Institutional vs Private Rental in Poland — Which Is Worth It?

A comparison of institutional (PRS) and private rental in Poland. Costs, security, tenant and landlord rights, contracts, and taxes.

10 min czytania

Institutional Rental in Poland — A New Standard or Just Marketing?

The Polish rental market is undergoing a transformation. Alongside the traditional model of renting from private landlords, PRS (Private Rented Sector) platforms are emerging — professional companies that build and manage entire buildings dedicated to rental. How does institutional rental differ from private rental? Which is more cost-effective? And what should you look out for when signing a lease?

What Is Institutional Rental?

Institutional rental (najem instytucjonalny) was codified in Polish law in 2017 through an amendment to the Tenant Protection Act (Ustawa o ochronie praw lokatorów). Legally, an institutional rental agreement is a fixed-term contract concluded by a person conducting business activity in the rental of premises, with a mandatory notarial declaration by the tenant to submit to enforcement (vacating the premises after the contract ends).

Institutional Rental in Practice (PRS)

In everyday usage the term "institutional rental" is applied more broadly — to professional rental by companies (investment funds, developers) that:

  • Build purpose-built rental buildings (build-to-rent)
  • Manage professionally (reception, on-site maintenance, mobile app for reports)
  • Offer standardised, fully furnished apartments
  • Operate at scale (dozens or hundreds of units)

Several large PRS platforms operate in Poland: Resi4Rent, LivUp, Vantage Rent, Heimstaden, and Fundusz Mieszkań na Wynajem (PFR Nieruchomości).

What Is Private Rental?

Private rental is the traditional model where an individual apartment owner rents out their property. It accounts for over 90% of the Polish rental market.

Typical Private Rental

  • The landlord owns 1–3 rental properties
  • Manages them personally or through a real-estate agency
  • Occasional tenancy agreement (najem okazjonalny) or standard lease
  • Widely varying standards and furnishings
  • Direct contact with the landlord

Cost Comparison

Monthly Rent

Institutional rental is typically 10–25% more expensive than private rental for comparable locations and standards:

City Private rental (2 rooms, 40–50 m²) Institutional rental (2 rooms)
Warsaw 3,000–4,500 PLN 3,500–5,500 PLN
Kraków 2,500–3,800 PLN 3,000–4,500 PLN
Wrocław 2,300–3,500 PLN 2,800–4,200 PLN
Gdańsk 2,500–3,800 PLN 3,000–4,500 PLN

What Is Included?

Institutional rental — often included in the rent:

  • Full furnishing (bed, wardrobe, sofa, table, desk)
  • Appliances (fridge, washing machine, dishwasher, hob, oven)
  • Internet
  • Apartment insurance
  • Access to common areas (gym, laundry room, co-working space, lounge)
  • Underground parking (in some buildings)
  • On-site maintenance / repair service

Private rental — what is included:

  • Varies enormously — from bare walls to a fully equipped apartment
  • Furniture and appliances depend on the landlord
  • Internet — usually separate
  • Repairs — a matter of negotiation and the contract

Additional Costs

Item Institutional rental Private rental
Deposit 1–2 months' rent 1–3 months' rent
Agent commission None 0–1 month's rent
Notarial declaration 200–400 PLN 200–400 PLN (occasional tenancy)
Utilities (electricity, water, gas) Separate or flat rate Separate
Administrative fees (czynsz) Included in rent Separate (300–800 PLN)

Annual Cost Comparison

Example: 2-room apartment in Warsaw:

Institutional rental:

  • Rent: 4,500 PLN/month (all-inclusive except utilities)
  • Utilities: 300 PLN/month
  • Total: 4,800 PLN/month → 57,600 PLN/year

Private rental:

  • Rent: 3,500 PLN/month
  • Administrative fees: 500 PLN/month
  • Utilities: 400 PLN/month
  • Internet: 60 PLN/month
  • Total: 4,460 PLN/month → 53,520 PLN/year

Difference: approximately 4,000 PLN per year in favour of private rental. But…

Safety and Comfort — Where Institutional Rental Wins

Contract Stability

Institutional rental:

  • The company will not sell the apartment out from under you
  • Predictable renewal terms
  • Clear rent-increase rules (typically inflation indexation, capped at 3–5% annually)
  • Professional legal support

Private rental:

  • The landlord may decide to sell the apartment
  • Rent increases can be arbitrary
  • Risk that the landlord does not declare rental income
  • Communication can be difficult in case of conflict

Maintenance and Repairs

Institutional rental:

  • Dedicated repair service (often 24/7)
  • Reports via mobile app
  • Response time: usually 24–48 hours
  • No debate over who pays — rules are clear in the contract

Private rental:

