Student Budget Tips: Managing Money at University in Poland
Practical budgeting guide for Polish university students. Typical expenses, scholarship income, part-time work, and how to avoid common financial mistakes.
7 min czytaniaStudent Budget Tips: Managing Money at University in Poland
University years are when most people first manage their own money independently. Polish students have unique advantages (free public university, relatively low living costs, access to student discounts) and unique challenges (limited income, social spending pressure, no financial education in the curriculum). Getting your finances right at 19-20 sets habits that persist for decades.
Typical student expenses in Poland (2026)
Living in a dorm (akademik)
| Expense | Monthly cost |
|---|---|
| Dorm room (shared, public university) | 400-700 PLN |
| Dorm room (single) | 700-1,200 PLN |
| Food (cooking + occasional eating out) | 800-1,200 PLN |
| Phone plan | 30-50 PLN (student plans) |
| Public transport (student pass) | 50-70 PLN |
| Textbooks and supplies | 50-100 PLN |
| Entertainment and social | 200-400 PLN |
| Personal care | 100-150 PLN |
| Total | 1,630-3,170 PLN |
Renting a shared apartment
| Expense | Monthly cost |
|---|---|
| Room in shared flat (pokój) | 800-1,500 PLN (varies by city) |
| Utilities share | 150-250 PLN |
| Internet share | 30-50 PLN |
| Food | 800-1,200 PLN |
| Transport | 50-70 PLN |
| Entertainment | 200-400 PLN |
| Total | 2,030-3,470 PLN |
City matters enormously. A shared room in Warsaw costs 1,200-1,500 PLN while the same in Lublin or Rzeszow costs 600-900 PLN. Students at regional universities have significantly lower costs.
Income sources for students
Stypendium (scholarships)
- Stypendium socjalne (needs-based): 400-1,200 PLN/month depending on family income. Apply through your university's dziekanat.
- Stypendium rektora (merit-based): 500-1,500 PLN/month for top academic performers (typically top 10% of students).
- Stypendium ministra (ministerial): Rare, for exceptional academic or sports achievement. Up to 2,000 PLN/month.
- Zapomoga (emergency aid): One-time payment of 1,000-3,000 PLN for unexpected financial hardship.
Key tip: Apply for stypendium socjalne even if you think you might not qualify. The income thresholds are higher than many students expect, and the application costs nothing.
Part-time work
- Umowa zlecenie (civil contract): Most common for students. No ZUS if you are under 26 and studying. Typical hourly rate: 30-40 PLN for basic jobs, 40-80 PLN for tutoring or IT work.
- Campus jobs: Library, administration, research assistant. Often 15-20 hours/week.
- Tutoring: High demand for English, maths, and science tutoring. 50-100 PLN/hour.
- Freelancing: Web development, graphic design, writing. Variable income but potentially high rates.
- Retail/hospitality: Seasonal work in restaurants, shops. 28.10 PLN/hour minimum wage.
Family support
Many Polish students receive regular support from parents. There is no shame in this — public university is free specifically so that families can invest in their children's education rather than paying tuition.
The student budget framework
Step 1: Calculate your guaranteed monthly income
Add up: scholarship + family support + any guaranteed work income. This is your baseline.
Example: Stypendium socjalne (600 PLN) + family support (1,000 PLN) + part-time work (800 PLN) = 2,400 PLN/month.
Step 2: Cover essentials first
Housing + food + transport + phone = your non-negotiable expenses. In the example above: dorm (600 PLN) + food (900 PLN) + transport (55 PLN) + phone (35 PLN) = 1,590 PLN.
Step 3: Allocate the remainder
2,400 - 1,590 = 810 PLN for everything else:
- 200 PLN: Entertainment (one night out per week on a budget)
- 100 PLN: Personal care
- 100 PLN: Clothing/supplies
- 200 PLN: Savings (yes, even as a student)
- 210 PLN: Buffer for unexpected expenses
The 200 PLN savings habit
Saving even 200 PLN/month as a student builds the habit that matters more than the amount. Over 5 years of university (including masters), 200 PLN/month at 5% interest becomes approximately 13,600 PLN — a solid start to a post-graduation emergency fund.
Money-saving hacks for Polish students
- Student discounts everywhere: Flash your legitymacja studencka for 50% off public transport, discounted cinema tickets, museum entry, and software (Microsoft 365, GitHub, JetBrains are free for students).
- Cook in batches: A week's worth of lunches costs 50-80 PLN when batch-cooked (rice, chicken, vegetables). The same meals at the university canteen cost 150-200 PLN.
- Used textbooks: Buy from upper-year students, use Allegro for secondhand books, or check if the university library has course copies.
- Free entertainment: University events, city parks, hiking, board game nights. Warsaw, Krakow, and Wroclaw have rich free cultural offerings.
- Student bank accounts: Most Polish banks (mBank, ING, PKO BP) offer free accounts for students with no minimum balance or monthly fee.
Common financial mistakes
- Lifestyle inflation from part-time income: Earning 1,500 PLN from a part-time job does not mean spending 1,500 PLN. Save at least 20%.
- BNPL trap: PayPo and Klarna make it easy to overspend. If you cannot pay cash, you probably should not buy it.
- Ignoring stypendium applications: Many students leave money on the table by not applying for available scholarships.
- No emergency buffer: One unexpected expense (laptop repair, medical bill) without savings means borrowing from friends or credit.
- Comparing yourself to wealthier peers: Some classmates have higher family support or better-paying jobs. Your budget is your own.
Start tracking your spending in Freenance from your first semester. Import your student bank account transactions and see exactly where your money goes. Students who track spending consistently report spending 15-20% less than those who do not.
Related Articles
- Financial Literacy for Students — Building financial knowledge early
- Investing at 18: Beginner's Guide — Starting to invest during university
- Zero-Based Budgeting Guide — The budgeting method that works for tight budgets
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