2026 minimum wage and average salary
Poland's 2026 statutory minimum wage is PLN 5,100/month gross - an 18% increase over 2024 and a doubling since 2020. After Polish income tax (12% on the first PLN 120,000/year) and social security contributions (13.7% pension, 9% health insurance), the net take-home from a minimum-wage salary is roughly PLN 3,670/month. The national average gross salary is PLN 9,200/month, with mid-level professional roles ranging PLN 8,000-15,000 and senior IT/finance roles PLN 15,000-30,000+.
For foreign workers, the salary math is decisive: PLN 5,100/month is approximately ₦2,040,000 (Nigeria), ₹1,14,000 (India), GH₵16,200 (Ghana), ₱72,000 (Philippines), NPR 47,000 (Nepal). Polish minimum wage alone pays 6-25× more than the equivalent country's typical worker earns at home, depending on home-country wages.
Salary by industry - comprehensive table
| Role | PLN gross | PLN net | USD/mo | ₦/mo | ₹/mo | GH₵/mo | NPR/mo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum wage (2026) | 5,100 | 3,670 | $1,275 | ₦2.04M | ₹1.14L | GH₵16.2K | NPR 4.7L |
| Cleaner/janitor | 5,100-6,000 | 3,670-4,300 | $1,275-1,500 | ₦2.04-2.4M | ₹1.14-1.34L | GH₵16-19K | NPR 4.7-5.5L |
| Factory operator | 5,500-7,500 | 3,950-5,400 | $1,375-1,875 | ₦2.2-3M | ₹1.23-1.68L | GH₵17.4-24K | NPR 5-6.9L |
| Warehouse (Amazon/DHL) | 5,500-7,500 | 3,950-5,400 | $1,375-1,875 | ₦2.2-3M | ₹1.23-1.68L | GH₵17.4-24K | NPR 5-6.9L |
| Construction labourer | 5,500-7,500 | 3,950-5,400 | $1,375-1,875 | ₦2.2-3M | ₹1.23-1.68L | GH₵17.4-24K | NPR 5-6.9L |
| Hospitality (hotel) | 5,500-8,000 | 3,950-5,750 | $1,375-2,000 | ₦2.2-3.2M | ₹1.23-1.79L | GH₵17.4-25.4K | NPR 5-7.4L |
| Care assistant | 5,500-7,500 | 3,950-5,400 | $1,375-1,875 | ₦2.2-3M | ₹1.23-1.68L | GH₵17.4-24K | NPR 5-6.9L |
| Driver (HGV/CE) | 7,000-10,000 | 5,050-7,200 | $1,750-2,500 | ₦2.8-4M | ₹1.56-2.23L | GH₵22-31.7K | NPR 6.5-9.2L |
| Welder TIG/MIG | 8,000-12,500 | 5,750-9,000 | $2,000-3,125 | ₦3.2-5M | ₹1.79-2.79L | GH₵25.4-39.7K | NPR 7.4-11.5L |
| Electrician | 8,000-12,000 | 5,750-8,650 | $2,000-3,000 | ₦3.2-4.8M | ₹1.79-2.68L | GH₵25.4-38K | NPR 7.4-11L |
| CNC operator | 7,500-11,000 | 5,400-7,900 | $1,875-2,750 | ₦3-4.4M | ₹1.68-2.46L | GH₵23.8-34.9K | NPR 6.9-10.1L |
| Registered nurse | 7,500-12,000 | 5,400-8,650 | $1,875-3,000 | ₦3-4.8M | ₹1.68-2.68L | GH₵23.8-38K | NPR 6.9-11L |
| IT junior (0-2 yrs) | 8,000-12,000 | 5,750-8,650 | $2,000-3,000 | ₦3.2-4.8M | ₹1.79-2.68L | GH₵25.4-38K | NPR 7.4-11L |
| IT mid (3-5 yrs) | 12,000-18,000 | 8,650-12,950 | $3,000-4,500 | ₦4.8-7.2M | ₹2.68-4.02L | GH₵38-57K | NPR 11-16.5L |
| IT senior (5+ yrs) | 18,000-25,000 | 12,950-17,950 | $4,500-6,250 | ₦7.2-10M | ₹4.02-5.58L | GH₵57-79K | NPR 16.5-23L |
| IT lead / architect | 20,000-30,000 | 14,400-21,500 | $5,000-7,500 | ₦8-12M | ₹4.46-6.70L | GH₵63.4-95K | NPR 18.4-27.6L |
| EU Blue Card (mid IT) | 10,800+ | 7,750+ | $2,700+ | ₦4.32M+ | ₹2.41L+ | GH₵34.3K+ | NPR 9.9L+ |
| Engineering (mid) | 10,000-15,000 | 7,200-10,800 | $2,500-3,750 | ₦4-6M | ₹2.23-3.35L | GH₵31.7-47.6K | NPR 9.2-13.8L |
| Engineering (senior) | 15,000-22,000 | 10,800-15,800 | $3,750-5,500 | ₦6-8.8M | ₹3.35-4.91L | GH₵47.6-69.7K | NPR 13.8-20.2L |
| Accountant (qualified) | 8,000-13,000 | 5,750-9,350 | $2,000-3,250 | ₦3.2-5.2M | ₹1.79-2.90L | GH₵25.4-41.2K | NPR 7.4-12L |
Salary by city - Warsaw > Kraków > Wrocław > others
