agency for Enterprise Development (PARP)
  6. National Centre for Research and Development (NCBR)
  7. Polish Development Fund (PFR)
  8. Krajowy Rejestr Sądowy (KRS), Ministry of Justice Portal

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How to Register a Company in Poland 2026: Choosing the Right Company Form, Costs, Grants and AI Act Compliance

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