Airbnb Hosting in Poland 2026: Complete Guide
How to start hosting on Airbnb in Poland. Legal requirements, tax obligations, expected income, and tips for maximising occupancy and reviews.
7 min czytaniaAirbnb Hosting in Poland 2026: Complete Guide
Short-term rental through Airbnb and Booking.com has become a significant income source for property owners in Poland's tourist cities. Warsaw, Krakow, Gdansk, and Wroclaw have thriving short-term rental markets. However, regulations are tightening, tax enforcement is increasing, and competition has grown. Here is what you need to know.
Expected income by city
| City | Avg nightly rate (2-person apartment) | Avg occupancy | Monthly gross income |
|---|---|---|---|
| Krakow (Old Town) | 280-450 PLN | 70-85% | 5,880-11,475 PLN |
| Warsaw (Centre) | 250-400 PLN | 65-80% | 4,875-9,600 PLN |
| Gdansk (Old Town) | 300-500 PLN (summer), 150-250 PLN (winter) | 50-90% (seasonal) | 2,250-13,500 PLN |
| Wroclaw (Centre) | 200-350 PLN | 60-75% | 3,600-7,875 PLN |
Seasonality: Krakow and Gdansk are heavily seasonal. Krakow peaks during summer and around Christmas/New Year. Gdansk sees 80-90% occupancy June-September but drops to 30-40% in winter.
Gross vs net: After platform fees (Airbnb takes 3% from hosts), cleaning costs, supplies, utilities, and maintenance, net income is typically 50-65% of gross.
Legal requirements
Business registration
Operating a short-term rental commercially requires business registration (JDG with PKD code 55.20.Z — holiday and short-stay accommodation). Renting your own apartment occasionally (a few weeks per year) may qualify as private rental (najem prywatny), but regular hosting typically requires formal registration.
Tax obligations
| Tax form | Rate | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Ryczalt 8.5% (up to 100K PLN revenue) | 8.5% | Most common for short-term rental |
| Ryczalt 12.5% (above 100K PLN revenue) | 12.5% | Higher-earning hosts |
| Skala podatkowa 12/32% | Progressive | If you want to deduct costs (renovation, furniture, mortgage interest) |
Ryczalt at 8.5% is the standard choice for Airbnb hosts. You cannot deduct expenses but the low flat rate on gross revenue typically results in lower total tax.
Local regulations
Some Polish cities are considering or have implemented short-term rental regulations:
- Registration requirements: Some cities require registering the property with local authorities
- Building regulations (wspolnota mieszkaniowa): Your building's management board may prohibit or restrict short-term rentals. Check your building rules before starting
- Noise and nuisance complaints: Neighbours can file complaints with the building management or police
Tourist tax (oplata klimatyczna/uzdrowiskowa)
Some Polish cities and resort towns charge a tourist tax (typically 2-5 PLN per person per night). Hosts are responsible for collecting and remitting this tax.
Getting started
Step 1: Prepare the property
- Professional photos: High-quality photos increase bookings by 20-40%. Consider hiring a professional photographer (500-1,000 PLN)
- Essential amenities: Fast WiFi (50+ Mbps), good bedding, kitchen essentials, hair dryer, iron, washing machine
- Self-check-in: Smart lock or lockbox eliminates the need to meet every guest personally
- Welcome guide: Local tips, WiFi password, house rules, emergency contacts
Step 2: Create your listing
List on multiple platforms:
- Airbnb: Largest platform, best for international tourists
- Booking.com: Strong in Europe, especially for business travellers
- Vrbo (Noclegi.pl): Smaller but growing in Poland
Use a channel manager (Guesty, Hospitable, or Beds24) to synchronise calendars across platforms and prevent double bookings.
Step 3: Set pricing
Dynamic pricing tools (PriceLabs, Beyond Pricing) automatically adjust rates based on:
- Local demand and events (concerts, conferences, holidays)
- Day of week (weekends command premium)
- Season
- Competitor pricing
Manual pricing works for casual hosts, but dynamic pricing typically increases revenue by 10-20%.
Costs breakdown
| Cost | Monthly estimate |
|---|---|
| Cleaning (per turnover, 3-4 per month) | 600-1,200 PLN |
| Supplies (toiletries, coffee, etc.) | 100-200 PLN |
| Utilities (extra from guests) | 200-500 PLN |
| Platform fees (3% Airbnb host fee) | 150-300 PLN |
| Maintenance and repairs | 200-500 PLN |
| Laundry | 100-300 PLN |
| Channel manager software | 100-200 PLN |
| Total monthly costs | 1,450-3,200 PLN |
Airbnb vs long-term rental
| Factor | Airbnb | Long-term rental |
|---|---|---|
| Gross income | 40-100% higher | Lower but stable |
| Management effort | High (turnovers, communication, cleaning) | Low (monthly rent collection) |
| Vacancy risk | Higher (seasonal, event-dependent) | Lower (12-month lease) |
| Wear and tear | Higher (frequent guests) | Lower |
| Regulation risk | Increasing restrictions | Stable |
| Tax rate | 8.5% ryczalt | 8.5% ryczalt |
For most property owners, Airbnb makes sense in high-tourism cities (Krakow Old Town, Gdansk Stare Miasto) and long-term rental makes sense everywhere else.
Track your Airbnb income and expenses in Freenance. Separating short-term rental finances from personal finances gives you a clear picture of actual profitability after all costs.
Related Articles
- Buying Apartment for Rental — Investing in rental property
- Small Business Tax in Poland — Tax form options for rental income
- Passive Income Ideas 2026 — Other income strategies
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