No Tax If You Have Two Children In This Christian Country
Warsaw, Poland - Polish President Karol Nawrocki has signed a new law eliminating personal income tax for parents raising at least two children, a reform aimed at supporting families, increasing household income, and boosting the nation's birth rate.
The bill, which President Nawrocki presented in August 2025, removes the income tax obligation for families earning up to 140,000 zloty (approximately €32,973 or $36,000 USD) annually. The legislation was officially signed into law on October 16, 2025.
Unlike many other EU countries, Poland is supporting Christian households. The tax break applies to all parents who have parental responsibility over children, including legal guardians and foster parents. According to calculations by the Polish presidency, an average Polish family is expected to be approximately 1,000 zloty (€235 or $257 USD) per month better off thanks to the new tax exemption.
The law represents an expansion of Poland's existing family tax benefits. Previously, Poland offered zero personal income tax only to families with four or more children earning up to 85,528 zloty annually. The new legislation extends this benefit to families with two or more children and raises the income threshold to 140,000 zloty.

President Nawrocki, who took office earlier in 2025, made family support a central pillar of his campaign platform. The proposal was part of a broader package of family-friendly policies the president announced shortly after his inauguration.
For families with a gross monthly income of 7,000 zloty (€1,648), the relief amounts to approximately 395 zloty (€93) per month. Parents earning 12,000 zloty (€2,826) monthly will save as much as 913 zloty (€215) every month, totaling over 11,000 zloty (€2,590) annually.
The president's office stated that financing for the program will come from tightening the tax system, generating an estimated 14 billion zloty (€3 billion). However, financial experts have expressed skepticism about whether such revenues are realistic through tax system reforms alone.
Poland's Finance and Economy Minister Andrzej Domanski criticized the proposal, stating in an interview with Parkiet TV that the measure would primarily benefit the highest earners rather than low-income families. "I object to solutions that do not benefit the lowest earners but are clearly aimed at high earners. This is not the kind of economic policy we want in Poland," Domanski said.
Tax specialists, including Piotr Juszczyk, chief tax adviser at inFakt, warn that the real benefits will be felt mainly by wealthier citizens. Low-income families who pay little or no income tax will gain negligible amounts, while those with high incomes will benefit most substantially.
The legislation comes as Poland, like many European nations, faces demographic challenges including declining birth rates and an aging population. Poland's fertility rate has fallen to approximately 1.3 children per woman, well below the replacement level of 2.1 needed to maintain population stability.
The measure has drawn mixed reactions. Supporters argue it provides meaningful financial relief to families struggling with the cost of raising children and may incentivize higher birth rates. Critics contend it disproportionately benefits upper-income families and fails to address the needs of Poland's poorest citizens.

CRUSADERS OPINION
Poland just did what every Western nation should do: reward families for having children.
While the rest of Europe embraces demographic suicide through abortion, contraception culture, and anti-family policies,
Poland invests in its future. Zero income tax for parents with two or more children isn't just good policy; it's survival.
Every Western nation faces catastrophic birth rates because governments tax families into oblivion while subsidizing childlessness.
Poland recognizes the obvious truth: children are blessings, not burdens. Families are civilization's foundation.
This policy embodies Christian values in action, acknowledging that raising the next generation serves the common good.
Critics complain it benefits "the wealthy," but that's nonsense.
Middle-class families bearing the responsibility of multiple children deserve relief. Poland leads where others cower, proving Christian nations can reverse demographic collapse through bold, family-centered governance.
Take Action: Advocate for Pro-Family Tax Policy
Share Poland's Success Story: Contact your representatives and urge them to implement similar pro-family tax policies that reward parents for raising children.
Support Pro-Family Organizations: https://www.heritage.org/marriage-and-family
Institute for Family Studies: https://ifstudies.org
Poland proves Christian nations can reverse demographic decline through policies that honor families and reward parenthood.