Do you live abroad but have worked for years in Poland? You can apply for a Polish pension without returning to the country. Poland has totalization agreements with most countries, so work periods are summed up.
Who Can Receive a Polish Pension
- You have worked in Poland for at least 15 years (women) / 20 years (men) for a pension without a totalization agreement
- With a totalization agreement — only 1 year of contributions in Poland is required (and the necessary period in another country)
- You have reached retirement age: 60 years for women, 65 years for men
- You can be on any visa/residency abroad — it does not affect payments from Poland
Totalization Agreement — What Does It Mean
A totalization agreement means that work periods in both countries are summed up for pension eligibility. Each country pays a proportional part of the pension for its years. Poland has agreements with:
- USA (since 2009)
- Canada (since 2009)
- All EU/EEA countries (UK until the end of the transition period, then a separate agreement)
- Australia, South Korea, Japan, Turkey
Step 1: Gather Documents
- Documents confirming Polish contributions — Rp-7, work certificates, insurance books, disability certificates
- Documents confirming foreign contributions — work history from US Social Security (form SSA-7050), UK National Insurance, German Rentenversicherung, etc.
- Birth certificate from USC in Poland
- Marriage certificate (if currently married)
- School and military certificates — count towards the period
- Bank account number — can be in the USA or Poland
Step 2: Fill Out the EMP Form
The main form is EMP — Application for Retirement. Available:
- Online at zus.pl in the "Forms" section
- At Polish consulates — in-person pickup
- Through PUE ZUS — Electronic Services Platform of ZUS, after creating an account (requires a trusted profile or e-ID)
Step 3: Submit the Application
You have 3 options:
Option A: Through the Polish Consulate
- The simplest — the consulate sends it to the appropriate ZUS branch
- Check the consulate location: gov.pl/web/usa-en/konsulaty
- Some consulates have ZUS office hours — check the schedule
- A reservation may be required through e-Konsulat
Option B: By Mail Directly to ZUS
- For those living outside Poland, the appropriate office is I Oddział ZUS in Warsaw — Headquarters ul. Senatorska 10, 00-082 Warsaw
- Processing time: 60 days from the completion of documents
Option C: Through PUE ZUS Online
- A trusted profile is required — can be created through consulates or via Polish banks
- You submit the application electronically, scanning the documents
- The fastest option if you already have a trusted profile
Step 4: Payment
ZUS pays the pension:
- To an account in a Polish bank (PLN) — the simplest option
- To a foreign account (USD, EUR, GBP) — quarterly (quarterly transactions to reduce bank costs)
- By check sent by mail — the slowest, least recommended option
Most Polish diaspora retirees have a bank account in a Polish bank + a standing order for transfer to a bank in the USA/UK (or Wise/Revolut for further transfers).
Tax on Pension
- In Poland: pensions are taxed according to the standard scale (12% / 32%), but with a tax-free amount of 30,000 PLN — most Polish diaspora pensions are below this and do not pay tax
- In the USA: foreign pensions are taxed on the 1040 form (as "Other Income" or "Pensions"). The first ~$30,000 is exempt due to the double taxation avoidance agreement.
- UK/DE: check local regulations — in the UK, foreign pensions are taxed from the first pound
Common Issues
- Missing Rp-7 — a form confirming employment and salary. Can be obtained from the employer or archives (New Records Archive, state archives)
- Less than 20 years (men) / 15 years (women) — without a totalization agreement, you will not receive a Polish pension. With an agreement — you will receive a proportional amount
- Spouse of a deceased — a separate form EMP-WR for family/widow's pension
- No trusted profile — creation from the USA: at consulates or through PKO BP/PEKAO/ING banks (if you have an account there)
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