Polish salaries vary substantially by city - Warsaw pays roughly 25-40% above the national average, while smaller cities pay 10-20% below. The pattern (high to low): Warsaw > Kraków > Wrocław > Gdańsk > Poznań > Łódź > Katowice > smaller cities. Cost of living follows roughly the same order, but Warsaw's higher salaries usually outpace its higher cost of living for foreign professionals.
| City | Avg salary multiplier | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Warsaw | 1.30× (vs national avg) | Highest pay, highest rent. IT, finance, corporate HQs |
| Kraków | 1.15× | Strong IT, lower cost than Warsaw. Google, Cisco, IBM |
| Wrocław | 1.10× | IT + Capgemini SSC, growing fast |
| Gdańsk | 1.05× | Intel, AWS, shipbuilding, mid-cost |
| Poznań | 1.00× | Manufacturing (VW, Amazon), balanced |
| Łódź | 0.85× | Lower pay, much lower rent |
| Katowice / Silesia | 0.90× | Heavy industry, automotive |
| Smaller cities | 0.75-0.85× | Lowest pay, lowest cost; manufacturing focus |
Warsaw commands a 15-20% salary premium across nearly every sector - IT, finance, corporate HQ functions, professional services, and even mid-tier retail and hospitality. The reason: Warsaw is Poland's only true global city, headquartering most multinationals' Polish operations and the financial centre that pays for itself in employer salary uplift. The trade-off is that Warsaw's central rent (PLN 3,500-4,500/mo for a one-bed) consumes most of the premium. Net disposable income for an IT engineer is often close to parity between Warsaw and Kraków, but career progression options and senior-role density are dramatically higher in Warsaw.
Kraków is Poland's IT capital - it hosts the Polish R&D centres for Google, Cisco, IBM, Motorola, ABB, HSBC, JP Morgan, and dozens of others. IT salaries in Kraków are typically only 5-10% below Warsaw but cost of living is 20-30% lower, making Kraków the highest-net-savings city for IT engineers. The drawback: traffic congestion in the historic centre and rapid rent appreciation since 2022. Wrocław is the fastest-growing IT and BPO city, with Capgemini, Volvo IT, Nokia, and BNY Mellon expanding aggressively - salaries are catching up to Kraków levels (within 5%) while the cost of living remains noticeably lower. Wrocław is the value play for IT workers prioritising savings rate.
Gdańsk and the broader Tri-City area (Gdańsk + Gdynia + Sopot) anchor Poland's maritime and IT-North economy: Intel, Amazon Web Services, Schibsted, and the legacy shipbuilding industry. Salaries are 5-10% below Warsaw, cost of living is moderate, and the Baltic coast lifestyle is a draw for European transfers. Poznań is Poland's manufacturing-and-logistics hub - Volkswagen, Amazon fulfilment centres, GlaxoSmithKline pharmaceuticals, and a strong SME export base. Poznań salaries hover near the national average, but Volkswagen and Amazon wages for skilled production workers significantly exceed local averages. Łódź, once a textile city, has reinvented itself as the BPO and shared-services hub for cost-conscious multinationals - salaries are 10-15% below the national average but Łódź has the cheapest rent of any major Polish city (PLN 1,500-2,200 for a one-bed). Katowice and the Silesian conurbation are Poland's heavy-industry heartland - coal, steel, automotive (Fiat/Stellantis Tychy plant) - with salaries close to national average but cost of living noticeably lower.
