Prior to 2004 Plans to join the
eurozone began back in 2003 before the accession to the
EU, when the contemporary premier
Leszek Miller stated that Poland would join the
eurozone between 2007 and 2009. One of the leaders of
Civic Platform party (PO),
Jan Rokita, was certain that the best way to converge to euro was through a unilateral
euroization. Nevertheless, euroization is against the rules of the EU and it cannot be adopted by any Member State without the approval of the Union. Lastly, the plan was not finalized and Poland suspended it.
2005–2007 During the rule of the Law and Justice,
Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland and
League of Polish Families coalition, the euro was not a priority on Poland's agenda. In 2006, prime minister
Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz stated that the accession to
euro area was only possible after 2009, as the Polish deficit could decrease to 3% of
GDP by the end of 2007. The negotiations about Poland joining the
eurozone were postponed.
2008–2012 The euro adoption process in Poland is regulated by the
Strategic Framework for National Euro Changeover Plan (adopted by the Council of Ministers in 2010) and the
National Euro Changeover Plan (approved in 2011 by the Committee for European Affairs). The plan comprises an economic impact assessment of the euro adoption, followed by a chapter on the measures needed to ensure Polish compliance with the "Maastricht convergence criteria", and finally a roadmap for the euro changeover process. On 10 September 2008, speaking at the launch of an economic forum in a Polish resort of
Krynica-Zdrój, Polish Prime Minister
Donald Tusk announced the ruling government's objective to join the
Eurozone in 2012, which was confirmed by the government on 28 October 2008. However, Poland's then President
Lech Kaczynski wanted euro adoption put to a referendum. Finance Minister Dominik Radziwill said on 10 July 2009 that Poland could meet the fiscal criteria by 2012 and enter the Eurozone in 2014. On 5 November 2009, speaking at the news conference, Polish Deputy Finance Minister Ludwik Kotecki said the government may announce a national strategy for euro adoption in mid-2010. In an interview for Rzeczpospolita dated 22 October 2009, he also said Poland could adopt the euro in 2014 if the general government deficit is reduced in 2012. Former President
Lech Kaczyński said at a news conference that Poland was unable to join
Eurozone before 2015, and even that date was still very optimistic. Also, Polish government officials had confirmed that
Poland would not join Eurozone in 2012. On Friday, 11 December 2009, Polish Prime Minister
Donald Tusk said Poland could join the eurozone in 2015. Speaking during Finance Ministry-organized seminar on the euro-adoption process on 15 December 2009, Deputy Minister of Finance
Ludwik Kotecki said the year 2015 is more likely than 2014, however he declined to specify the official target date. In the years following the
Great Recession, economic statistics showed that the
devaluation of its floating currency the
złoty led Polish products to become more competitively priced to foreign buyers, and because of that, Poland had a higher economic
GDP growth in subsequent years than if the country had been a part of the
eurozone. The Polish government advocated in 2012 that it would only be wise for Poland to join the eurozone once the
euro crisis had ended, based on the argument that delaying their accession would minimise the risk for Poland to become one of the net financial
creditors to other eurozone countries in financial difficulties. In December 2011, Polish foreign minister
Radosław Sikorski said that Poland aimed to adopt the euro on 1 January 2016, but only if "the eurozone is reformed by then, and the entrance is beneficial to us." The Polish government planned to comply with all the
Euro convergence criteria by 2015. The governor of the National Bank, Marek Belka, has stated that the euro will not be adopted before the end of his term in 2016. will need to be passed to change the currency from the Złoty to the euro and to enact changes to the central bank. Despite the Polish government under Prime Minister
Donald Tusk having favoured euro adoption in 2012, it however did not have the required two-thirds majority in the
Sejm to amend the constitution to make it legally compatible with euro adoption, due to the opposition of the Law and Justice party to the euro. The Polish Finance Minister emphasised that the government's support for euro adoption remained unchanged as a strategic goal, and would not be changed in the updated plan. At the same time, the
European debt crisis gave the government reason to wait for increased stability in the euro.
2013–2023 In January 2013,
Polish President Bronislaw Komorowski stated that a decision on euro adoption should not be made until after parliamentary and presidential elections scheduled for 2015, but that in the meantime the country should try to comply with the convergence criteria. In February 2013,
Jaroslaw Kaczynski, leader of the Law and Justice party stated that "I do not foresee any moment when the adoption of the euro would be advantageous for us" and called for a referendum on euro adoption. Rostowski has stated that Poland will not set a target date for the switch since the country first needs to carry out reforms to prepare itself. In March 2013, Tusk said for the first time that he would be open to considering a referendum on euro participation – decided by simple majority – provided that it was part of a package in which the parliament first approved the necessary constitutional amendment to adopt the euro subject to approval in a referendum. In April 2013
Marek Belka, head of
National Bank of Poland, said that Poland should demand to be permitted to adopt the euro without first joining the ERM-II due to concerns over
currency speculation. Following the
2014 Russian military intervention in Ukraine, Belka said that Poland needed to reevaluate its reluctance to join the eurozone. In June 2014, a joint statement by the finance minister, central bank chief and president of Poland stated that Poland should begin a debate shortly after the
2015 parliamentary elections about when to adopt the euro, leading to a roadmap decision that might even include identification of a target date. In October 2014, the Deputy Prime Minister
Janusz Piechociński suggested that Poland should join the Eurozone in 2020 at the earliest. The newly elect Prime Minister,
Ewa Kopacz, having replaced Donald Tusk for the final year of the government's term, at the same time commented: "Before answering the question which target date should be set for the euro changeover, we must ask another: What is the situation of the eurozone and where are they going? If the eurozone will strengthen, then Poland should fulfill all the criteria for inclusion, which would in any case be good for the economy." The PM hereby referred to the earlier political decision of first letting the
National Coordination Committee for Euro Changeover complete its update of the changeover plan, which await a prior establishment of the
banking union, before setting a target date for euro adoption. More recently, Krzysztof Szczerski, the foreign affairs advisor to Poland's new President
Andrzej Duda, said in July 2015 that "Poles should decide in a referendum whether they want to embrace the euro". In the
2015 Polish parliamentary election, the winning party was the eurosceptic Law and Justice party, which opposes euro adoption. On 13 April 2019 at a convention,
Jarosław Kaczyński, the leader of Law and Justice party stated: "We will adopt the euro someday, because we are committed to do so and we are and will be in the European Union, but we will accept it when it is in our interest". He came forth with a declaration, according to which the euro would not be introduced until Poland's economy catches up with Western European economies. In his view Poland should accept the euro only when the national economy will reach 85% of
GDP per capita of Germany. Later on,
Jarosław Kaczyński and premier
Mateusz Morawiecki maintain that convergence to euro at this point would be harmful for Poland. This statement shows that the change of government, after the defeat of the PiS in the
2023 elections, did not modify the stance of Poland on the adoption of the euro. In January 2026, Domański reiterated his opposition to Poland joining the Eurozone in the short to medium term, arguing that Poland's strong economic performances showed that growth did not require the adoption of the euro. == The process for the introduction of the euro ==