
Britain’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) re-issued its Poland travel advice on 13 January 2026, keeping the overall risk level unchanged but adding guidance for UK–Polish dual nationals re-entering the United Kingdom. The note clarifies that individuals travelling on a Polish passport may require additional evidence of UK residence when boarding carriers bound for Britain, especially during temporary German and Lithuanian border checks that can generate secondary ID scrutiny.
The bulletin also repeats warnings about occasional Russian missile strikes near the Ukrainian frontier, reminding visitors that access within 20 km of Poland’s eastern border can be restricted without notice.
Travellers who need straightforward, up-to-date assistance with these documentation rules can turn to VisaHQ. Its dedicated Poland page (https://www.visahq.com/poland/) enables dual nationals and corporate travel coordinators to verify entry requirements, arrange passport services, and receive automated alerts, ensuring smoother transit through European checkpoints.
For mobility managers the practical takeaway is documentation: dual-national assignees should carry a valid UK biometric passport or a physical proof of settled-status to avoid delays at airline check-in desks. Employers hosting conferences in Kraków or Poznań should circulate the update through corporate travel-management channels and check that duty-of-care platforms capture the tightened border-zone restrictions.
While the advisory does not impose new entry requirements, it may influence insurance underwriters’ risk ratings for trips to border regions, potentially nudging premiums upward. Companies are advised to re-confirm coverages for employees transiting via Lublin or Przemyśl when undertaking Ukraine-related humanitarian projects.
The bulletin also repeats warnings about occasional Russian missile strikes near the Ukrainian frontier, reminding visitors that access within 20 km of Poland’s eastern border can be restricted without notice.
Travellers who need straightforward, up-to-date assistance with these documentation rules can turn to VisaHQ. Its dedicated Poland page (https://www.visahq.com/poland/) enables dual nationals and corporate travel coordinators to verify entry requirements, arrange passport services, and receive automated alerts, ensuring smoother transit through European checkpoints.
For mobility managers the practical takeaway is documentation: dual-national assignees should carry a valid UK biometric passport or a physical proof of settled-status to avoid delays at airline check-in desks. Employers hosting conferences in Kraków or Poznań should circulate the update through corporate travel-management channels and check that duty-of-care platforms capture the tightened border-zone restrictions.
While the advisory does not impose new entry requirements, it may influence insurance underwriters’ risk ratings for trips to border regions, potentially nudging premiums upward. Companies are advised to re-confirm coverages for employees transiting via Lublin or Przemyśl when undertaking Ukraine-related humanitarian projects.






