Poland: Poland introduces new R&D tax incentives

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Poland: Poland introduces new R&D tax incentives

Dziedzic

Monika Marta Dziedzic

From January 1 2016, Polish tax resident companies can make an extra deduction from their tax base for expenditure incurred on research and development (R&D).

R&D is defined as the creative activity including scientific studies or development works, carried out systematically to increase the resources of knowledge and use of knowledge resources to create new applications. The regulations also provide definitions of scientific studies (basic research, applied research, industrial research) and development works.

The new R&D tax relief provides a reduction of the tax base by:

  • 30% of wages and social contributions of employees employed to carry out research and development (irrespective of the size of the company); and

  • 10% or 20% in the case of:

    • purchase of commodities and raw materials;

    • expert opinions, research and similar activities;

    • payments for use of research equipment; and

    • depreciation of intangible assets and fixed assets, excluding passenger cars, buildings and constructions.

Micro-enterprises or small and medium-sized enterprises are entitled to a deduction of 20%. Larger entities are entitled to a deduction of 10% of expenditure.

R&D tax relief is available to taxpayers who:

  • incur non-refundable R&D qualified costs;

  • did not carry out business activity within a special economic zone in a given tax year;

  • identify R&D costs in records kept for income tax purposes; and

  • have concluded an agreement with a scientific unit (this requirement refers to expenditure incurred on basic research defined as original research, experimental or theoretical works, undertaken mainly to acquire new knowledge without any direct commercial application or use in view.

Deductions shall be made in a tax return in relation to the tax year in which the qualified costs were incurred. If the taxpayer suffers a tax loss or if the taxpayer's income is lower than the amount of allowed deduction, then deductions – in the entire amount or in the remaining part – can be made in tax returns in relation to three tax years immediately following the year in which the taxpayer took or will be able to take the deduction.

New regulations also introduce a totally new concept for Poland. A capital gain on the disposal of the qualifying minimum 10% participation held for a minimum two years in a defined R&D company may be exempt from corporate profits tax. The shares must be acquired in 2016 or 2017. The exemption applies to corporations and limited partnerships which invest at least 75% of their assets in defined financial instruments. Despite some limitations, this is possibly a sign of a broader participation exemption in Poland.

Monika Marta Dziedzic (monika.dziedzic@mddp.pl)

MDDP, Poland

Tel: +48 22 322 68 88

Website: www.mddp.pl

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

In looking at the impact of taxation, money won't always be all there is to it
Australia’s Tax Practitioners Board is set to kick off 2026 with a new secretary to head the administrative side of its regulatory activities.
Ireland’s Department of Finance reported increased income tax, VAT and corporation tax receipts from 2024; in other news, it’s understood that HSBC has agreed to pay the French treasury to settle a tax investigation
The Australian Taxation Office believes the Swedish furniture company has used TP to evade paying tax it owes
Supermarket chain Morrisons is facing a £17 million ($23 million) tax bill; in other news, Donald Trump has cut proposed tariffs
The controversial deal will allow US-parented groups to be carved out from key aspects of pillar two
Awards
ITR invites tax firms, in-house teams, and tax professionals to make submissions for the 2027 World Tax rankings and the 2026 ITR Tax Awards globally
Pillar two was ‘weakened’ when it altered from a multinational convention agreement to simply national domestic law, Federico Bertocchi also argued
Imposing the tax on virtual assets is a measure that appears to have no legal, economic or statistical basis, one expert told ITR
The EU has seemingly capitulated to the US’s ‘side-by-side’ demands. This may be a win for the US, but the uncertainty has only just begun for pillar two
Gift this article