Tax and deductions - what's taken from gross
Polish gross-to-net conversion is relatively transparent. The main deductions:
- Income tax (PIT): 12% on the first PLN 120,000/year of taxable income, 32% on income above that
- Social security (ZUS): 13.71% pension + 9.76% disability + 2.45% sickness (employee share)
- Health insurance: 9% of gross salary (deductible for income tax purposes)
- Tax-free allowance (kwota wolna): PLN 30,000/year - first PLN 30,000 of annual income is tax-exempt
- Special incentives: PLN 0 PIT up to age 26 (Bez PIT dla młodych) - Polish residents under 26 pay no income tax on first PLN 85,528/yr
| Gross salary (PLN/mo) | Net (PLN/mo) | Effective deduction |
|---|---|---|
| 5,100 (minimum) | 3,670 | 28% |
| 6,500 | 4,675 | 28% |
| 8,000 | 5,750 | 28% |
| 10,000 | 7,150 | 28.5% |
| 12,000 | 8,400 | 30% |
| 15,000 | 10,400 | 31% |
| 18,000 | 12,400 | 31% |
| 20,000 | 13,750 | 31% |
| 25,000 | 17,000 | 32% |
| 30,000 | 20,200 | 33% |
Note: above PLN 120,000 annual income (PLN 10,000/month), the 32% top-bracket rate kicks in, so the effective deduction creeps up from ~28% to ~33% as gross income rises. Polish income tax is dramatically lower than Germany's (which can reach 42-45% for high earners) or the UK's (45% top rate). The net take-home advantage is real.
Three salary-level walkthroughs
Walkthrough 1 - Polish minimum wage (PLN 5,100/month gross, factory or warehouse worker): Gross PLN 5,100. ZUS pension (9.76%) = PLN 498. ZUS disability (1.5%) = PLN 77. ZUS sickness (2.45%) = PLN 125. Health insurance (9%) = PLN 380. Income tax (12% on PLN 4,000 after PLN 30,000/yr tax-free allowance pro-rated) = PLN 250. Net take-home: approximately PLN 3,670/month. After typical living costs (employer-dorm rent PLN 100-400, food PLN 800, transport PLN 110, phone PLN 30): savings of PLN 2,200-2,600/month, ideal for high-remittance unskilled workers.
Walkthrough 2 - Polish average wage (PLN 9,200/month gross, mid-level professional): Gross PLN 9,200. ZUS pension PLN 898, disability PLN 138, sickness PLN 225. Health insurance PLN 685. Income tax (12% bracket, after allowance and ZUS deductions) PLN 580. Net take-home: approximately PLN 6,674/month. After living costs (own apartment outside Warsaw centre PLN 2,200-3,000, utilities PLN 500, groceries PLN 900, transport PLN 110, phone PLN 50): savings of PLN 1,900-2,800/month.
Walkthrough 3 - Polish IT mid-level (PLN 15,000/month gross): Gross PLN 15,000. ZUS pension PLN 1,464, disability PLN 225, sickness PLN 368. Health insurance PLN 1,160. Income tax - first PLN 10,000/mo (PLN 120,000/yr) taxed at 12%, last PLN 5,000/mo taxed at 32% - total monthly income tax approximately PLN 2,400. Net take-home: approximately PLN 10,400/month. After living costs (Warsaw central one-bed PLN 4,000, utilities PLN 600, groceries PLN 1,000, transport PLN 110, phone PLN 50): savings of PLN 4,600-4,900/month - strong remittance capacity even at Warsaw central rents.
Cost of living - Warsaw vs smaller cities
| Monthly cost | Warsaw (PLN) | Smaller city (PLN) |
|---|---|---|
| 1-bed apartment (centre) | 3,500-4,500 | 2,000-2,800 |
| 1-bed apartment (outskirts) | 2,500-3,000 | 1,500-2,200 |
| Utilities (water, electric, heating) | 400-700 | 300-500 |
| Internet (300 Mbps fibre) | 60-80 | 60-80 |
| Mobile (unlimited data) | 30-50 | 30-50 |
| Groceries (single adult) | 800-1,200 | 650-1,000 |
| Monthly transit pass | 110 | 80-100 |
| Restaurant meal (mid-range) | 60-100 | 40-70 |
| Cinema ticket | 25-35 | 20-30 |
| Gym membership | 100-180 | 80-130 |
| Total single person | 5,500-7,500 | 4,200-5,800 |
A single person can live comfortably in Warsaw on PLN 5,500-6,500/month - which means a Polish minimum-wage worker (PLN 3,670 net) needs employer-provided housing or shared accommodation to make Warsaw work. In smaller cities (Łódź, Lublin, Katowice, Bydgoszcz), the same lifestyle costs PLN 4,200-4,800/month - more comfortable on minimum wage but with fewer job opportunities.
