Best ISP in Poland for 2026
Poland has a competitive fixed broadband market. Orange Poland offers fiber and cable across major cities. UPC (now Play) has a strong cable network in urban centers. Fiber penetration is growing rapidly — Warsaw, Kraków, and Wrocław have excellent coverage. Prices are among Europe's most competitive. Updated 2026-04-27.
Top ISPs in Poland at a glance
| Rank | ISP | Technology | Plan range | Upload |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Orange Poland | Fiber (FTTH), Cable | 100–1000 Mbps | Asymmetric | |
| 2. Play (UPC Poland) | Cable (DOCSIS 3.1), Fiber (FTTH) | 100–1000 Mbps | Asymmetric |
ISP breakdown
1. Orange Poland
Orange Poland is one of the country's largest ISPs, offering fiber and cable broadband. Fiber plans up to 1 Gbps in Warsaw, Kraków, Wrocław, and other major cities. Known for stable performance and broad coverage.
2. Play (UPC Poland)
Play (formerly UPC Poland) is a major cable ISP in Poland's urban centers. Cable download speeds up to 1 Gbps but asymmetric upload. Fiber rollout is ongoing in larger cities. Competitive bundled offers with mobile.
How to pick the right plan in Poland
- Match the plan to actual usage, not headline speed. A 1 Gbps plan only matters if multiple people stream 4K, run cloud backups, or transfer large files at once. For a couple of streams and video calls, 200–500 Mbps is plenty.
- Prioritise upload symmetry if you work from home. Fibre plans in Poland are usually symmetric; legacy DSL and cable hybrids are not. Asymmetric plans cripple video calls, cloud sync, and uploading large files even when download looks fast.
- Watch for promotional vs renewal pricing. Most ISPs advertise a 6–12 month introductory rate that doubles afterwards. Check the post-promo price before signing — that's what you actually pay long-term.
- Check the router they ship. A flagship plan on a 4-year-old ISP-issued router still tops out at the router's Wi-Fi 5 speed. If you have Wi-Fi 6/6E devices, ask whether you can BYO router or upgrade the issued model.
- Read the fair-use policy. Some plans deprioritise traffic after a monthly threshold (often 1–3 TB) or during peak hours. The fine print is where the real bottleneck hides.
What to test after installation
Within the first 14 days of a new connection, run a wired speed test at three different times of day (early morning, evening peak, and late night). If sustained throughput is consistently below 80% of the advertised plan speed on a wired connection, escalate to your ISP within the cooling-off window — most providers in Poland are required to fix or release you from the contract.
Also test ping and jitter — see our guides on latency, jitter, and packet loss to interpret the numbers.
Frequently asked questions
Fibre vs cable vs 5G fixed wireless — which is best?
Fibre (FTTH) wins on reliability, symmetric upload, and consistent latency. Cable can hit similar download speeds but uploads are typically 10–20% of download and contention is higher at peak hours. 5G fixed wireless is improving fast and can be a strong option in areas without fibre, but performance varies with cell-tower load and weather.
Does the contract length actually matter?
Yes — long contracts (12–24 months) usually get the better headline price, but make it expensive to leave if service quality deteriorates or a faster competitor launches in your area. Read the early-termination fee before signing.
Is the ISP-supplied router good enough?
It depends. Newer Wi-Fi 6 / Wi-Fi 6E gateways from major ISPs are usually fine for typical homes. Older Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) units bottleneck plans above ~400 Mbps over wireless. If you can't change the router, hardwire your most important devices over Ethernet to bypass the wireless ceiling.
How to check ISP availability at your address
ISP availability varies at the address level — two houses on the same street can have different technology (fiber vs cable vs DSL) available. Always check each provider's address-level tool, then run a speed test after installation to verify real-world performance.