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Poland visa options for India passport holders

Tourist / short stay

Visa required

Arrange a visa at a consulate or embassy before travelling.

Visa types & longer-stay routes for Poland

Rules are written for non-EU/EEA/Swiss "third-country" nationals; EU/EEA/Swiss citizens enjoy free movement and do not need these visas or permits. (ETIAS travel authorisation for visa-exempt visitors is scheduled to launch in late 2026 and is not yet in force as of June 2026.)

  • Most nomadsTourist

    Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C)

    Up to 90 days within any 180-day period

    Insurance
    Required— travel medical insurance covering at least EUR 30,000, valid across the Schengen Area for the whole stay and covering emergency hospitalisation and repatriation (per gov.pl).
    Good for
    Tourists, visitors and short-term business travellers from visa-required third countries staying in Poland and the wider Schengen Area for a short period.
    Requirement
    Valid passport, completed application, proof of accommodation, sufficient funds, return travel and purpose of stay; biometrics via consulate/visa centre. Visa fee EUR 90 from 1 Jan 2026 (plus visa-centre service fee).
  • Most nomadsBusiness

    Temporary Residence Permit for Business Activity (Self-Employment)

    Temporary residence card (Karta Pobytu) issued for up to 3 years, renewable

    Insurance
    Required— health insurance covering the applicant in Poland (NFZ or qualifying private medical insurance). Verify specifics.
    Good for
    Foreigners running a registered sole proprietorship (CEIDG) or holding board/management roles in a Polish company — the realistic route for self-employed and remote/freelance workers, as Poland has NO dedicated digital-nomad visa.
    Requirement
    Registered Polish business plus financial conditions — generally company income of at least 12x the average monthly gross salary in the relevant voivodeship in the prior tax year, OR employing at least 2 full-time workers (Polish/settled status), OR demonstrating resources to meet these; personal income above the social-assistance threshold also required. Stamp duty approx. PLN 340. Filed digitally via the MOS portal. Requirements vary by voivodeship — verify locally.
  • Most nomadsWork

    National Long-Stay Visa (Type D) — Work / Study / Family

    More than 90 days up to a maximum of 1 year (plus up to 90 days/180 in other Schengen states)

    Insurance
    Required— medical travel insurance of at least EUR 30,000 valid for the intended stay, OR Polish public health insurance as a substitute (per gov.pl).
    Good for
    Third-country nationals coming to Poland for more than 90 days for employment, study, business or family reunification; the standard entry document before obtaining a residence card.
    Requirement
    Document supporting the purpose of stay — e.g. work permit/employer offer, university acceptance letter, or family ties — plus proof of funds and accommodation. National visa fee EUR 200 (~USD 235) from 1 Jan 2026.
  • Most nomadsWork

    EU Blue Card (Highly Qualified Employment)

    Temporary residence/work permit issued for the contract period plus 3 months, up to a maximum of 3 years, renewable

    Insurance
    Required— health coverage in Poland (public NFZ insurance via employment, or qualifying private medical insurance). Verify specifics.
    Good for
    Highly qualified non-EU professionals with a higher-education qualification (or equivalent experience, allowed for some IT roles) and a qualifying job offer or contract with a Polish employer.
    Requirement
    Qualifying employment contract meeting the minimum salary threshold — PLN 13,355.34 gross/month (150% of the average national salary, effective 9 Feb 2026); labour-market test abolished from 1 June 2025. Verify current figure as the threshold is updated annually.
  • Work

    Seasonal Work Route (Type S permit + visa)

    Up to 9 months per calendar year

    Insurance
    Required— health coverage for the stay (via employment registration/NFZ or qualifying medical insurance). Verify specifics.
    Good for
    Workers in agriculture, horticulture and tourism doing temporary seasonal jobs for a Polish employer.
    Requirement
    Seasonal work permit obtained by the employer from the district (powiat) labour office before work begins; application fee approx. PLN 100. Entry via Type D national visa (D-05b) where required.
  • Most nomadsStudy

    Student National Visa & Residence Permit

    Type D visa up to 1 year for entry, then temporary residence permit for the duration of studies