How much can you send home each month?
| Profile | Gross PLN/mo | Net PLN/mo | Living costs | Monthly remittance | Annual remittance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Factory worker (dorm) | PLN 6,500 | PLN 4,675 | PLN 1,500 | PLN 3,175 / $795 | PLN 38,100 / $9,540 |
| Welder (Warsaw) | PLN 10,000 | PLN 7,150 | PLN 5,500 | PLN 1,650 / $415 | PLN 19,800 / $4,980 |
| Welder (Łódź, dorm) | PLN 10,000 | PLN 7,150 | PLN 2,000 | PLN 5,150 / $1,290 | PLN 61,800 / $15,480 |
| IT junior (Kraków) | PLN 10,000 | PLN 7,150 | PLN 4,800 | PLN 2,350 / $590 | PLN 28,200 / $7,050 |
| IT mid (Warsaw) | PLN 15,000 | PLN 10,400 | PLN 5,500 | PLN 4,900 / $1,225 | PLN 58,800 / $14,700 |
| IT senior (Warsaw) | PLN 22,000 | PLN 15,200 | PLN 7,000 | PLN 8,200 / $2,055 | PLN 98,400 / $24,660 |
| IT lead (Wrocław) | PLN 25,000 | PLN 17,000 | PLN 5,500 | PLN 11,500 / $2,880 | PLN 138,000 / $34,560 |
Converted to home-country currencies (annual remittance for IT mid-level at ~$14,700/year): ₦23.5 million for Nigeria, ₹13.1 lakh for India, GH₵187,000 for Ghana, ₱830,000 for the Philippines, NPR 24.2 lakh for Nepal. A Polish IT mid-level worker remits more per year than most senior managers earn in their home country. For a Polish IT senior or architect remitting $24,000-35,000/year, the lifetime savings potential transforms families.
Transfer service comparison - what your remittance costs
| Service | Typical fee | Speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wise (formerly TransferWise) | 0.5-1.5% | Same day to 2 days | Mid-market FX, transparent. Best for Nigeria, India, Ghana, Philippines, Nepal. |
| Revolut | 0.5-2% | Same day | Free up to monthly limit, then small fees. Strong in IT/Blue Card community. |
| Remitly | 0.5-2% | Minutes to hours | Mobile-money payout (MTN, Airtel), cash pickup available. |
| WorldRemit | 1-3% | Minutes to hours | Cash pickup widely available, especially Africa corridors. |
| IME Pay | 1.5-2.5% | Same day | Dominant for Nepal corridor, growing in Bangladesh. |
| Western Union | 4-8% | Minutes to days | Universal but expensive - best avoided for routine transfers. |
| MoneyGram | 4-7% | Minutes to days | Similar to WU; convenient cash pickup, high cost. |
| Direct bank SWIFT wire | 5-8% (hidden in FX) | 2-5 days | Slowest, highest hidden FX markup. Use only when no alternative. |
The fee gap matters at scale. A Polish IT mid-level worker remitting $1,225/month (~PLN 4,900) through Wise pays roughly $9-18/month in fees ($110-220/yr). The same transfer via Western Union or a bank SWIFT wire costs $50-100/month in fees ($600-1,200/yr). Over a 5-year work contract, the service choice alone is the difference between $550-1,100 saved (Wise) versus $3,000-6,000 lost to fees (Western Union). For workers remitting larger amounts (IT senior at $2,055/month, lead at $2,880/month), the gap is even more substantial. Use Wise or Remitly as default; reserve cash-pickup services for one-off emergencies.
