Vehicle registration plates of Poland


Vehicle registration plates of Poland indicate the region of registration of the vehicle given the number plate.

Law

According to Polish law, the registration plate is tied to the vehicle, not the owner. There is no possibility for the owner to keep the licence number for use on a different car, even if it's a cherished registration. The licence plates are issued by the powiat of the vehicle owner's registered address of residence, in the case of a natural person. If it is owned by a legal person, the place of registration is determined by the person's address. Vehicles leased under operating leases and many de facto finance leases will be registered at the address of the lessor. When a vehicle changes hands, the new owner must apply for new vehicle registration document bearing their name and registered address. The new owner may obtain a new licence plate although it is not necessary. In such a situation the licence plates are usually carried over to the new owner, because the change carries an additional cost. Upon purchasing a vehicle from another person, if the vehicle has an EU plate, the new owner must replace it with a registration for their address and area, and give the EU plate to their powiat licensing authority to free up numbers in the future. If the car has a plate dated before May 1, 2006, the owner is free to do whatever they wish with it, as long as it is legal under Polish law. The plaque cannot be replaced if destroyed. The change of the whole set is required.
The change in system shown below in 2001 is related to the reduction in the previous year of the number of voivodeships in Poland from 49 to 16, based on the country's historic regions. The pre-2001 licence plates can be used indefinitely, but since they are obsolete they have to be replaced in case of change of vehicle's ownership.
In the pre-2001 model, there were not sufficient letters in the Polish alphabet for each of the old voivodeships to have a single letter. Only the standard latin alphabet was used, and the specific Polish characters with diacritics were excluded. Therefore, two letters had to be used to indicate the vehicle's origin. Since the change, the first letter has always denoted the new voivodeship. One additional letter is used in cities with rights of powiat. Two additional letters are used in any other powiat.
It is not necessary for EU citizens to immediately re-register the vehicles they have brought with them if they are duly registered and taxed elsewhere in the EU, when living in Poland. This emerges from European law, although local regulations have to date not been changed to reflect the law, leading to officials locally sometimes giving incorrect advice on this point. When in doubt, motorists are recommended to refer to their respective embassies.

Format

Stickers and security measures

The licence plates are invalid without two adhesive stickers with holograms placed on the license plates, and, before 2022, an adhesive plaque bearing the same number as the plates inside the windshield. If the vehicle uses only one licence plate then the second sticker must be attached to the registration documents.

Licence plate types and combinations

Each powiat uses a unique two or three letter code, with the first letter denoting the voivodeship. The number pools listed below are not used in any particular order, although one pool is usually depleted before the next one is used. A visible gap exists between the area code and series, but there is no possibility of confusion if the number is written down without it.
The following characters are used in licence plate examples:
  • X – voivodeship code
  • XY, XYZ – county code
  • J, K, L – any allowed letter
  • digits
The letters used in licence plates include all standard Latin alphabet letters outside of Q. The letters B, D, I, O, and Z cannot be used in series area, because they could be confused with similarly-looking digits. Custom plates are allowed to include these letters though. The leading 0 in numbers is part of the code and is never omitted.
Due to the pool of license plates combinations possibly running out in some areas, in 2022 the Ministry of Infrastructure issued a directive under which extra leading characters were introduced for several of the voivodeships:V for Lower Silesian J for Lesser Poland A for Masovian Y for Subcarpathian X for Pomeranian I for Silesian M for Greater Poland
Reportedly, the Warsaw district of Mokotów was the first to start issuing AE registration plates following the new directive.

Cars, trucks, and buses

Format:
  • XY 12345
  • XY 1234J
  • XY 123JK
  • XY 1J345
  • XY 1JK45
  • XYZ J234
  • XYZ 12JK
  • XYZ 1J34
  • XYZ 12J4
  • XYZ 1JK4
  • XYZ JK34
  • XYZ 12345
  • XYZ 1234J
  • XYZ 123JK
The number of available unique numbers with these mentioned formats is 1,100,000 for each two-letter powiat code, and 872,400 for each three-letter powiat code. The combinations "XYZ 1234" and "XYZ 123J" are not used, because they would lead to creation of numbers identical to these in the old system. Also, the two-letter powiat codes must be followed by a leading digit, "XY 1...", to avoid confusion with the "XYZ..." scheme, as the gap is not significant. Electric vehicles have green background on their license plates.

