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When a defamatory statement damages your reputation in Poland, the core decision is stark: file a criminal complaint under Article 212 of the Polish Criminal Code (zniesławienie) or bring a civil action for protection of personal rights (ochrona dóbr osobistych). The choice between criminal defamation vs civil defamation in Poland turns on what you actually want, a criminal record for the perpetrator, monetary damages in your pocket, or a swift court order pulling content offline. Politicians, executives, journalists and their communications counsel face this fork daily, and the 2025–2026 wave of decriminalisation pressure from NGOs and EU institutions has made the criminal route less predictable than ever.
This guide maps both options dimension by dimension, provides a side-by-side comparison table, and closes with a concrete decision framework so you can act immediately.
Article 212 of the Polish Criminal Code criminalises the act of imputing to another person, a group of persons, an institution, a legal entity or an organisational unit without legal personality, conduct or characteristics that may discredit them in public opinion or undermine confidence necessary for a given position, occupation or type of activity. The offence exists in two forms: a basic form (Article 212 § 1) covering defamatory statements made privately or in direct communication, and an aggravated form (Article 212 § 2) for statements disseminated through mass media, including print, broadcast and online publications. The aggravated media form carries heavier penalties precisely because the legislature recognised the greater harm that wide dissemination can cause.
Truth is a defence, but with an important limitation. A defendant may invoke the truth of the imputed facts only where the allegation relates to conduct of a person holding a public function or serves a justified public interest. Outside those circumstances, proving that the statement was factually accurate may not shield the speaker from conviction. This narrows the practical utility of a truth defence for many private disputes and makes criminal defamation a potent, if controversial, tool for individuals who are not public figures.
Criminal defamation under Article 212 is a private prosecution offence (prywatnoskargowy). The victim initiates proceedings by filing a private accusation (prywatny akt oskarżenia) directly with the competent district court. This is a significant procedural point: the public prosecutor does not ordinarily launch proceedings on their own initiative. However, a prosecutor may join or take over a private prosecution case if the public interest so requires, a discretionary power that is exercised sparingly in defamation matters.
The procedural steps for the complainant are as follows:
The entire process is victim-driven. Early indications from recent practice suggest prosecutors are becoming more reluctant to intervene in defamation cases, a trend reinforced by the decriminalisation of defamation 2026 Poland debate.
Politicians seeking the symbolic power of a criminal conviction against an opponent or media outlet. Executives who want the deterrent effect of a potential criminal record hanging over the defamer. Private individuals in smaller-scale disputes where the emotional weight of criminal proceedings outweighs the desire for monetary compensation. The criminal route sends a strong signal, but it is a blunt instrument that offers the complainant limited control over timing and remedies.
Practical pros and cons of the criminal route:
The civil route for a civil defamation claim in Poland rests on the protection of personal rights (dobra osobiste), principally under Articles 23 and 24 of the Polish Civil Code and the general tort provisions of Article 415 and following. Good name, reputation, image and professional standing are recognised personal rights. Any person or entity whose personal rights have been infringed, or face imminent threat of infringement, may seek the following remedies:
This toolkit gives the civil claimant far more granular control over the outcome than the criminal route, where the court’s remedial powers are limited to penalty and publication of the judgment.
A civil defamation claim is filed in the regional court (sąd okręgowy) where claims exceed the jurisdictional threshold, or in the district court for lower-value claims. The critical procedural advantage is access to preliminary injunctions (zabezpieczenie roszczenia). A claimant can apply for an urgent injunction to order content removal, publication takedown, or a ban on further dissemination, often within days or weeks of filing. For executives facing a viral online smear or journalists targeted by a competitor’s defamatory campaign, this speed is decisive.
Evidentiary standards are less demanding than in criminal proceedings. The claimant must show that a personal right was infringed and that the infringement was wrongful; the defendant then bears the burden of proving a lawful justification (truth combined with public interest, fair comment, reporting privilege). Full trial timelines in Polish civil courts vary, but a straightforward defamation case will typically reach first-instance judgment faster than a criminal prosecution that depends on court scheduling for multiple hearings.
Executives and companies seeking rapid takedown of damaging content and quantifiable damages. Journalists or public figures who want a retraction published in the offending outlet. PR and communications counsel managing a live reputational crisis where speed and discretion matter more than punishment. The civil route is also the natural choice when the primary objective is money, whether to compensate actual business losses or to deter repetition through significant damages awards.
