Tax relief for returning to Poland: when the Polish tax office may challenge the PIT exemption
Tax relief for returning to Poland is attracting growing interest from people who, after several years of living and working abroad, move back to Poland. From the taxpayer’s perspective, it is a very specific preference: an exemption from Polish personal income tax (PIT) on qualifying income up to PLN 85,528 per year, available for four consecutive tax years. From the perspective of the Polish tax authorities, however, this is a relief that requires careful verification of whether all statutory conditions have actually been met, especially regarding the moment when the taxpayer changed their place of residence for tax purposes.
This is now the central issue in most disputes. Working abroad or spending several years outside Poland does not in itself determine eligibility for the relief. The key question is whether the taxpayer had genuinely lost Polish tax residence earlier and then transferred it back to Poland after the required period. The Ministry of Finance in Poland indicates that the relief applies to individuals who moved their place of residence to Poland after 31 December 2021, but only if they meet all statutory conditions jointly, including the requirement not to have had a place of residence in Poland for the required period and to properly document their foreign tax residence.
What does tax relief for returning to Poland involve?
Tax relief for returning to Poland is an exemption from Polish personal income tax for specific types of income earned after transferring tax residence to Poland. It covers income from employment, certain mandate contracts, maternity benefits and business activity taxed under the progressive tax scale, flat tax, lump-sum taxation or the IP Box regime. The exemption limit is PLN 85,528 per year.
The relief can be used for four consecutive tax years, starting either from the year of return or from the following tax year.
Importantly, the PLN 85,528 limit is shared with other so-called zero-tax reliefs in Poland, so it does not accumulate with the relief for young people, the relief for families with four or more children or the relief for working seniors.
In practice, this means the preference may be attractive, but it should not be treated as an automatic bonus for moving back to Poland. First, it is necessary to establish whether an effective change of tax residence actually took place.
Why is the Polish tax office checking this relief more closely?
Recently, documentary evidence and factual circumstances confirming actual residence abroad and the real moment of return to Poland have become increasingly important. It is no longer enough to indicate a formal moving date. The Polish tax authorities may assess the full factual situation: family ties, housing, business activity, bank accounts, length of stay and the taxpayer’s real centre of life. Official Ministry of Finance guidance clearly refers here to the tax explanations concerning tax residence.
From a business perspective, this matters greatly. Many entrepreneurs and managers returning to Poland assume that if they worked abroad for several years, they automatically meet the conditions for the relief. In practice, the Polish tax authorities may reach a different conclusion if they find that the taxpayer’s centre of vital interests remained in Poland throughout that period or was moved back to Poland earlier than declared.
Tax residence is not only about the number of days
When assessing a place of residence for tax purposes in Poland, the number of days spent in a given country is not the only decisive factor. Under Polish tax rules and Ministry of Finance guidance, the centre of personal or economic interests, often described as the centre of vital interests, is equally important. In practice, the analysis covers not only physical presence, but also family ties, place of work, assets, social activity, bank accounts and the lasting nature of a person’s connections with a given country.
That is why disputes over tax relief for returning to Poland usually focus not on the mere fact of emigration, but on where the taxpayer’s real centre of life was located during the period in question.
Where does the risk most often arise?
The family returns to Poland before the taxpayer
This is one of the most problematic scenarios. The taxpayer continues working abroad, but their spouse and children return to Poland earlier, enrol the children in school, rent or occupy a home and organise everyday life in Poland. In that situation, the Polish tax authority may conclude that the taxpayer’s centre of personal interests was transferred to Poland earlier than the taxpayer’s formal return.
This is crucial because the regulations require the taxpayer not to have had a place of residence in Poland during the period covering the three calendar years preceding the year in which tax residence changed, as well as during the relevant part of the year of return up to the day before that change. Even shifting this date by a few weeks may result in the loss of entitlement to the exemption.
Long-term work abroad, but lasting ties with Poland
Another common case concerns individuals who worked abroad for years but left their family, home or a substantial part of their personal and financial affairs in Poland. A long period of foreign employment alone is not enough to prove that tax residence changed. The Polish tax office reviews the overall situation, not just one document or one criterion. This approach is reflected both in the Ministry of Finance guidance and in the interpretation practice concerning residence for tax purposes in Poland.
Lack of proper documentation
The Ministry of Finance states directly that, if requested by the tax authority, the taxpayer must prove their right to the relief. A foreign tax residence certificate may be the key document, but it is not the only possible form of evidence. Other documents may also be accepted to confirm residence abroad, such as an employment contract, a foreign tax return or a tenancy agreement for accommodation abroad.