Motorcycles, mopeds, and agricultural vehicles

Format:
  • XY 1234
  • XY 123J
  • XY 1J34
  • XY 12J4
  • XY 12JK
  • XY JK12
  • XYZ J234
  • XYZ 12JK
  • XYZ 1J34
  • XYZ 12J4
  • XYZ 1JK4
  • XYZ JK34
  • XYZ J23K
  • XYZ J2KL
Cars – reduced sizeFormat:
  • X 123
  • X 12J
  • X 1J2
  • X J12
  • X 1JK
  • X JK1
  • X J1K
The plates are designed for cars imported from USA and Japan. Reduced size plates are the same width as US plates.

Classic cars

Format:
  • XY 12J
  • XY 123
  • XYZ 1J
  • XYZ 12
  • XYZ J1
These plates use black text on yellow background with an additional picture of a vintage car on the right side. Vehicles are required to meet three criteria:
  • manufactured at least 30 years ago
  • the particular model must be out of production for at least 15 years
  • consist of at least 75% of original parts
These criteria, however, can be waived for special cases, such as prototype vehicles that were never mass-produced, cars of considerable historical value, cars being part of museum exhibition or models representing technological breakthroughs. As such, issuing of these plates is always handled on a case-by-case basis by the conservation officer. Registered classic cars are not required to undergo yearly technical checkup unless used for transportation services, such as taxi.

Temporary and export plates

Format:
  • X1 2345
  • X1 234J
These plates use red text on a white background. The plates wear a seal with month and year of validation. The windshield plaque is not issued with it.

Electric car plates

Introduced on 1 January 2020, they are issued to battery-electric and hydrogen vehicles. They are similar to regular plates but the background colour is light green instead of white. Such vehicles are allowed to drive on bus lanes, therefore visibly different registration plates allow the police to establish whether a vehicle is doing so legally. Electric plates are also used in "American" plates with reduced space.

Testing vehicles

Format:
  • X1 234 B
These plates use red text on a white background. The last character is always the letter B. Only car manufacturers and automobile R&D centres are issued these plates.

Custom plates

Format:
  • X1 JKLMN
These plates use standard black letters on a white background. Each custom number starts with the letter denoting voivodeship and a single digit, followed by the gap. This digit and next characters can be picked by the owner. Outside the availability the following constrains are used:
  • after the gap between 3 and 5 characters can be used
  • the first character must be a letter
  • no more than 2 last characters can be digits
  • all letters come before digits
  • any standard Latin letter outside Q can be used
  • resulting plate must not contain or resemble offensive contents

Professional plates

Format:
  • X12 34P56
Since July 2019 dealers of new cars can apply for special number plates with green letters on white background specifically for doing test drives. Those plates are issued exclusively for the company itself and not for a specific vehicle. This means they can be applied to multiple vehicles when needed. Only car retailers can obtain these and such cars can be driven only by the car dealer, owner of the company, their employees or customers, but only when accompanied by an employee.

Diplomatic plates

Format:
  • X 123456
White symbols on dark blue background. The leading character is reserved for voivodeship, but in practice all vehicles are issued W and registered by the Masovian voivode. The first three digits indicate a country or organization as listed in the table below.
CodeCountry
003France

Service plates

Format:
  • H#J K234
  • H#J 12KL
Vehicles utilised used by the Polish Ministry of Internal Affairs and Administration use licence plates beginning with "H", instead of the voivodeship code. The second letter denotes the service, for example "HP" is used by the Polish Police. Any standard Latin letter outside Q can be used. These services are also allowed to use common licence plates.
Codes:

