Poland continues to refine its tax framework, with recent amendments to Transfer Pricing regulations accompanied by a series of important administrative rulings and court decisions. Together, these developments signal a more pragmatic but still tightly controlled compliance environment for multinational enterprises (MNEs) and large domestic groups operating in Poland.
This update highlights what has changed, why it matters, and how businesses should respond—especially from a Transfer Pricing, documentation, and audit-risk perspective.
Why These Poland Tax Updates Matter for Transfer Pricing
Poland is one of the EU jurisdictions with high audit intensity and detailed reporting expectations. Recent changes suggest a dual approach:
Procedural relief where compliance burden was excessive
Continued strictness where economic substance or abuse risk is identified
For Transfer Pricing teams, this means simpler mechanics in some areas, but no reduction in scrutiny.
Relaxed Rules for Signing Transfer Pricing Reports (TPR)
One of the most practical changes concerns the signing of Transfer Pricing Report (TPR) information under both:
- Personal income tax regulations
- Corporate income tax regulations
What Has Changed
- The rules governing who can sign TPR filings have been relaxed
- This provides greater flexibility for groups with centralized tax or finance functions
Why It Matters
- Reduces procedural bottlenecks
- Eases compliance for groups with multiple Polish entities
- Does not change responsibility for accuracy or completeness
Key point: Easier signing does not mean lighter liability.
Tax Deductibility of Invoices Outside the KSeF System
Poland’s move toward mandatory e-invoicing via KSeF raised concerns around deductibility of costs.
Recent Clarification
The tax authority confirmed that:
- Expenses supported by invoices issued outside KSeF may still be tax-deductible
- This applies if the transaction is real and economically substantiated
Transfer Pricing Angle
- Substance over form remains decisive
- Intercompany invoices must reflect actual services or goods, not just formal compliance
- Documentation consistency is critical
Draft Amendments to the Tax Code: Third-Party Liability
Preliminary remarks were released on a bill aiming to align third-party liability for tax debts with EU law and CJEU case law.
Why This Is Relevant
- Could affect intra-group transactions involving intermediaries
- Increases the importance of counterparty due diligence
- Reinforces the need for defensible Transfer Pricing structures
Top-Up Tax Guidance: R&D Relief Clarified
Poland released an opinion clarifying when R&D relief qualifies as an eligible refundable relief under top-up tax rules for:
Multinational enterprise groups
Large domestic groups
Transfer Pricing Implications
- Interaction between incentives and Pillar Two is now clearer
- Pricing outcomes must align with effective tax rate calculations
- Misalignment could trigger top-up exposure
Share Redemptions Without Remuneration: Clearance Denied
The Head of the National Revenue Administration denied a clearance opinion for a share redemption without remuneration in a public company.
Why This Matters
- Highlights Poland’s strict stance on non-remunerated intra-group restructurings
- Reinforces substance and value-transfer analysis
- Transfer Pricing considerations extend beyond pricing into corporate actions
Anti-Tax Avoidance Council: Investment Fund Structures Under Review
The Anti-Tax Avoidance Council published a resolution assessing transactions involving:
- Closed-end investment funds
- Claimed tax benefits
This reflects heightened scrutiny of structural planning, not just pricing.
Key VAT Court Decisions Businesses Should Note
The Supreme Administrative Court (SAC) issued several rulings with practical impact:
- Overstated invoices do not allow input VAT deduction
- Corrective notes cannot change transaction parties
- Certain promotional activities may fall outside alcohol advertising rules
Transfer Pricing Relevance
- Accurate invoicing is essential
- Entity roles must be consistent across VAT and Transfer Pricing
- Documentation errors can cascade into multiple tax risks
What Multinational Groups Should Do Now
Given the breadth of changes, groups operating in Poland should:
- Review Transfer Pricing documentation and TPR processes
- Confirm substance and invoicing consistency (especially intercompany)
- Reassess R&D incentives under top-up tax rules
- Monitor restructuring and investment transactions carefully
- Prepare for continued audit activity despite procedural relaxations
How TransferPricing.report Supports Poland-Focused Compliance
At TransferPricing.report, we help MNEs navigate Poland’s evolving Transfer Pricing and tax landscape with clarity and control.
Our support includes:
- Poland-compliant Transfer Pricing documentation
- TPR preparation and governance reviews
- Substance and invoicing alignment
- Pillar Two and incentive interaction analysis
- Audit readiness and controversy support
Final Takeaway: Poland Is Easing Process, Not Expectations
Recent developments in Poland point to smarter administration, not weaker enforcement. For Transfer Pricing, substance, consistency, and documentation remain decisive.
Operating in Poland?
Confident your Transfer Pricing and tax positions align across regimes?
Speak with TransferPricing.report specialists and ensure your Poland strategy is built for today’s rules—and tomorrow’s audits.
In Poland, precision still matters—just with fewer procedural hurdles.
This is general information only and not professional advice. Consult a professional before acting.

