Returning to Poland — What to Arrange at Offices in 2026

A list of offices and formalities when returning to Poland after years abroad — registration, ZUS, NFZ, tax office, driver's license.

Introduction / For Whom

Returning to Poland after years abroad requires handling several official matters. This guide walks you through all the key steps in the correct order.

Step 1: Registration

Deadline: 30 days from the date of moving in.

  1. Go to the municipal office or USC appropriate for your place of residence
  2. Submit a permanent residence registration (form)
  3. Documents: ID card or passport, document confirming legal title to the premises (deed of ownership, rental agreement, owner's declaration)
  4. Free of charge, decision on the spot

Step 2: ID Card

If your ID has expired / you do not have a Polish ID as an adult:

  1. Application for an e-ID — gov.pl or in person at the office
  2. Documents: photo 35x45 mm, passport (if you do not have an old ID)
  3. Free of charge, ready in 30 days
  4. Allows logging into most Polish e-services (trusted profile)

Step 3: Trusted Profile / mObywatel

Necessary to use Polish e-services (ePUAP, ZUS PUE, e-PIT):

  • Trusted profile via online banking (fastest) or at a confirmation point
  • mObywatel app — download after obtaining your ID

Step 4: ZUS

If you work in Poland (or plan to) — your employer will automatically register you with ZUS. If you run a business or need proof of insurance from abroad:

  • Registration in PUE ZUS (pue.zus.pl) — log in with a trusted profile
  • Report periods of work abroad — they will affect the amount of your future pension
  • Form E 301 / U1 from the previous country (USA: there is an agreement with Poland from 2009)
  • Form E 205 — insurance history from another EU country

Step 5: NFZ (National Health Fund)

To access free healthcare, you must be insured with NFZ. Options:

  • Employer registers automatically
  • Business activity — you register yourself along with CEIDG registration
  • Voluntary insurance — if you are not working, you can purchase through NFZ (~700 PLN/month)
  • Family member of a working person — registration by the working spouse/parent

After registration, choose a primary care physician (POZ) at pacjent.gov.pl.

Step 6: Tax Office

Upon returning to Poland, you become a Polish tax resident when:

  • You live in Poland for more than 183 days a year, OR
  • Your center of vital interests is in Poland

What to do:

  1. Update your data at the tax office — form ZAP-3 if changing address
  2. NIP — if you do not have one (most Poles have it since their first job)
  3. Report foreign income in PIT-36 with attachment PIT/ZG for the tax year of return
  4. Check the return relief (since 2022) — 4 years of PIT exemption up to 85,528 PLN annual income for those returning after 3+ years abroad

Step 7: Driver's License

A Polish driver's license does NOT lose validity while staying abroad. If it has expired:

  • Application for exchange at the communication department of the county office
  • Current photo, medical psychological/ophthalmological examination
  • 100 PLN fee
  • Ready in 30 days

If you have a foreign driver's license (USA, UK, Canada), within 6 months of settling in Poland, you should:

  • Exchange your foreign driver's license for a Polish one (possible from the USA, UK, most countries)
  • Requirements: medical examinations + fee + sworn translation of the foreign driver's license

Step 8: Bank Account

If you closed your Polish account before leaving, open a new one:

  • PKO BP, mBank, ING, Santander — popular choices
  • Can be done online (trusted profile) or at a branch
  • Free basic accounts for individuals

Step 9: Children's Education

If you are returning with children:

  • Preschool / nursery — registrations usually in March for September; after March, free spots are random
  • Primary school — mandatory from age 7; registration at the district school
  • Nostification of foreign grades — for a child finishing secondary school abroad
  • Foreign certificates — sworn translation into Polish

Step 10: Work Certificates from Abroad

To recognize periods of work abroad for Polish pension / disability:

  • USA: form SSA-7050-F4 (confirmation of earnings history) + agreement from 2009
  • UK: form U1 / E 301 from HMRC
  • Germany: form DRV (Deutsche Rentenversicherung) Bescheinigung
  • EU in general: form U1 from employment services

Return Relief (PIT)

Since January 1, 2022 — a very favorable relief for returning Poles:

  • PIT exemption up to 85,528 PLN annual income for 4 years
  • Conditions: 3+ years living abroad, transferring residency to Poland
  • Submit a declaration to your employer or in your annual PIT
  • Benefit: 12,829 PLN or more annually

Common Mistakes

  • Not registering residence within 30 days — delays all other matters
  • Failure to report periods of foreign work — lower pension
  • Omitting return relief — loss of several thousand PLN annually
  • Not reporting foreign driver's license within 6 months — it expires
  • Using NFZ without insurance (you pay 25-100% of the cost of the first visit + administrative penalty)
  • Neglecting to secure bank/tax documents from abroad before leaving (harder to obtain later)

What to Do in the First 7 Days

  1. Registration
  2. Activate your bank account (open a Polish one if you don't have it)
  3. Trusted profile (through the bank, fastest)
  4. Phone on a Polish number (easier with a Polish PESEL)
  5. POZ doctor (at pacjent.gov.pl)
  6. Update address at the tax office
  7. Register in PUE ZUS

Official sources

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