Military plates

Format:
  • U# 12345
  • UC 1234T
  • UK 1234
The Polish military uses licence plates beginning with "U" instead of the voivodeship code. The following letter denotes the usage of the vehicle. For example, military trucks have licence plates beginning with "UC". The trailing T in the number denotes a tracked vehicle. The military are not obliged to use the standard licence plates on tracked vehicles, armoured cars and armoured personnel carriers — they can be painted on the vehicle itself or applied as a sticker.
Codes:
  • UA# – Cars, offroad vehicles and specialistic vehicles based on cars or off-roaders
  • UB# – Armoured personnel carriers
  • UC# – Military trucks
  • UD# – Buses
  • UE# – Trucks
  • UG# – Special trucks
  • UI# – Transport trailers
  • UJ# – Special trailers
  • UK# – Motorcycles

Cost of purchasing registration plates

  • Regular: 80 złoty
  • Motorcycles: 40 złoty
  • Mopeds: 30 złoty
  • Custom regular: 200 złoty
  • Custom motorcycles: 140 złoty
  • Classic cars: 100 złoty
  • Temporary: 30 złoty

History

1922–1937

From July 1922 Polish car number plates had two letters denoting voivodeship, or single letter W denoting capital city of Warsaw, and up to five digits. Except for letter identifier, each voivodeship had own range of numbers. Plates were white, with red letters and black digits, separated with red dash.

There were also temporary plates with PR letters and presidential plates with WZK letters. Military plates had only four white digits on black background.

1937–1939

From 1937 there was a new different system of registration numbers introduced, with white letters on black plates. There was one letter denoting vehicle type, two-digit number denoting voivodeship, and three-digit individual number after a dash. Letters A, B, C, D, E, H, K, L, X, Y, Z were used for cars, trucks and buses, T for taxicabs, M, N, P, R, S, U for motorcycles and W for military vehicles. A range of numbers 00 to 19 meant capital city of Warsaw, 20 to 24 indicated Białostok Voivodeship, and so on, in alphabetical order, up to 95 to 99 for Wołyńskie Voivodeship.
During World War II there were plates introduced by occupants.

1944–1956

From 1946 Polish car number plates had the LNN-NNN format, with L being a letter and N being a digit. The full name of the province was located at the bottom.

1956–1976

From June 19, 1956, Polish car number plates had 2 letters and 4 digits, and after May 13, 1964, letters could stand after digits.
Individual elements meant:
  • first letter: code of voivodeship,
  • second letter: code of powiat,
  • digits: code of vehicle.
Codes of voivodeships:ABiałystok VoivodeshipBBydgoszcz VoivodeshipCKielce VoivodeshipEKoszalin VoivodeshipFŁódź VoivodeshipGGdańsk VoivodeshipHOpole VoivodeshipI – city of ŁódźKKraków VoivodeshipLLublin VoivodeshipMSzczecin VoivodeshipOOlsztyn VoivodeshipPPoznań VoivodeshipRRzeszów VoivodeshipSKatowice VoivodeshipTWarsaw VoivodeshipW – capital city of WarsawXWrocław VoivodeshipZZielona Góra Voivodeship
Codes of special forces:Y – Citizen's MilitiaD – army U – army N – Border Guard

1976–2000

Plates from the 1976–2000 series are still valid. They have white letters on black background. The coding used was three letters and four digits or three letters, three digits and one letter, although at the beginning the configuration with a letter in the end was used for public cars only.
The following coding was used for the 49 regions of the country:
The following codes were used for special forces:
  • Militia/Police: MO
  • Military: U
  • Border Guard: HW
  • "Nadwislanskie" Troops of the Interior Ministry: HN
  • Foreigner plates : I
  • Test plates : X
Special plates:
  • Diplomatic: XY 12 345, The first two numbers are denoting the region of ambassador and blue background.
  • Temporary: X 12 34 56, with yellow font.

2000–present

Since the year 2000 Polish car plates have black letters pressed onto white reflective blanks with an EU stripe and country code. The switch was made to conform with other EU countries and to increase visibility. The licence plates issued until May 1, 2006, bear a Polish national flag. Plates issued after that date have the 12 EU stars instead of the Polish flag.