PCC tax — 2% on secondary market purchases
2% of the purchase price on all resale transactions. Paid by the buyer. Non-negotiable. Collected by the notary at signing. First-time buyers who have never owned property anywhere in Poland or abroad may be eligible for a PCC exemption under certain conditions — this requires individual verification with a legal specialist before relying on it.
Notary fee (taksa notarialna)
Regulated by Polish law on a decreasing scale, capped at PLN 10,000 plus 23% VAT. Indicative fees for Warsaw transactions in 2026:
- PLN 400,000 purchase → approximately PLN 2,370 incl. VAT
- PLN 600,000 purchase → approximately PLN 3,270 incl. VAT
- PLN 900,000 purchase → approximately PLN 4,270 incl. VAT
- PLN 1,200,000 purchase → approximately PLN 5,270 incl. VAT
Always request a written fee estimate from the notary before signing anything. Notaries occasionally also charge for preparing the deed text separately — confirm what is included.
Land register entry fee — PLN 200 (fixed)
The notary files the application to update the Księga Wieczysta on the buyer's behalf. This is a court fee, not a notary fee. Fixed at PLN 200 regardless of transaction size.
Power of attorney stamp duty — PLN 17
If a power of attorney is used by a remote buyer, the POA stamp duty is PLN 17. The POA itself must be executed before a notary in the buyer's home country, apostilled under the Hague Convention, and translated into Polish by a sworn translator — typically adding PLN 500–1,500 to the total.
Legal representation
Not mandatory under Polish law, but essential for every foreign buyer. A notary is a neutral officer — their role is to ensure the transaction is legally correct, not to protect the specific buyer's interests. An independent Polish lawyer reviews the contract, checks the land register, verifies seller title and coordinates the process in English. Fees: typically PLN 2,000–5,000 depending on complexity. For buyers completing remotely, this is one of the most efficient protections in the entire cost stack.
Agency commission
If a real estate agent assists in finding the property, commission on Warsaw secondary market transactions is typically 2–3% from the buyer's side. Developer sales are usually agent-free. On a PLN 750,000 apartment with a 2.5% commission, that is PLN 18,750.
MSWiA permit — non-EU buyers where applicable
Non-EU nationals purchasing a standalone house where they individually own the land beneath it require a Ministry of Interior permit (PLN 1,570 stamp duty, up to two months processing). For apartment purchases in multi-unit buildings — no permit is required regardless of nationality. This covers the majority of Warsaw investment transactions.
The most often overlooked item
Currency exchange spread. Most foreign buyers convert EUR, GBP or USD into PLN. The spread between bank rates and the mid-market rate is significant at scale. On a PLN 800,000 purchase, a 1% spread is PLN 8,000. Using a currency specialist rather than a standard bank transfer often recovers meaningful savings on larger transactions — the planning effort is minimal relative to the saving.