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Jan 12, 2026

Poland extends temporary protection for one million Ukrainians to 4 March 2026

Poland extends temporary protection for one million Ukrainians to 4 March 2026
Warsaw has quietly amended the Special Act on Assistance to Citizens of Ukraine, stretching all rights linked to EU temporary-protection status until 4 March 2026. Roughly one million displaced Ukrainians—many already embedded in Polish factories, IT hubs and logistics centres—retain the right to live and work in Poland under a notification-only procedure on the praca.gov.pl platform. ([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-11/pl/temporary-protection-for-one-million-ukrainians-in-poland-extended-to-4-march-2026/))

With emergency reception now largely complete, the government is pivoting toward long-term integration. A new network of National Integration Centres will pair regional authorities with NGOs to deliver Polish-language tuition, skills assessments and job-matching services. Data from those centres will feed a public dashboard that maps employment, benefit uptake and school attendance down to county level—giving employers unprecedented visibility into local talent pools. ([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-11/pl/temporary-protection-for-one-million-ukrainians-in-poland-extended-to-4-march-2026/))

Poland extends temporary protection for one million Ukrainians to 4 March 2026


Need help navigating Poland’s evolving rules? VisaHQ’s local experts can handle the entire process—from submitting temporary-protection notifications on praca.gov.pl to arranging PESEL numbers, residence cards and work-permit upgrades—so both employers and Ukrainian nationals stay fully compliant. Find out more at https://www.visahq.com/poland/.

For corporate mobility teams the extension removes a cliff-edge risk: Ukrainian staff can continue working without full work-permit sponsorship, and new hires can be onboarded in as little as 24 hours. Two caveats loom. From mid-2026 Poland’s flagship PLN 800-per-child benefit will only be paid if at least one parent holds formal employment, nudging more beneficiaries into regulated jobs. Uninsured adults will also lose some free medical services, raising the value of employer-provided health cover. ([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-11/pl/temporary-protection-for-one-million-ukrainians-in-poland-extended-to-4-march-2026/))

The bottom line: Warsaw recognises that most Ukrainians will stay for the medium term and is shifting costs from humanitarian budgets to labour-market integration. Employers that invest early in language and up-skilling programmes are likely to gain a competitive edge in Poland’s tight labour market. ([visahq.com](https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-11/pl/temporary-protection-for-one-million-ukrainians-in-poland-extended-to-4-march-2026/))
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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