What your annual remittance buys back home
Polish IT mid-level annual remittance ($14,700) translates to substantial purchasing power: in Nigeria, roughly a 20% deposit on a 3-bedroom flat in Lekki Phase 1 Lagos, or full purchase of a 3-bed bungalow in Abuja outskirts. In India, a 1-2BHK apartment deposit in tier-2 cities (Pune, Ahmedabad, Coimbatore, Bhubaneswar), or full ownership of a small flat in tier-3 cities. In Ghana, a 3-bedroom house deposit in East Legon Accra, or a near-complete house build in Kumasi. In the Philippines, a deposit on a 2-bed condo in Quezon City or full purchase in Cebu or Davao outskirts. In Nepal, 1-2 ropani of land in the Kathmandu Valley outskirts plus partial construction costs, or a complete 2-bedroom house in Pokhara, Chitwan, or Biratnagar. A Polish IT senior remitting $24,000-35,000/year compresses these home-country purchases into 1-3 years rather than 5-10.
الأسئلة الشائعة
What is Poland's minimum wage in 2026?
PLN 5,100/month gross (US$1,275) as of January 1, 2026 - an 18% increase from 2024. Net take-home after Polish income tax (12% on first PLN 120,000/yr) and social security contributions (~28% combined effective rate) is approximately PLN 3,670/month. This is the floor for all Type A work permit applications.
How much does an IT engineer earn in Poland?
Junior (0-2 years): PLN 8,000-12,000/month gross. Mid-level (3-5 years): PLN 12,000-18,000. Senior (5+ years): PLN 18,000-25,000. Lead/architect: PLN 20,000-30,000+. The EU Blue Card threshold is PLN 10,800/month. Kraków, Warsaw, and Wrocław pay roughly 25-40% above smaller cities. Google, Microsoft, Samsung, and major SSCs cluster at the top end of these ranges.
How much is Polish income tax?
12% on the first PLN 120,000/year of taxable income (the bulk of typical foreign-worker salaries), 32% on income above PLN 120,000/year. There's a tax-free allowance of PLN 30,000/year. Combined with social security (~13.7% pension + 9% health), the effective deduction rate is roughly 28-33% depending on gross income - substantially lower than Germany (42-45%) or the UK (40-45%).
What does PLN 5,100 buy in Poland?
Outside Warsaw, PLN 5,100 gross (PLN 3,670 net) covers comfortable single-person living: shared apartment outside centre (PLN 1,500-2,200), utilities (PLN 300-500), groceries (PLN 700-1,000), transit (PLN 80-100), phone (PLN 30-50), modest entertainment. In Warsaw, the same salary requires employer-provided housing or shared accommodation to stretch comfortably - Warsaw central rents alone consume the entire net salary.
Are Polish salaries higher or lower than German salaries?
Lower in absolute PLN/EUR terms but competitive after cost-of-living adjustment. Polish mid-level IT (PLN 15,000 = €3,500/mo) vs German equivalent (€4,500-6,500). But Warsaw rent is ~50% of Berlin, groceries 40-60% cheaper, restaurant meals 50% cheaper. Net disposable income after housing and food is closer to parity than gross salaries suggest. Senior roles still pay meaningfully more in Germany in absolute terms.
Can a foreign worker save 50%+ of Polish salary for remittance?
Yes - particularly for blue-collar workers with employer-provided dormitory housing (very common in Polish factories, warehouses, construction, trucking). A factory worker earning PLN 6,500 gross / PLN 4,675 net with employer dorm can save PLN 3,000-3,500/month after personal expenses, hitting ~65-75% savings rate. Skilled IT roles in Warsaw with own apartment save 35-50% (still NPR 25-35K equivalent/month for Indians).
How much annual remittance can a Polish IT worker send home?
Mid-level IT (PLN 15,000/mo): roughly $14,700/year remittance = ₹13 lakh/yr for India, ₦23 million/yr for Nigeria. Senior IT (PLN 22,000/mo): roughly $24,600/year = ₹22 lakh/yr, ₦39 million/yr. Lead/architect (PLN 25,000+/mo): $34,000+/year = ₹30+ lakh/yr, ₦54+ million/yr. These figures rival or exceed senior-manager pay in Lagos, Bangalore, Manila, and Kathmandu.
Does Poland have the Bez PIT dla młodych tax exemption for foreign workers?
Yes - the 'No PIT for Young People' exemption applies to all Polish residents under age 26, regardless of nationality. If you arrive in Poland on a work visa before your 26th birthday, you pay PLN 0 income tax on the first PLN 85,528/year of salary (you still pay social security). For early-career foreign workers, this is a significant net pay boost - effectively raising take-home by ~12% on the first PLN 85K of annual salary.
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