In practice, this means that anyone planning to use tax relief for returning to Poland should think about documentation in advance. The issue is often not only the absence of a residence certificate, but also the lack of a consistent evidential record showing where the taxpayer actually lived and where their centre of vital interests was located. This is also reflected in recent individual tax rulings and court judgments, where both tax authorities and courts focus primarily on the taxpayer’s real centre of life rather than only on the declared period spent abroad.
Tax relief for returning to Poland in practice: what tax rulings and court judgments show
The practice of the Polish tax authorities shows that, in cases involving tax relief for returning to Poland, the decisive factor is not the fact of long-term work abroad, but a genuine change of tax residence. The authorities examine whether the taxpayer actually moved their centre of vital interests outside Poland and then later moved it back. Specific life circumstances are becoming increasingly important, especially the place where the closest family lived, whether the taxpayer had a home in Poland and whether the documents confirming residence abroad form a consistent picture.
A good example is individual tax ruling no. 0115-KDIT2.4011.725.2025.2.KC issued by the Director of the National Revenue Information Service (KIS). The case concerned a taxpayer who had worked in Norway for eleven years and wanted to claim the relief after returning to Poland. The authority found the taxpayer’s position incorrect. Based on the facts presented, despite working abroad, the taxpayer’s centre of personal interests had remained in Poland, among other things because his wife and children stayed there. The length of stay abroad alone was therefore not enough to confirm that an effective change of tax residence had taken place.
A similar approach can be seen in tax ruling no. 0113-KDWPT.4011.294.2025.3.ASZ, concerning a taxpayer who had worked in the United Kingdom for eleven years. In that case as well, the authority concluded that tax relief for returning to Poland was not available because the taxpayer’s centre of personal interests had continued to be in Poland. Once again, family ties were decisive, including the fact that the taxpayer’s wife and children remained in the country.
This approach is even clearer in case law. In the judgment of the Voivodeship Administrative Court in Gdańsk, case no. I SA/Gd 708/25, the court confirmed that long-term work abroad does not by itself determine entitlement to the relief. The case concerned a woman who had worked in the Netherlands for several years. The Polish tax authority, and later the court, concluded that she had not effectively transferred her centre of vital interests there, because her son remained in Poland and she also had a flat in Poland. As a result, she did not meet the conditions required to apply the relief.
These rulings lead to important conclusions for people planning a return to Poland. The authorities do not limit themselves to checking the moving date or the period of foreign employment. They examine the taxpayer’s whole life situation, including family relationships, where the closest relatives live, owned assets and everyday functioning. In practice, even several years of working abroad do not automatically give the right to the preference if the taxpayer’s most important personal and economic ties still connected them with Poland.
How to prepare safely before claiming the relief
When it comes to tax relief for returning to Poland, consistency of facts is essential. The taxpayer should be able to demonstrate not only that they stayed abroad, but also that their centre of vital interests was actually located there. In practice, it is worth organising:
- documents confirming residence and work abroad,
- foreign tax returns and tax settlements,
- tenancy agreements or other documents relating to accommodation abroad,
- the dates of family relocation,
- the dates when professional activity was closed down or transferred,
- information about bank accounts, assets and other lasting connections.
This is particularly important for entrepreneurs and people earning income from multiple sources, because in such cases the factual situation is usually more complex than in a standard employment relationship.
Tax relief for returning to Poland and entrepreneurs
From a business perspective, one more point should be highlighted: tax relief for returning to Poland also applies to income from business activity, but only under certain forms of taxation. The Ministry of Finance states that this includes business activity taxed under the progressive scale, flat tax, lump-sum taxation or the IP Box regime. This means that for an entrepreneur returning to Poland, not only the relocation itself matters, but also the way income is taxed after the move.
In practice, this is often where a broader analysis is needed. Tax residence, foreign-source income, double tax agreement rules, the business model used in Poland and the way the return is documented should all be assessed together rather than separately.
The key conclusion: facts matter more than declarations
Tax relief for returning to Poland remains a beneficial solution for people who genuinely transfer their tax residence to Poland. However, it is not a preference that can be applied safely based only on the belief that several years abroad are enough. The Polish tax authorities examine the taxpayer’s real life circumstances, especially the date of the actual return and the location of the centre of vital interests.
That is why, before filing a return, it is worth answering three questions: when did the change of tax residence actually occur, which documents confirm it and whether the entire life situation is consistent with that date. In matters involving tax relief for returning to Poland, foreign income and tax residence, it is safer to analyse the facts before filing the annual tax return than only after receiving questions from the Polish tax office.
If you have any questions regarding this topic or if you are in need for any additional information – please do not hesitate to contact us:
CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIPS DEPARTMENT
ELŻBIETA NARON
Head of Customer Relationships
Department / Senior Manager
getsix® Group
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