IKE: The Polish Retirement Account Guide for Expats and English Speakers

English-language guide to Poland's IKE retirement system. How it compares to 401(k) and ISA, eligibility for foreigners, and practical setup instructions.

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IKE: The Polish Retirement Account Guide for Expats

If you work in Poland as an expat or are a Polish professional who prefers English-language resources, IKE (Indywidualne Konto Emerytalne) is one of the most important financial accounts you should understand. It is Poland's equivalent of a Roth IRA (US), ISA (UK), or TFSA (Canada): you invest after-tax money, and all growth is completely tax-free when you withdraw in retirement.

Quick Answer

IKE (Indywidualne Konto Emerytalne) is Poland's voluntary third-pillar retirement account, the local equivalent of a US Roth IRA, UK ISA, or Canadian TFSA: you invest after-tax money and all growth is tax-free on withdrawal in retirement. Any natural person who is a Polish tax resident can open one — Polish citizenship is not required, only a PESEL number and tax residency. The 2026 annual contribution limit is 23,472 PLN (about 5,400 EUR).

  • Who qualifies: Polish tax residents with a PESEL (EU citizens straightforward; non-EU need a residence card or long-term visa).
  • If you leave Poland: you can keep the account open but cannot add new contributions once you are no longer a Polish tax resident.

Poland's three-pillar pension system

To understand IKE's role, you need to see the bigger picture:

Pillar I: ZUS (mandatory state pension) Every employed person in Poland contributes to ZUS. The state pension replacement rate (pension as a percentage of pre-retirement salary) is projected at 25-30% for people currently under 40. This is not enough to maintain your lifestyle.

Pillar II: OFE (Open Pension Funds) Largely dismantled in 2014 reforms. Most assets were transferred back to ZUS. OFE still exists in a diminished form but is not a meaningful retirement tool.

Pillar III: Voluntary savings (IKE, IKZE, PPK) This is where you take control:

  • PPK (Pracownicze Plany Kapitalowe): Employer-sponsored, automatic enrollment with opt-out. Employer matches employee contributions (2% + 1.5%).
  • IKE: Individual, voluntary, tax-free growth. You choose what to invest in.
  • IKZE: Individual, voluntary, tax-deductible contributions, 10% flat tax on withdrawal.

IKE for foreigners: eligibility

Who can open an IKE? Any natural person who is a Polish tax resident can open an IKE. You do not need Polish citizenship. If you have a PESEL number and are tax-resident in Poland, you are eligible.

EU citizens: Straightforward. Register for PESEL at your local Urzad Gminy, then open an IKE at any Polish broker.

Non-EU citizens: Same process, but you need a valid residence card (karta pobytu) or long-term visa. PESEL registration may require additional documentation.

What happens if you leave Poland? IKE is portable in the sense that you can keep it open even after moving abroad. However:

  • You cannot make new contributions if you are no longer a Polish tax resident
  • Tax treatment upon withdrawal depends on the tax treaty between Poland and your new country of residence
  • Some brokers may require you to maintain a Polish correspondence address

IKE vs international equivalents

Feature IKE (Poland) Roth IRA (US) ISA (UK) TFSA (Canada)
Annual limit 23,472 PLN (~5,400 EUR) $7,000 USD GBP 20,000 CAD 7,000
Tax on contributions Already taxed (after-tax) After-tax After-tax After-tax
Tax on growth 0% 0% 0% 0%
Tax on withdrawal 0% (after 60) 0% (after 59.5) 0% anytime 0% anytime
Early withdrawal penalty 19% tax on gains 10% penalty + income tax None None
Investment options Stocks, ETFs, bonds, deposits Broad Stocks, funds, cash Broad

IKE's annual limit is lower than ISA or TFSA but the tax-free benefit is equally powerful. Over 30 years, the compound effect of zero tax on dividends and capital gains adds up to hundreds of thousands of PLN.

Practical setup for expats

Step 1: Get a PESEL

If you do not have one, visit your local Urzad Gminy (municipal office) with your passport and proof of Polish residence (lease agreement, utility bill). PESEL is issued within 1-2 weeks.

