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Understanding how to obtain a criminal record certificate in Poland is essential for anyone facing a job offer, visa application, professional licensing requirement or corporate background check that demands proof of a clean record. The certificate, officially called informacja z Krajowego Rejestru Karnego (KRK), and sometimes referred to as a police clearance certificate, is issued by Poland’s National Criminal Register, maintained by the Ministry of Justice. Applicants can apply through three channels: the e‑KRK electronic platform, in person at a KRK Information Point located in selected courts, or by post. This guide consolidates every procedural step, document, fee and deadline into a single reference for residents, foreign nationals, employers and lawyers practising in Poland.
The Krajowy Rejestr Karny (KRK) is Poland’s centralised database of criminal convictions, maintained under the Ustawa z dnia 24 maja 2000 r. o Krajowym Rejestrze Karnym (Act of 24 May 2000 on the National Criminal Register). The register records final convictions by Polish courts and, where applicable, conviction data received from other EU Member States through the European Criminal Records Information System (ECRIS).
A KRK certificate, formally an “informacja o osobie” (information on a person) or “informacja o podmiocie zbiorowym” (information on a collective entity), confirms whether the subject has any recorded convictions. Common scenarios that require a KRK include:
The issuing authority is the Biuro Informacyjne Krajowego Rejestru Karnego (KRK Information Bureau) at the Ministry of Justice, which operates both the paper‑based and electronic (e‑KRK) issuance channels.
Any natural person with legal capacity may request information about their own criminal record. Polish citizens and permanent residents typically identify themselves using a PESEL number and a valid national ID card (dowód osobisty) or passport. To use the e‑KRK portal, the applicant must hold one of three forms of electronic identification: a Profil Zaufany (Trusted Profile), a kwalifikowany podpis elektroniczny (qualified electronic signature), or a podpis osobisty (personal signature embedded in a new‑format ID card).
Foreign nationals may apply for a KRK certificate concerning their own record in Poland. Because non‑residents rarely hold a PESEL or Profil Zaufany, they typically apply in person at a KRK Information Point or by post using a paper form. Identification is established through a valid passport; a residency card or registration certificate, where held, should also be presented to speed verification. Foreign nationals who do hold a Profil Zaufany, obtainable through selected Polish consulates or the login.gov.pl portal, may use the e‑KRK channel.
Employers may request a KRK certificate only where a specific statutory provision authorises the check. The employee (or candidate) must provide explicit written consent, and the employer must comply with the GDPR and the Polish Act on the Protection of Personal Data. Collecting criminal‑record data without a lawful basis or proper consent exposes the employer to administrative fines and civil liability.
The procedure varies by application channel. Below are the five key steps, followed by a consolidated timeline table.
Before submitting any application, determine which certificate you need. An informacja o osobie covers a natural person; an informacja o podmiocie zbiorowym covers a legal entity. Verify the purpose code required by the requesting institution, the application form asks you to cite the legal basis for the request (e.g., a specific article of the relevant statute). Assemble the documents listed in the Required Documents section below.
The e‑KRK portal is the fastest channel for obtaining a Polish criminal record certificate online. The process works as follows:
Common errors at this stage include entering an incorrect PESEL, omitting the legal‑basis code, or attempting to use an expired Profil Zaufany. Verify all data before submission, corrections after filing require a fresh application and an additional fee.
KRK Information Points (Punkty Informacyjne KRK) operate at selected regional and district courts throughout Poland. To apply in person:
The fee for a paper KRK certificate issued in person is 30 PLN.
Applicants who cannot visit an Information Point or use the e‑KRK portal may submit a paper application by post. The procedure is as follows:
If you cannot apply personally, for instance, because you are abroad, an authorised representative may submit the application on your behalf. Requirements for applying by proxy:
The proxy then follows the in‑person or postal procedure described above, presenting the POA together with the application form, their own ID, and proof of payment.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Prepare documents and ID | Applicant / HR / counsel | 0–3 days (depends on document retrieval) |
| 2. Apply via e‑KRK (register, sign, submit, pay) | Applicant / authorised representative | Submission: same day; issuance: 1–7 business days |
| 3. Apply in person at KRK Information Point | Applicant / authorised proxy | Often same day; up to 7 days if verification needed |
| 4. Apply by post (paper application) | Applicant / proxy | 7–30 days (includes postal delivery both ways) |
| 5. Apply by proxy / attorney (POA route) | Attorney / proxy | Add POA preparation time (notarisation / apostille) + chosen‑route processing time |
The documents needed depend on the application channel and whether you apply personally or through a proxy. The table below lists every document you may need to assemble.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Valid passport or national ID card (original or certified copy) | Required for identity verification at all channels. For e‑KRK, a clear digital scan may be required when applying on behalf of another person. |
| PESEL number (Polish residents) / residency card (foreign residents) | Providing both where available speeds verification. Foreign nationals without PESEL should present full passport details and date/place of birth. |
| Completed KRK application form (paper or e‑form) | Use the official e‑KRK electronic form or the downloadable paper form from the gov.pl KRK pages. Specify the legal basis for the request. |
| Proof of payment | Electronic confirmation (e‑KRK) or bank‑transfer receipt (postal/in‑person). See the gov.pl Opłaty page for account details. |
| Power of attorney / signed authorisation (proxy applications only) | Original signed POA; notarisation may be required. If issued abroad, apostille or consular legalisation is typically necessary. |
| Employer consent / written justification (employer‑initiated checks) | Employers must obtain explicit written consent from the individual and cite the statutory provision authorising the check. GDPR compliance is mandatory. |
| Certified translation / multilingual standard form (if needed for foreign use) | A multilingual standard form may satisfy some EU authorities. Non‑EU recipients often require a certified (sworn) translation and apostille. |
Processing times vary by method and the complexity of the applicant’s record. The table below summarises typical timeframes for each channel.
