Poland IBAN Format & Validator (PL)

Poland IBANs are 28 characters long. Poland is a SEPA member — euro transfers within SEPA are processed as domestic payments with no extra fees.

Updated Jun 2026 SEPA Member Live Validator
83 Countries Covered
27 SEPA Member Countries
15 – 32 chars IBAN Length Range
Mod-97 ISO 13616 Algorithm
Poland

Poland

Country Code: PL

SEPA Member
IBAN Length 28 characters
SEPA Zone ✓ Yes — SEPA member
IBAN Format Pattern PLkk BBBS SSSK CCCC CCCC CCCC CCCC
k = IBAN check digits B = Bank code S = Branch / sort code C = Account number K = Check digit(s)
BBAN Structure 3 digits bank, 4 digits branch, 1 check, 16 digits account

Poland IBAN Example

PL61 1090 1014 0000 0712 1981 2874

Validate a Poland IBAN

Spaces are removed automatically. Letters converted to uppercase.

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Poland IBAN — Complete Banking Guide

The International Bank Account Number (IBAN) system is used in Poland to uniquely identify bank accounts for domestic and international transfers. Every bank account in Poland is assigned a 28-character IBAN that begins with the country code PL, followed by two mathematically calculated check digits, and then the local BBAN (Basic Bank Account Number) encoding 3 digits bank, 4 digits branch, 1 check, 16 digits account. The IBAN standard in Poland is governed by ISO 13616 and administered through the SWIFT IBAN registry.

Unlike domestic account numbers which vary in format between banks, an IBAN provides a standardised, universally recognised account identifier. Any bank in the world that participates in the SWIFT network can process a payment to a Poland IBAN without requiring additional routing information — the bank code and branch information is encoded directly in the IBAN itself.

Poland and SEPA — What It Means for Your Money

Poland is a full member of the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA), the European payment integration initiative that covers 36 countries. This membership has significant practical implications for anyone sending or receiving money involving Poland:

  • SEPA Credit Transfer (SCT): Euro transfers to and from Poland bank accounts are processed as domestic payments. Funds arrive within one business day and fees are capped at the same rate as local transfers under EU Directive 2015/2366 (PSD2).
  • SEPA Direct Debit (SDD): Businesses in Poland can collect recurring payments (subscriptions, utility bills, loan EMIs) from any SEPA account using a signed mandate and the payer's IBAN. No international wire fees apply.
  • SEPA Instant Credit Transfer (SCT Inst): Transfers complete in under 10 seconds, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, as long as both banks support the instant payment rail.
  • No currency risk on EUR transfers: Since Poland uses SEPA, euro-denominated transfers within the zone carry no foreign exchange conversion fees if both accounts are held in euros.

For transfers involving Indian Rupees (INR) from or to Poland, you will need to convert currency. The SWIFT code of the Poland bank is required alongside the IBAN when banks outside the SEPA zone initiate the transfer. Use BankZop's SWIFT Code Lookup to find the correct BIC for any Poland bank.

How to Read a Poland IBAN — Digit by Digit

The 28-character Poland IBAN is structured as follows: PLkk BBBS SSSK CCCC CCCC CCCC CCCC

  • Positions 1–2 (PL): ISO 3166-1 country code for Poland. This is always fixed and cannot change.
  • Positions 3–4 (kk): Two numeric check digits calculated using the ISO 7064 modulo-97 algorithm. These verify the entire IBAN is correctly formed.
  • Positions 5–28 (BBAN): The Poland-specific BBAN (Basic Bank Account Number): 3 digits bank, 4 digits branch, 1 check, 16 digits account. This part encodes the bank, branch, and account number according to Poland's national banking standards.

For example: PL61 1090 1014 0000 0712 1981 2874 is a structurally valid Poland IBAN. When you paste any Poland IBAN into the validator above and click Validate IBAN, BankZop instantly verifies the check digits using the modulo-97 algorithm — no internet connection required for the validation itself.

Finding Your Poland IBAN

Your Poland IBAN can be found in several places. The most reliable sources are:

  1. Mobile or online banking app: Log in and navigate to Account Details or Account Summary. The IBAN is displayed alongside your account number and sort code.
  2. Bank statement: Your monthly bank statement — whether paper or PDF — includes the IBAN in the account summary header, typically on the first page.
  3. Cheque book: Some Poland banks print the IBAN on the front page of the cheque book or inside the cover.
  4. Bank counter or customer service: Call the number on the back of your debit card and ask for your full IBAN. You will need to verify your identity.
  5. Welcome letter: When an account is first opened, banks typically send a welcome letter containing the IBAN and account details.

Once you have your IBAN, share it with anyone who needs to send you money from abroad. Never share your full IBAN publicly, but it is safe to share it with people or businesses you trust for legitimate payment purposes — an IBAN alone cannot be used to withdraw money from your account.

Common Poland IBAN Errors to Avoid

  • Wrong character count: A Poland IBAN must be exactly 28 characters. Count carefully — even one extra or missing character will fail validation.
  • Confusing IBAN with account number: Your IBAN is different from your local account number. The account number appears inside the IBAN but the two codes are not interchangeable.
  • Spaces in the IBAN: IBANs are sometimes written with spaces for readability (e.g. PL61 1090 1014 0000 0712 1981 2874), but when entering an IBAN in a bank form, always remove all spaces. BankZop's validator accepts both formats.
  • Using IBAN for domestic transfers: Within Poland, some banks still use local account numbers for domestic transfers. Check with your bank whether IBAN is required or optional for domestic payments.
  • Wrong country IBAN: Never use an IBAN from one country for an account in another country. The PL prefix specifically identifies this as a Poland account.

Banking Codes for Poland — Quick Reference

When dealing with Poland bank transactions, you may encounter several different banking codes depending on the payment type:

  • IBAN (this page): 28-character code for international and SEPA transfers. Format: PLkk...
  • SWIFT/BIC Code: 8 or 11 characters identifying the specific Poland bank. Required for all international wires.
  • Local account number: Country-specific format used for domestic payments within Poland.

For sending money to India from Poland, the recipient's Indian bank will need their IFSC code (for domestic India transfers) or the bank's SWIFT code (for the international leg of the transfer).

Data sourced from SWIFT IBAN Registry and ISO 13616. Last reviewed Jun 2026 by BankZop Editorial Team.

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Frequently Asked Questions — IBAN