Poland has a clearly defined cryptocurrency tax framework. Cryptoassets are recognised as a form of property, and profits from their disposal are subject to personal or corporate income tax. For individuals, crypto gains are taxed at a flat 19% rate under capital income rules, while businesses are taxed under standard corporate income tax provisions. The Polish tax authority (Krajowa Administracja Skarbowa) provides explicit guidance on reporting, valuation, and loss treatment.
In Poland, cryptocurrencies are treated as a type of property right (*prawa majątkowe*). They are not considered legal tender or financial instruments, but their disposal is explicitly taxable under the Polish Personal Income Tax (PIT) and Corporate Income Tax (CIT) systems.
Poland’s crypto taxation rules are based on:
Selling crypto for PLN or another fiat currency is a taxable event. Profits must be calculated as the difference between disposal value and acquisition cost.
Crypto-to-crypto exchanges are treated as taxable disposals. Each trade must be valued in PLN at the time of the transaction.
Using crypto to purchase goods or services constitutes a disposal and may generate taxable income.
Crypto received through:
is taxed as income. Subsequent disposal of these assets may also trigger capital income tax.
Companies involved in crypto trading, mining, or services must report crypto income as part of their taxable business revenue.
Individuals pay a flat 19% tax on crypto gains, regardless of income level.
Businesses are taxed under standard CIT rules:
Crypto gains are excluded from progressive PIT brackets and are taxed separately at the flat capital income rate.
Individuals must report crypto gains and costs using the PIT-38 form, even if no tax is due.
Crypto acquisition costs can be carried forward indefinitely until the assets are sold.
Taxpayers should retain:
Crypto losses can offset crypto gains in the same tax category. However, they cannot offset other types of income, such as employment income.
Unrealised costs can be carried forward to future tax years until disposal occurs.
NFTs are treated as property rights. Profits from NFT sales are generally taxed under the same 19% capital income framework.
Airdropped tokens may be taxable as income if received in connection with services or promotional activities.
Income from staking, liquidity pools, or lending may be classified as taxable income. Token swaps can trigger taxable disposal events.
Given Poland’s strict reporting requirements, maintaining accurate transaction histories is essential.
Crypto tax software can help calculate gains, manage cost carryforwards, and prepare PIT-38-compatible reports.
Failure to declare crypto income may result in tax penalties, interest, and fiscal penal liability. Polish tax authorities actively audit crypto activity.
Poland provides one of the clearest crypto tax systems in Europe, with flat-rate taxation and defined reporting rules. Investors and businesses must track transactions carefully, report annually, and ensure proper cost documentation to remain compliant.

In June 2026, JuCoin was flagged for abnormal withdrawal processing, with reports that a significant portion of its reserves consisted of stablecoins issued on its own proprietary chain rather than official versions, raising doubts about reserve transparency. The platform has undergone multiple rebrands, previously suffered losses due to contract vulnerabilities, and has heightened user vigilance regarding exchange security. CoinW, in contrast, has maintained an eight-year track record with zero security incidents. It employs multi-signature technology, MPC-based private key sharding and distributed storage, full-stack risk controls with real-time monitoring, and a publicly verifiable Proof of Reserves (PoR) mechanism to ensure transparent and auditable asset backing. Users are advised to self-check withdrawal conditions on their current platforms, verify PoR, assess operational history, and consider migrating to CoinW, where completing KYC enables secure trading.

On June 1, 2026, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) disclosed that it sold 32 BTC—the company’s first Bitcoin sale since December 2022—to fund preferred stock dividend payments. Although the amount represented only a tiny fraction of its holdings, the transaction created the first visible crack in the long-standing “never sell” narrative.

Abandon mechanical farming and build authentic identities; forge an unbreakable Web3 credit passport through diverse on-chain footprints.