IKZE Guide in English: Poland's Tax-Deductible Retirement Account
English-language guide to IKZE. How the tax deduction works, contribution limits for 2026, investment strategies, and step-by-step setup for English speakers.
7 min czytaniaIKZE Guide in English: Poland's Tax-Deductible Retirement Account
IKZE (Indywidualne Konto Zabezpieczenia Emerytalnego) translates to Individual Retirement Security Account. It is Poland's only investment account where contributions directly reduce your taxable income. Think of it as a simplified version of a US Traditional IRA or a UK personal pension: you get a tax break when you put money in, the investments grow tax-free inside the account, and you pay a reduced tax rate (10%) when you take money out in retirement.
The IKZE pitch in one paragraph
You contribute up to 9,388.80 PLN per year (2026 limit; higher for self-employed). That contribution reduces your taxable income, saving you 12-32% in tax immediately depending on your bracket. Inside the account, your investments grow without any capital gains or dividend tax. When you withdraw after age 65, you pay a flat 10% tax on the entire withdrawal, regardless of how much it has grown. If you contributed in the 32% bracket, you effectively paid 32% less tax on the money going in and only 10% on the money coming out: a 22-percentage-point advantage.
Who can open IKZE
Anyone who is a Polish tax resident. No age minimum (though you must be at least 16 with earned income). No maximum age. Polish citizens and foreign nationals with PESEL and tax residency both qualify.
One IKZE per person. You cannot split contributions across multiple IKZE accounts.
Contribution limits for 2026
| Status | Annual limit |
|---|---|
| Employed (UoP) | 9,388.80 PLN |
| Self-employed (B2B / JDG) | 14,083.20 PLN |
The self-employed limit is 1.8x the standard limit, reflecting the absence of employer-sponsored pension benefits.
Step-by-step: opening and using IKZE
1. Choose a provider
| Provider type | Examples | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Brokerage (rachunek maklerski) | mBank, Bos, XTB | ETF and stock investors |
| Bank deposit | PKO BP, ING | Ultra-conservative savers |
| Mutual fund (TFI) | NN Investment Partners, PKO TFI | Those wanting managed funds |
| Insurance | Various | Generally avoid (high fees) |
For most people: Open a brokerage IKZE at mBank eMakler or Bos. This gives you access to XETRA-listed global ETFs (VWCE, IWDA) with reasonable commission rates.
2. Open the account
Apply online. Provide PESEL, personal details, Polish address, and sign the IKZE agreement. Processing takes 1-3 business days. You will declare that you do not hold another IKZE elsewhere.
3. Contribute
Transfer PLN from your bank account to the IKZE. You can contribute any amount up to the annual limit, in one lump sum or multiple transfers throughout the year.
Deadline: Contributions must arrive in the IKZE account by December 31 to count for that tax year.
4. Invest
Buy your chosen investments. For simplicity and long-term growth, a single global ETF is optimal:
- VWCE (Vanguard FTSE All-World, TER 0.22%)
- IWDA (iShares MSCI World, TER 0.20%)
One purchase per year, immediately after contributing. Total annual effort: approximately 15 minutes.
5. Claim the tax deduction
On your annual PIT tax return (filed by April 30):
- PIT-36/37: Enter IKZE contributions in the deductions section
- PIT-36L (liniowy): Same process
- PIT-28 (ryczalt): Same process
The tax office applies the deduction and either reduces your tax owed or increases your refund.
Withdrawal rules in detail
Qualifying withdrawal (after age 65 + 5 years of contributions)
The entire account balance is taxed at a flat 10%. The broker withholds this automatically.
Example: IKZE balance at age 65: 400,000 PLN. Tax: 40,000 PLN. You receive: 360,000 PLN.
You can withdraw in full or in scheduled instalments (periodic payments over years). Instalment withdrawals are also taxed at 10%.
Early withdrawal (before age 65)
The full withdrawal amount is added to your taxable income for that year and taxed at your marginal rate:
- 12% bracket: Pay 12% on the entire withdrawal
- 32% bracket: Pay up to 32%
Additionally, you must "repay" the tax deductions you received over the years (the deduction is reversed). This makes early withdrawal extremely costly.
Death of the IKZE holder
The account passes to designated beneficiaries. The beneficiary pays 10% flat tax on the inherited amount, the same as a qualifying retirement withdrawal. This is advantageous compared to regular inheritance tax for larger amounts.
Tax deduction example with refund reinvestment
A sophisticated approach: reinvest the IKZE tax refund into your IKE or taxable brokerage account.
Year 1:
- IKZE contribution: 9,388.80 PLN into VWCE
- Tax refund (32% bracket): 3,004 PLN
- Reinvest 3,004 PLN into IKE
After 25 years:
- IKZE grows to ~590,000 PLN (withdraw at 10% = 531,000 PLN net)
- Reinvested tax refunds grow to ~150,000 PLN in IKE (tax-free)
- Total value: 681,000 PLN from 9,388.80 PLN annual out-of-pocket
The effective annual cost to you is only 6,384.80 PLN (contribution minus tax refund), making the actual return on your out-of-pocket investment even higher.
Common questions
Can I have both IKE and IKZE? Yes. They are separate accounts with separate limits. You can and should use both.
What if I switch from UoP to B2B? Your contribution limit adjusts for the new year. You can contribute up to the B2B limit starting January 1 of the year after you become self-employed.
Can I transfer IKZE between providers? Yes, without tax consequences. The receiving institution handles the transfer.
What if I move abroad? You can keep the IKZE open but generally cannot make new contributions if you are no longer a Polish tax resident. Tax treatment on withdrawal depends on the applicable tax treaty.
Use Freenance to track your IKZE contributions, tax refunds, and portfolio growth over time. Seeing the cumulative impact of the tax deduction reinforces why IKZE should be a core part of every Polish investor's strategy.
Related Articles
- IKZE Guide: Tax Deduction Explained — Deeper dive into the tax mechanics
- IKE vs IKZE Comparison — Which to choose if you can only fund one
- IKE Guide — The tax-free complement to IKZE
Want full control over your finances?
Try Freenance for free