| Method | Typical start → finish | Notes / exceptions |
|---|---|---|
| e‑KRK (electronic) | 1–7 business days from submission | Fastest channel. Digital delivery to your e‑KRK account. Straightforward, no‑record queries are often processed within 1–2 business days. |
| In person (Information Point) | Same day – up to 7 days | Many points issue certificates immediately after identity verification. Complex cases requiring additional data checks may take up to 7 days. |
| Postal application | 7–30 days | Includes postal transit both ways. Allow additional time during holiday periods or if supplementary verification is required. |
| Proxy / attorney route | Chosen‑route processing time + POA preparation | Factor in time for POA notarisation and, where the POA originates abroad, apostille or consular legalisation (which can add 5–15 days). |
Applicants with an urgent need, for instance, an imminent employment start date or visa deadline, should use the e‑KRK platform or visit an Information Point in person to minimise waiting time. Industry observers expect the ongoing digitalisation of KRK processes to further reduce electronic turnaround times over the coming year.
Fees for a criminal record certificate in Poland are set by regulation of the Minister of Justice. The cost differs depending on whether you apply electronically or on paper.
| Item | Amount | Notes / statutory basis |
|---|---|---|
| Electronic KRK certificate (e‑KRK) | 20 PLN | Payable online through the e‑KRK payment system. Fee confirmed on the gov.pl Opłaty page. |
| Paper KRK certificate (in person / postal) | 30 PLN | Payable at the court cashier or by bank transfer to the Ministry of Justice account listed on the gov.pl Opłaty page. |
| Stamp duty on power of attorney (opłata skarbowa) | 17 PLN | Due when a POA is submitted to a court or public authority. Paid to the local municipality. |
| Apostille (MFA or authorised office) | Varies | Official fee set by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; third‑party service providers may charge additional handling fees. Contact the MFA or relevant court for current rates. |
| Certified (sworn) translation | Varies (market rates) | Rates depend on the target language and translator. Business clients should note that translation fees are subject to VAT at the standard rate. |
Certain applicants are exempt from the fee, for example, persons applying in connection with the exercise of the right to information about their own data under specific statutory provisions. The gov.pl Opłaty page lists all exemption categories.
The Ustawa z dnia 13 lutego 2026 r. (Act of 13 February 2026), published in the Journal of Laws as item 421, introduced amendments to the Act on the National Criminal Register. The principal changes concern Poland’s alignment with the ECRIS‑TCN (European Criminal Records Information System – Third Country Nationals) framework and adjustments to the mechanisms for cross‑border exchange of criminal‑record data.
For applicants and employers, the likely practical effects include:
Applicants whose certificate is needed for use in another EU Member State, or whose record may include convictions registered abroad, should allow additional processing time while the ECRIS‑TCN system is fully operationalised.
Foreign employers, immigration authorities and licensing bodies frequently require a Polish criminal record certificate to be apostilled and translated. The procedure differs depending on the format of the certificate.
Paper certificates issued by a KRK Information Point can be apostilled by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MSZ) or, in some cases, by a designated regional court. Poland is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention, so an apostille is sufficient for use in all Convention member states. For non‑Convention countries, full consular legalisation may be required.
Electronic certificates issued through e‑KRK carry a qualified electronic signature and are legally valid within Poland and for many EU‑internal purposes. However, they generally cannot receive a traditional paper apostille. Applicants who know in advance that an apostille will be needed should apply for a paper certificate via the in‑person or postal channel.
A certified (sworn) translation by a Polish sworn translator (tłumacz przysięgły) is typically required whenever the certificate will be used in a jurisdiction that does not accept documents in Polish. Some EU authorities accept a multilingual standard form as a substitute for a full translation, confirm the requirements of the receiving authority before commissioning a translation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maciej Zaborowski at Kopeć & Zaborowski Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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