    Insurance
    Required— medical travel insurance of at least EUR 30,000 for the visa, then Polish health insurance for residence (voluntary NFZ for non-EU students at approx. PLN 55/month, or qualifying private cover).
    Good for
    Non-EU students enrolled at a Polish university or educational institution for a full degree or course longer than 90 days.
    Requirement
    Letter of acceptance from a recognised Polish institution and proof of sufficient funds (official minimum approx. PLN 776/month for a single person after living costs; for the residence permit, ~PLN 1,010/month plus rent over the stay — consulates often expect higher). Verify current amounts.
  • Most nomadsResidence

    Temporary Residence Permit (General — Work / Study / Family)

    Issued for up to 3 years (Karta Pobytu czasowego), renewable

    Insurance
    Required— health insurance covering the applicant in Poland (NFZ via employment/study, or qualifying private medical insurance). Verify specifics.
    Good for
    Third-country nationals already in Poland who intend to stay longer than 3 months for work, study, business or family reunification; applied for after/with the Type D visa.
    Requirement
    Documented purpose of stay (employment, enrolment, family ties), stable income and place of residence; since 1 Jan 2026 applications are digital-only via the MOS portal (signed with a qualified e-signature/Trusted Profile). Fees rose in 2026: approx. PLN 340 stamp duty + PLN 100 residence-card fee (~PLN 440 total).
  • Residence

    Permanent Residence / EU Long-Term Resident Permit

    Indefinite right of stay (card renewed every few years for ID purposes); no separate work permit needed

    Insurance
    Recommended— permanent/long-term residents typically access NFZ public healthcare; private cover advisable for gaps. Verify eligibility.
    Good for
    Long-settled foreigners seeking indefinite stay — via Permanent Residence (e.g. Polish heritage/Pole's Card, marriage, refugee grounds) or the EU Long-Term Resident permit after years of legal stay.
    Requirement
    Generally 5 years of continuous legal residence (shorter for some categories); the EU Long-Term Resident route also requires stable and regular income (3-year record) and confirmed Polish at B1 level via a state-recognised certificate (or qualifying Polish diploma). Filed via the MOS portal. Verify criteria.
  • Transit

    Airport Transit Visa (Type A)

    Airside transit only; does not permit entry into Poland or the Schengen Area

    Insurance
    Required— not specified as mandatory for pure airside transit, but travel/medical cover is advisable. Verify per consulate.
    Good for
    Nationals of certain countries who must pass through the international transit zone of a Polish airport when changing flights, without entering the Schengen Area.
    Requirement
    Valid passport, onward flight booking, and a visa/entry document (where required) for the final destination.

General guidance only, not legal or immigration advice; figures and rules change — verify with the Polish consulate or Office for Foreigners (Urząd do Spraw Cudzoziemców) before relying on them. Last checked: 2026-06.

Last verified June 2026

Routes that depend on your nationality

Some of Poland’s long-stay routes are open only to citizens of specific countries. Here’s where a India passport stands:

  • Working Holiday Programme (Poland)

    Not open to India passport holders

    Bilateral youth-mobility scheme run by Poland's Ministry of Family, Labour and Social Policy. Open only to citizens of the 8 partner countries/territories: New Zealand (in force 2008), Australia (2014), Taiwan (2014), Japan (2015), Chile (2017), Republic of Korea (2018), Argentina (2019) and Peru (signed 2020). Applicant must be at least 18 and not yet 31 at time of visa application; grants a national long-stay (type D) visa for up to 12 months. Annual visa quotas, language/education conditions and work-duration limits vary by individual bilateral agreement (e.g. NZ allows work for the same employer up to 6 months vs. 3 months for most). Full official 8-country list verified on gov.pl (Ministry of Family, Labour and Social Policy).

Visa-free isn’t insurance-free

Whatever route you take into Poland, your entry stamp never includes health cover. Many longer-stay visas also require proof of insurance before they’re granted. That part is on you — and it’s what we actually do.

IndiaPoland: frequently asked

Do India passport holders need a visa to visit Poland?
Visa required. Arrange a visa at a consulate or embassy before travelling. Always confirm with the official source before booking.
Can a India passport holder live or work long-term in Poland?
Yes, via a long-stay visa. Poland has 9 documented visa types covering work, study, residence and — where it exists — digital-nomad routes.
Do I need travel insurance for Poland?
Entry to Poland never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several Poland visas also require proof of insurance before they're granted.

Last updated

Visa rules can change at short notice and depend on your purpose of travel, length of stay and onward tickets. Always confirm with the destination’s embassy or the IATA Travel Centre before you book. Visa-free entry never includes travel health insurance. That’s still on you.