Mandatory Smoke and CO Detectors Across Poland
Poland requires smoke and carbon monoxide detectors in homes and rentals, with short-term rentals facing a June 30, 2026 deadline.
Important update: The government now requires smoke and carbon monoxide detectors in many Polish homes and rentals. Consequently, owners must act fast if they rent short-term or run a new building.
What changed and why the rule matters
On 22 November 2024 the Interior Minister Tomasz Siemoniak signed a regulation updating fire safety rules. Moreover, he timed the announcement on European Smoke Alarm Day to make a point. The new law responds to 2024 data. Specifically, authorities recorded over 27,400 fires, 235 deaths, and more than 1,700 injuries that year. In addition, officials logged 3,600 carbon monoxide incidents. Therefore, the ministry says many tragedies could be prevented by early detection.
Three deadlines and who must install detectors
The regulation creates three groups and three deadlines. First, from 23 December 2024 new residential buildings and new hospitality facilities must have detectors on hand. Second, and crucial for many owners, short-term rentals must comply by 30 June 2026. Consequently, Airbnb and Booking hosts have less than three months to fit devices. Third, the rule covers all remaining homes with fuel-burning appliances from 1 January 2030. However, buildings with adequate fire alarm systems may qualify for exemptions. In addition, cooking hobs alone do not trigger the CO detector rule.
Location, cost and practical steps
Detectors cost little. A smoke alarm typically costs 50-200 PLN. A carbon monoxide unit runs about 100-300 PLN. Moreover, combined units exist. Installation often takes only minutes. Therefore, many owners will handle it themselves. Place smoke detectors on ceilings and near bedrooms. Place CO detectors on walls at eye level, about 1.5-1.9 metres high, near boilers or fireplaces. In multi-storey houses put detectors on each floor. Furthermore, check for PN-EN 50291 certification. The Trade Inspection requires visible power and status LEDs. In addition, expect yearly operating costs near 10-20 PLN per dwelling, assuming five-year battery life.
smoke and carbon monoxide detectors: enforcement and penalties
Inspectors from the fire brigade and building control will check compliance. Authorities can fine up to 5,000 PLN. Moreover, courts may impose arrest in extreme cases. However, firefighters stress the human cost over fines. Therefore, the real risk lies in injury and death, not penalties.
For expats, the deadline is easy to meet. Buy certified models, mount them in the right spots, and test them monthly. Consequently, you reduce legal risk and protect lives. In addition, landlords avoid liability for guest injuries. Finally, remember the national regulation: updated in the Journal of Laws (Dz.U. 2024 pos. 1716) and effective as described.
Source: Read original article

