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The penal code changes in Poland that took effect on 29 January 2026 represent the most consequential criminal law reform for businesses operating in the country in over a decade. The amendments expand corporate criminal liability mechanisms, introduce modified penalties for key economic offences, strengthen the state’s ability to impose compensation-type measures on legal entities, and heighten the personal criminal exposure of board members and senior officers. Meanwhile, related draft changes to the Code of Criminal Procedure, including a reform act vetoed by the President on 27 March 2026, continue to reshape the evidentiary and pre-trial landscape in ways that every general counsel, compliance officer and CFO needs to understand now.
Before diving into the detail of the criminal law reform in Poland, decision-makers should absorb the following high-level conclusions and immediate action items.
The overarching compliance question, “Do our current programmes adequately mitigate the increased exposure created by these penal code changes in Poland?”, should, for most companies, be answered with “not yet.” The sections below translate the legal changes into concrete steps.
The 2026 penal code amendments build on the major overhaul package adopted in July 2022 (effective in stages from October 2023 onwards) and extend its logic into the corporate and white-collar domain. Understanding the specific changes is essential for any company assessing its exposure to white-collar crime in Poland.
Several categories of offence have been modified or expanded in ways that directly affect business operations:
Perhaps the most consequential dimension of these penal code amendments for business audiences is the expansion of corporate criminal liability in Poland. The key developments include:
Substantive penal code amendments do not operate in isolation. The parallel changes to the Code of Criminal Procedure, though currently stalled following the presidential veto of 27 March 2026, shape how investigations are conducted, how evidence is gathered, and what mitigation strategies are available to defendants.
The vetoed procedure reform act contained provisions that would have:
Even without the vetoed bill, existing procedural tools, combined with the expanded substantive offences, give prosecutors materially greater leverage in white-collar investigations. Companies should not wait for the procedure reform to be re-enacted before updating their evidence management and privilege protocols.
Pre-trial detention remains a powerful tool in Polish criminal procedure and a significant concern for executives under investigation. The code of criminal procedure changes under discussion would extend the circumstances in which pre-trial detention can be imposed in economic cases, particularly where there is a risk of evidence destruction or coordination among suspects. European standards, as documented by the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights, require that pre-trial detention remain proportionate, but the practical reality for executives is that the threshold for detention in complex economic cases has been trending downward.
The immediate implication is that criminal liability for executives in Poland now carries not only financial and reputational consequences but also a realistic risk of personal liberty restrictions during investigation. Defence strategies must account for this from day one.
The 2026 amendments do not create a one-size-fits-all risk profile. Exposure varies significantly depending on entity type, governance structure and the role of the individual within the organisation. The following comparison table summarises the key dimensions.
| Entity Type | Typical Criminal Exposure Under 2026 Amendments | Immediate Compliance Action |
|---|---|---|
| Polish subsidiary | Direct corporate penalties; compensation-type measures; potential disgorgement of profits derived from criminal conduct | Commission internal audit; prepare remedial action plan; tighten approval thresholds for high-risk transactions |
| Parent company (foreign) | Attribution risk via corporate culture, management control directives, and failure-to-supervise doctrines | Review group-level corporate governance framework; document that compliance programmes are genuinely implemented, not just on paper |
| Board members / CEO / CFO | Personal criminal liability for managerial offences; potential pre-trial measures including detention | Complete director-level compliance training; establish independent investigation protocols; execute privilege agreements with external counsel |
| Compliance officers | Liability risk where compliance function was aware of misconduct and failed to escalate or where compliance was used as a shield rather than a genuine control | Formalise escalation procedures; ensure board-level reporting line; document all risk assessments and recommendations |
The critical point is that the penal code amendments in Poland now enable prosecutors to pursue both the entity and its officers simultaneously, creating dual-track exposure that must be managed through coordinated, but carefully separated, defence strategies.
Compliance is no longer optional insurance, it is an operational necessity and, under the 2026 regime, a potential legal defence. The following playbook provides a prioritised action plan for companies of all sizes operating in or through Poland.
