How to Cancel Subscriptions in Poland
Your Polish consumer rights, refund rules, and the steps that make charges actually stop — updated for 2026. Includes a free cancellation-deadline calculator.
Cancelling subscriptions in Poland
Poland is Central Europe's largest streaming market, with local players (Player, Canal+ Poland) alongside globals and football-driven premium subscriptions. EU cancellation rights apply throughout.
Cancellation Deadline Calculator — Poland
Enter your renewal date and notice period to find the last day you can cancel.
Pick a renewal date above to calculate your cancellation deadline.
Your cancellation rights in Poland
As an EU/EEA market, Poland guarantees a 14-day right of withdrawal (cooling-off) on most subscriptions bought online at a distance — cancel within two weeks of signing up and you are entitled to a refund. Providers must clearly state contract duration, renewal terms and notice periods before you commit, and since 2023 EU rules require that any subscription you can take out online must also be cancellable online, as easily as you signed up. The practical challenge in Poland is rarely your legal right to cancel — it is catching the renewal or notice-period deadline before the next charge.
Refunds when you cancel in Poland
Within the 14-day cooling-off period you can cancel most online subscriptions in Poland for a full or pro-rata refund. After that window, refunds depend on the provider's terms and the timing of your cancellation — cancelling before the next billing date is the most reliable way to avoid an unwanted charge.
How to cancel common subscriptions in Poland
Cancel anytime in Account → Membership; access continues until period end
Cancel in Account → Subscription; reverts to free tier at period end
Manage in Account → Prime Membership; pro-rata refund if unused
Cancel in Account → Subscription before renewal
Often a minimum term plus 30-day notice — check contract
Typically 1–3 month notice before the contract anniversary
Minimum term (often 24 months) then 30-day rolling notice
Annual auto-renewal — cancel before the renewal date
Step-by-step: cancelling without getting charged again
- Use the 14-day right of withdrawal on online sign-ups in Poland to cancel within two weeks for a refund.
- Cancel online — since 2023 EU rules require online cancellation to be as easy as online sign-up.
- Track minimum-term contracts (telecom, pay-TV, gym) — note the anniversary date and notice period and cancel in time.
Cancellation help by city in Poland
Local cancellation guides for the largest cities in Poland:
Frequently asked questions
What are my subscription cancellation rights in Poland?
As an EU/EEA market, Poland guarantees a 14-day right of withdrawal (cooling-off) on most subscriptions bought online at a distance — cancel within two weeks of signing up and you are entitled to a refund. Providers must clearly state contract duration, renewal terms and notice periods before you commit, and since 2023 EU rules require that any subscription you can take out online must also be cancellable online, as easily as you signed up. The practical challenge in Poland is rarely your legal right to cancel — it is catching the renewal or notice-period deadline before the next charge.
Can I get a refund when I cancel in Poland?
Within the 14-day cooling-off period you can cancel most online subscriptions in Poland for a full or pro-rata refund. After that window, refunds depend on the provider's terms and the timing of your cancellation — cancelling before the next billing date is the most reliable way to avoid an unwanted charge.
How do I stop being charged after cancelling in Poland?
Cancel before your renewal or notice deadline, keep written confirmation, and check your next statement. The most common reason consumers in Poland keep getting charged is a missed renewal date — tracking each subscription's billing date prevents it.
What's the best way to track subscription renewals in Poland?
List every subscription with its renewal date and notice period in one place. For automatic reminders before each renewal, a tracker like SubTracker.io is the most reliable option — it's privacy-first and GDPR-compliant.
Legal information last reviewed 7 June 2026. Reflects Polish and EU consumer law as of that date; this is general information, not legal advice.
How many subscriptions are you actually paying for?
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