Practical pros and cons of the civil route:
| Dimension | Criminal Complaint (Article 212) | Civil Claim (Protection of Personal Rights) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis | Article 212 Polish Criminal Code (zniesławienie) | Articles 23, 24, 415+ Polish Civil Code (dobra osobiste, tort) |
| Who initiates | Victim files private accusation; prosecutor may join if public interest warrants | Victim (plaintiff) sues in civil court; entirely private action |
| Burden of proof | Criminal standard: beyond reasonable doubt for conviction | Civil standard: balance of probabilities (lower threshold) |
| Primary remedies | Fine, restriction of liberty, or imprisonment (§ 2); criminal record; publication of judgment | Monetary damages, injunctions, retraction/apology orders, content removal |
| Defamation penalties | § 1: fine or restriction of liberty; § 2 (mass media): fine, restriction of liberty, or up to one year of imprisonment | No criminal penalty; damages quantum set by court based on harm |
| Typical costs to bring | Low filing fees; counsel costs PLN 5,000–30,000+ (complexity-dependent) | Filing fees proportional to claim value; counsel costs PLN 10,000–60,000+ |
| Typical timeline | Lengthy, conciliation, trial hearings; prosecutor discretion adds unpredictability | Faster for injunctive relief (days/weeks); full trial 6–18 months typical |
| Publicity risk | High, criminal proceedings attract media; allegation amplified | Lower, proceedings can be managed with greater discretion |
| Injunctive relief | Not available as a criminal remedy; no takedown orders | Preliminary injunctions for urgent content removal available |
| Enforceability | Domestic criminal enforcement; no direct damages; separate civil claim needed | Damages and injunctions directly enforceable; EU cross-border recognition under Brussels I Recast |
| SLAPP / chilling-effect risk | Heavily criticised by NGOs; growing judicial scepticism toward criminal complaints used to silence media | Also used as SLAPPs; costs can deter defendants, but reputational risk to claimant lower |
Three tradeoffs dominate this comparison. First, publicity: criminal proceedings are inherently public and attract press coverage that can amplify the very allegations the complainant seeks to suppress, the civil route allows quieter resolution. Second, speed of injunctive relief: only the civil route offers preliminary injunctions capable of forcing content removal within days; the criminal process has no equivalent mechanism. Third, remedy type: if your goal is money and a retraction, civil is the only direct path; if your goal is a criminal record and public condemnation, the criminal route is the sole option, but it delivers no damages without a follow-on civil claim.
The threshold elements differ significantly between the two routes and shape who can realistically pursue each option.
This dimension alone steers many clients toward civil proceedings.
The remedial divergence is the sharpest practical difference between the two routes.
| Item | Criminal Complaint (Article 212) | Civil Claim (Personal Rights) |
|---|---|---|
| Court / filing fees | Minimal filing fee for private accusation | Filing fees proportional to claim value; injunction requests carry procedural fees |
| Typical counsel fees | PLN 5,000–30,000+ depending on case complexity | PLN 10,000–60,000+ depending on injunctive work and damages sought |
| Monetary exposure | Statutory fines; no direct damages to victim | Damages can be substantial; plus recoverable legal costs |
| Speed to injunctive relief | Not available, criminal process offers no takedown mechanism | Preliminary injunctions possible within days to weeks |
Under Article 212 § 1, defamation penalties in Poland include a fine or restriction of liberty. Under § 2 (mass media), the court may impose a fine, restriction of liberty, or imprisonment of up to one year. In practice, imprisonment for defamation is rare, courts overwhelmingly impose fines. The criminal route also permits the court to order publication of the judgment, which can serve a declaratory function. Civil damages, by contrast, are calibrated to actual harm: lost revenue, reputational injury, and non-pecuniary suffering. Large commercial claimants routinely recover more through civil proceedings than any criminal fine would achieve.
Cost structure differs in character, not just quantum.
Time is often the decisive factor for clients managing a live reputational crisis.
For clients with cross-border exposure, multinational executives, international media entities, dual-nationality politicians, enforceability matters.
The landscape for criminal defamation vs civil defamation in Poland is shifting. International organisations including ARTICLE 19 have publicly called for the decriminalisation of defamation in Poland, framing criminal provisions as a tool that chills press freedom and enables strategic lawsuits against public participation (SLAPPs). The International Press Institute and EU-level anti-SLAPP discussions have added momentum to these campaigns.
As of May 2026, Article 212 remains in force, no formal legislative amendment has been enacted. However, the likely practical effect of sustained advocacy is threefold. First, prosecutors are increasingly reluctant to intervene in private defamation prosecutions, reducing the chance that the state will bolster a complainant’s case. Second, courts are applying greater scrutiny to criminal defamation complaints that target journalistic reporting or political commentary, raising the evidentiary bar in practice even without statutory change. Third, the reputational cost of being seen to use criminal law to silence critics, particularly for politicians and large corporations, has grown materially.
Industry observers expect that if formal decriminalisation proceeds, the civil route will become the sole enforcement mechanism. Clients who file criminal complaints in 2026 should therefore treat the criminal route as a strategic signalling tool with declining enforcement reliability, not as a dependable path to conviction.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Immediate content removal or takedown of an ongoing publication | Civil claim, seek a preliminary injunction and correction order |
| Public criminal condemnation and maximum deterrent signalling | Criminal complaint (Article 212), only if you accept the publicity and the uncertainty of prosecution |
| Monetary compensation for quantified business or reputational loss | Civil claim, damages plus recoverable legal costs |
| Minimal public attention and discretion throughout proceedings | Civil claim, pursued quietly with controlled media exposure |
| Criminal sanction to deter serial or egregious defamation | Criminal complaint, if the facts clearly support prosecution and public interest is demonstrable |
| Cross-border enforcement against an EU-based publisher or platform | Civil claim, enforceable under Brussels I Recast across the EU |
Practical illustrations:
Certain situations demand immediate legal advice rather than further research. Contact a specialist if any of the following apply:
Prepare the following for your first consultation: an evidence log (screenshots, recordings, URLs with timestamps), publication metadata (date, outlet, reach), any witness contact details, all prior correspondence with the defamer, and a clear statement of the remedy you are seeking. This allows counsel to assess both criminal and civil options and recommend the right route for your circumstances. Browse the lawyer directory to find experienced defamation counsel in Poland.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maciej Zaborowski at Kopeć & Zaborowski Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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