The first priority is governance architecture. Boards and audit/risk committees should take the following steps within the first 30 days:
Within 30 to 90 days, companies should update their written policy framework to reflect the new legal environment:
The expanded attribution mechanisms mean that companies can be held liable for the conduct of agents, consultants and business partners. Over the next three to six months, companies should:
The following table summarises reporting and remediation responsibilities for different entity types under the new framework:
| Entity | Reporting Obligation | Suggested Remediation Practice |
|---|---|---|
| Polish operating subsidiary | Direct obligation to report suspicious activities; cooperation duty with prosecutors | Maintain real-time compliance dashboards; quarterly risk reviews; annual compliance audit |
| Foreign parent company | Indirect, via group compliance oversight and consolidated reporting | Document group-level compliance programme implementation; ensure Polish subsidiary receives adequate resources and training |
| Board / senior management | Personal duty of oversight; obligation to act on red flags | Formal board minutes recording compliance discussions; escalation logs; independent counsel engagement |
Even the best compliance programme cannot eliminate risk entirely. When an executive receives notice that they are under investigation, or has reason to believe one is imminent, the response in the first hours is critical.
Beyond the initial response, executives and their advisers should coordinate across three tracks:
Two illustrative scenarios demonstrate how the 2026 reforms translate into real-world corporate exposure:
Scenario 1, Procurement fraud in a public infrastructure project. A Polish subsidiary of a multinational engineering firm discovers that its local procurement director has been steering contracts to a related-party supplier in exchange for kickbacks. Under the expanded attribution rules, prosecutors investigate not only the individual but the subsidiary itself, arguing organisational fault based on the absence of effective procurement controls and the failure of senior management to act on internal audit warnings. The parent company faces scrutiny for inadequate group-level compliance oversight. The company’s defence rests heavily on demonstrating that it had a documented compliance programme, but its effectiveness is challenged because training records are incomplete and the last policy update preceded the 2026 amendments.
Scenario 2, Internal accounting manipulation at a mid-cap listed company. The CFO of a Warsaw-listed company directs the finance team to reclassify certain expenses to meet quarterly earnings targets. When the manipulation is discovered during an external audit, the CFO faces personal criminal liability under the updated accounting fraud provisions. The company itself is exposed to compensation-type measures ordered by the court. The board’s failure to establish an independent audit committee reporting line becomes a central issue in assessing organisational fault.
The following timeline maps the key legislative milestones against the corporate actions that should already be underway:
| Date | Event | Required Corporate Action |
|---|---|---|
| 29 January 2026 | Penal Code amendments enter into force | Complete initial gap analysis; brief the board; engage external counsel |
| 27 March 2026 | Presidential veto of the criminal procedure reform act | Monitor legislative developments; do not defer procedural preparedness |
| April–May 2026 | Revised procedure bill expected to be resubmitted to the Sejm | Update evidence management and privilege protocols; prepare for expanded investigative tools |
| Q2–Q3 2026 | First enforcement actions under the new provisions anticipated | Finalise all policy updates; complete training cycles; test rapid-response protocols |
Companies that complete the compliance and governance playbook outlined above within the first 90 days of the amendments’ effective date will be materially better positioned to defend against enforcement actions and to demonstrate good faith if proceedings arise.
The 2026 criminal law reform in Poland is not a distant legislative prospect, it is already in force, and enforcement actions under the new framework are expected to follow in the coming quarters. For boards, executives and compliance teams, the window for proactive preparation is narrowing. Companies operating in or through Poland that have not yet audited their compliance programmes against the penal code changes, updated their internal investigation protocols, refreshed board oversight structures and engaged specialist counsel are operating at materially elevated risk.
The penal code changes in Poland reward preparedness and punish complacency. A documented, effective compliance programme is no longer merely good governance, it is a statutory mitigating factor that can influence the outcome of criminal proceedings. Conversely, the absence of such a programme is now an established aggravating consideration. Early engagement with experienced criminal law practitioners, whether for a preventive audit, a rapid-response retainer or an active defence, is the single most valuable step a company can take. For readers seeking deeper context on corporate criminal liability in Poland and the regulatory environment for businesses, additional resources are available on Global Law Experts’ Poland regulatory analysis pages.
This article provides general guidance on the 2026 Penal Code amendments in Poland and does not constitute legal advice. Companies and individuals should seek qualified legal counsel for advice tailored to their specific circumstances. Last reviewed: 14 May 2026.
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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