  • Depends on the landlord — some respond immediately, others take weeks
  • Repairs often done by the landlord's acquaintances (not always professional)
  • Conflicts over who bears the cost of repairs
  • No standardised procedures

Apartment Standard

Institutional rental:

  • Identical standard across all units in the building
  • New finishes and equipment
  • Regular refreshing between tenants
  • Modern features: smart home, air conditioning, mechanical ventilation

Private rental:

  • Enormous variation: from a dated studio to a luxury flat
  • Standard depends entirely on the landlord's taste and budget
  • Furniture and appliances may be old and worn
  • Possibility of negotiating equipment upgrades

Types of Rental Agreements

Institutional tenancy (Art. 19f–19j of the Tenant Protection Act):

  • Fixed term only
  • Requires notarial declaration by the tenant to submit to enforcement (vacating)
  • The landlord does not need to provide alternative housing in case of eviction
  • Faster procedure for recovering the apartment after the contract ends

Occasional tenancy (najem okazjonalny, typical for private rental):

  • Fixed term (max 10 years)
  • Notarial declaration required
  • Tenant must designate an alternative premises they can move to
  • Consent of the alternative premises owner required

Standard tenancy (default):

  • Strongest tenant protection
  • Very limited grounds for landlord termination
  • No notarial declaration required
  • Eviction requires a court order and provision of social housing

Tenant Protection

Tenant protection in Poland is relatively strong:

  • Eviction is not allowed during the protection period (1 November – 31 March) — but this does NOT apply to institutional and occasional tenancies
  • Landlord termination requires justification (for standard tenancies)
  • Deposit cannot exceed 6 months' rent (institutional tenancy) or 12 months (occasional tenancy)

Taxes

The landlord pays income tax on rental revenue:

  • Lump-sum tax (ryczałt): 8.5% on revenue up to 100,000 PLN/year, 12.5% above (the only form available to individuals since 2023)
  • CIT: PRS companies pay standard corporate income tax (9% or 19%)

The tenant does not pay tax, but it is worth confirming that the landlord declares rental income legally — otherwise you have no invoice or receipt for potential claims.

Flexibility

Institutional Rental

  • Changing apartments: easy within the same operator (different size, floor, or building)
  • Contract term: usually 12 months with renewal option
  • Early termination: penalty fees (1–3 months' rent), but the procedure is clear
  • Furnished/unfurnished: some operators offer both

Private Rental

  • Changing apartments: requires finding a new place and a new contract
  • Contract term: negotiable (3–12 months, with extension)
  • Early termination: depends on the contract, can be problematic
  • Furnishing: negotiable with the landlord

Who Is Institutional Rental For?

The Ideal PRS Tenant Profile

  • Expats and foreigners: easier process (professional service, often in English)
  • Young professionals: value convenience and hassle-free living
  • People relocating: fast move-in to a ready apartment
  • Couples and singles: smaller apartments (studios, 2-room units)
  • People who value predictability: clear rules, no surprises

When Private Rental Is Better

  • Families with children: wider selection of 3–4-room apartments
  • Limited budget: cheaper options, especially outside the centre
  • Long-term rental: possibility of negotiating favourable terms
  • Specific locations: PRS is available mainly in the centres of major cities
  • Need for personalisation: you can negotiate changes to the apartment

The Future of the Rental Market in Poland

The PRS market in Poland is growing rapidly but still represents a fraction of the total rental market:

  • 2020: approximately 5,000 PRS apartments
  • 2025: approximately 15,000–20,000 PRS apartments
  • 2030 (forecast): 40,000–60,000 PRS apartments

For comparison, in Germany or the UK institutional rental accounts for 30–50% of the rental market. Poland therefore has enormous growth potential.

  • Co-living: shared housing with private rooms and communal spaces
  • Flexi-living: short-term contracts (from 1 month), something between a hotel and a traditional lease
  • Senior housing: dedicated buildings for seniors (still niche in Poland)
  • Technology: management apps, smart locks, automated billing

How to Choose — A Checklist

Before you decide, answer these questions:

  1. Budget: how much can you spend monthly on housing (all costs)?
  2. Location: is PRS available in your preferred neighbourhood?
  3. Duration: how long do you plan to rent?
  4. Size: how many rooms do you need?
  5. Standard: how important is a new building and modern furnishings?
  6. Flexibility: might you need to change apartments quickly?
  7. Service: do you prefer handling repairs yourself or having a professional maintenance team?

Summary

Institutional rental means convenience, predictability, and professional service — at a higher price. Private rental means flexibility, lower costs, and a wider selection — but with the risk of non-standard situations.

Regardless of which option you choose, keep your housing expenses under control. Rent is usually the largest item in your budget — it is worth tracking how it affects your overall finances. Freenance can help you monitor housing costs in the context of your entire budget and plan whether (and when) you can afford to buy your own place.

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