Step 2: Choose a broker

For expats, the key requirement is an English-language (or at least navigable) platform:

  • XTB: Full English interface, zero commissions, excellent mobile app. IKE available.
  • mBank eMakler: Polish interface primarily, but workable for Polish speakers. Strong ETF access.
  • Interactive Brokers: Not available for IKE (IBKR does not offer Polish retirement accounts). Use for your taxable account.

Step 3: Open the IKE account

Apply online through your chosen broker. Provide PESEL, Polish address, and identity verification. You may need to sign a declaration that you do not hold another IKE elsewhere (only one active IKE is permitted per person).

Step 4: Fund and invest

Transfer PLN from your Polish bank account. You can contribute any amount up to the annual limit. Buy your chosen ETFs or other investments immediately.

What to invest in within IKE

For expats who may eventually leave Poland:

Global ETFs on XETRA: VWCE, IWDA, or SWDA. These are denominated in EUR but purchased with PLN (the broker handles currency conversion). If you leave Poland and keep your IKE, the global ETFs remain relevant regardless of where you live.

Avoid: Poland-only investments (Polish stocks, Polish bonds) if there is a chance you will leave the country. You want your retirement account to be globally diversified.

Tax considerations for international moves

Moving to another EU country

Poland has tax treaties with all EU countries. Generally, IKE gains remain tax-free under the Poland-residence country treaty when you withdraw in retirement. However, some countries may tax foreign retirement account withdrawals differently. Consult a tax advisor in your new country of residence before withdrawing.

Moving outside the EU

Tax treaties vary significantly. The US, for example, may treat IKE as a foreign grantor trust with specific reporting requirements (FBAR, FATCA). UK treatment depends on whether IKE is recognised as a pension scheme.

Key advice: Do not withdraw from IKE immediately upon leaving Poland. Keep it invested and consult a cross-border tax advisor about the optimal withdrawal timing and method.

PPK, IKE, and IKZE together

If you are employed in Poland on UoP (umowa o prace), you likely have PPK contributions alongside your IKE and IKZE:

Optimal order of priority:

  1. PPK (get the employer match, it is free money)
  2. IKE (tax-free growth, higher limit)
  3. IKZE (tax deduction now, 10% tax later)
  4. Taxable brokerage account (no contribution limits)

If your total investable monthly income is limited, prioritise in this order. PPK employer match is the highest guaranteed return. IKE provides the best long-term tax benefit.

Track all your Polish retirement accounts alongside any international accounts in Freenance. As an expat with potentially complex finances across multiple countries, having a unified view of your net worth is especially valuable.

FAQ

Who is eligible to open an IKE as a foreigner in Poland?

Any natural person who is a Polish tax resident with a PESEL number can open an IKE, regardless of citizenship. EU citizens generally register PESEL at the local Urzad Gminy, while non-EU citizens additionally need a valid residence card (karta pobytu) or long-term visa.

What is the 2026 IKE contribution limit and does it differ for expats?

The 2026 annual IKE contribution limit is approximately 23,472 PLN (three times the projected average monthly salary) and applies equally to Polish citizens and foreign tax residents. The limit is per person per calendar year and cannot be carried forward.

How does IKE compare to a Roth IRA, ISA, or TFSA?

Like those accounts, IKE is funded with after-tax money and grows tax-free, but the qualifying withdrawal age is 60 (or 55 with pension rights). The annual limit is lower in absolute terms than ISA or TFSA, while early withdrawal is taxed at 19% on gains rather than triggering a percentage penalty as in a Roth IRA.

What happens to my IKE if I leave Poland?

You can typically keep the IKE open after relocating, but you cannot make new contributions once you cease being a Polish tax resident. Tax treatment on eventual withdrawal depends on the double-taxation treaty between Poland and your new country of residence, so cross-border tax advice before withdrawing is strongly recommended.

Should an expat hold Polish or global investments inside IKE?

For expats who may eventually relocate, globally diversified ETFs (such as broad world equity trackers on European exchanges) tend to remain relevant regardless of where you live. This guide is educational and not personalised advice — a Polish-licensed adviser can assess your circumstances.

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