Student Loan vs Working While Studying in Poland — Full Comparison
Should you take a student loan or work part-time while studying in Poland? Compare costs, benefits, and real numbers to make the right choice.
10 min czytaniaThe Classic Student Dilemma — Borrow or Work?
You are studying in Poland and money is getting tight. Parents help as much as they can, scholarships do not always cover everything, and life in a big Polish city is expensive. You face the classic choice: take out a student loan (kredyt studencki) or get a job?
The answer is not as obvious as it might seem. Both options have clear pros and cons, and the best choice depends on your specific situation. Let us break it down.
How Student Loans Work in Poland
The kredyt studencki is a preferential loan offered by selected banks (PKO BP, Pekao, Bank Polskiej Spoldzielczosci) with government-subsidized interest rates.
Key Parameters (2026):
- Monthly amount: 400, 600, 800, or 1,000 PLN — you choose
- Disbursement period: up to the entire duration of your studies (max 6 years)
- Repayment starts: 2 years after graduation
- Repayment period: twice the disbursement period
- Interest rate: very low — half of the NBP rediscount rate (approximately 2.8-3.5% annually in 2026)
- Forgiveness: possibility of 20-50% loan forgiveness for excellent academic results
Eligibility Requirements:
- Active student or doctoral student status
- Family income per person below the threshold (approximately 3,500 PLN net in 2026)
- Age up to 30 (students) or 35 (doctoral students)
- A guarantor (parent, guardian) or BGK guarantee required
Working While Studying — Options and Realities
Umowa Zlecenie — The Student Gold Standard
As a student under 26 on a civil contract (umowa zlecenie), you are exempt from ZUS social security contributions. This means you receive practically the entire gross amount. At 30 PLN/hour working 15 hours per week:
- Monthly earnings: approximately 1,800 PLN net
- ZUS contributions: 0 PLN
- PIT (income tax): 0 PLN (youth tax relief)
- Actual take-home: 1,800 PLN
Part-Time Employment Contract
A regular employment contract offers more stability but includes ZUS deductions:
- Half of minimum wage: approximately 2,350 PLN gross
- Take-home: approximately 1,900-2,000 PLN (no PIT thanks to youth relief, but ZUS is deducted)
Other Income Sources
- Freelancing — tutoring (40-80 PLN/hour), graphic design, programming, translations
- Paid internships — 2,000 to 4,000 PLN gross, especially in IT and finance
- Remote work — customer service, content writing, social media management
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Criterion | Student Loan | Working While Studying |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly amount | 400-1,000 PLN | 1,000-3,000+ PLN |
| Cost | Low interest (~3%) | Time (10-20h weekly) |
| Impact on studies | None | Can be significant |
| CV building | No | Yes |
| Work experience | None | Valuable |
| Post-graduation debt | Yes (up to tens of thousands PLN) | None |
| Availability | Must meet criteria | Depends on job market |
| Stress | Low day-to-day, higher after graduation | Can be higher daily |
When Does a Student Loan Make Sense?
- You study a demanding program — medicine, law, architecture. Working 20 hours per week can genuinely threaten your grades
- You plan to have part of the loan forgiven — if you can graduate with excellent results, you may get 20-50% forgiven
- You need financial stability — a regular monthly amount regardless of job availability
- Your family has a low income — you meet the criteria and the interest rate is genuinely low
- You are entering a high-paying profession — repaying 40,000-60,000 PLN is realistic on a salary of 8,000+ PLN net
When Is Working the Better Choice?
- You can find work in your field — an industry internship is worth more than avoiding debt. Experience has long-term value
- You have a flexible class schedule — weekend studies or light days that you can fill with work
- You value financial independence — earning your own money feels different from borrowing
- You do not want post-graduation debt — psychologically, debt can be burdensome even when it is cheap
- Rates in your field are good — IT, marketing, design — you can earn well even during studies
Option Three: Do Both
You do not have to choose. Many students combine a student loan with part-time work:
- The loan covers fixed costs (rent, utilities) — 800-1,000 PLN
- Work covers variable expenses and allows saving
- Less financial pressure — you do not need to accept every gig at any rate
This can be the optimal strategy, especially if you want to work in your field (where starting rates might be lower) without stressing about survival.
What About Saving?
Regardless of which option you choose, try to set aside even small amounts. Even 100-200 PLN per month makes a difference over time. The key is awareness — knowing how much you earn, how much you spend, and where savings are possible.
Tools like Freenance help you stay on top of this — import transactions from your bank, see spending categories, and track whether your financial situation improves month over month.
Real Numbers — What Does a Student Loan Actually Cost?
Let us assume you take 800 PLN monthly for 5 years:
- Total amount received: 48,000 PLN
- Interest rate: ~3% annually
- Repayment period: 10 years (after 2-year grace period)
- Monthly installment: approximately 460-480 PLN
- Total interest cost: approximately 8,000-10,000 PLN
If you manage to get 20% forgiven, you repay 38,400 PLN instead of 48,000 PLN. Interest is lower, and the installment drops to approximately 370 PLN.
For perspective: 370-480 PLN per month over 10 years after graduation is an amount most graduates can handle — especially since repayment begins 2 years after finishing studies, when you should already be working.
FAQ
Does a student loan appear on my credit report (BIK)?
Yes, the student loan is reported to BIK (Poland's credit bureau). But regular repayment builds a positive credit history, which can actually help when applying for a mortgage later.
Can I work and have a student loan at the same time?
Yes, there is no prohibition. The student loan requires meeting your family's income criteria, not your personal earnings from part-time work (though this can change — verify current conditions).
What if I cannot find a job after graduation and cannot make payments?
You can apply for a payment suspension of up to 12 months. In extreme cases, you may apply for forgiveness due to a difficult life situation. But these are emergency scenarios — it is better to plan ahead.
Which option is better financially in the long term?
If working does not negatively impact your grades and gives you professional experience — working is usually better. Experience equals a higher first salary, which means faster recovery of any costs. But if work threatens your results in a demanding program — a student loan is a sensible investment in your future.
Want full control over your finances?
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