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No β Poles do not need a traditional US visa for a short visit, but they do need an approved ESTA before they travel. Poland is a member of the US Visa Waiver Program (VWP), which lets its citizens visit the United States for tourism, business or transit for up to 90 days without applying for a B1/B2 visa at a US embassy. Instead, Poles apply online for an ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization), which is linked electronically to the passport β there is no sticker, no label and no embassy interview.
Poland is the most recent large country to join the Visa Waiver Program, gaining ESTA access in November 2019 β before that, Poles needed a B1/B2 visa to visit the United States. Chicago, home to one of the worldβs largest Polish communities, remains a major destination. You can review the destination on our US travel hub or go straight to the US ESTA page.
ESTA is an online travel authorization run by US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) for citizens of Visa Waiver Program countries such as Poland. It is not a visa β it is a pre-travel screening that checks your eligibility against security and law-enforcement databases before you board. For Polish citizens, an approved ESTA replaces the need for a B1/B2 visitor visa for stays of up to 90 days.
Typical reasons Poles use ESTA include holidays and sightseeing, visiting friends and relatives, attending conferences or business meetings, and transit to a third country. It does not permit paid work, study leading to a degree, or stays beyond 90 days. If your plans involve any of those, you will need the appropriate US visa instead.
An ESTA is mandatory for every Polish citizen who travels to the United States by air or sea under the Visa Waiver Program, regardless of age. There is no family or group authorization: each traveller, including children and infants, needs their own ESTA linked to their own passport. A parent or guardian can complete the application on a child's behalf using the child's passport details.
Polish citizens who already hold a valid US visa β for example a B1/B2 stamped in their passport β do not need an ESTA, as the visa takes precedence. But for a standard short holiday or business trip, the great majority of Poles travel on ESTA rather than applying for a visa.
To use ESTA, Poles must hold a biometric Polish passport β an e-passport with the small gold camera-shaped chip symbol on the cover. Modern Polish passports are biometric, but an emergency or temporary travel document is not accepted under the Visa Waiver Program. Most Polish citizens qualify for ESTA, but some are not eligible and must apply for a B1/B2 visa instead. You generally cannot use ESTA if you:
If any of these apply, Poles should apply for a B1/B2 visitor visa at a US embassy rather than using ESTA. When in doubt, answer every eligibility question truthfully β an honest declaration that leads to a visa is far better than a false answer that can trigger a long-term ban.
ESTA is completed entirely online, so Poles do not upload a stack of paperwork, but you must enter accurate details that match your passport exactly. Have the following ready before you apply:
Most Poles fly to the United States from Warsaw Chopin and KrakΓ³w, typically arriving at Chicago, New York and Newark. Apply at least 72 hours before departure β ideally as soon as you book your flight β so a manual review, if any, has time to clear before check-in. Never buy a non-refundable ticket before your ESTA is approved.
For Polish applicants, more than 80% of ESTAs are approved within minutes, and the authorization is sent by email. A minority are flagged for manual review by CBP, which can take up to 72 hours. You should not count on instant approval at the airport: apply several days before departure so you have a buffer if anything needs attention. If your status shows 'Pending' or you are asked for more information, wait for the email decision rather than submitting a second application.
An approved ESTA is valid for two years from the date of approval, or until your Polish passport expires β whichever comes first β and allows multiple entries. On each visit Poles may stay up to 90 days. This suits a single long holiday, a multi-stop trip across the United States, or several shorter business or family visits over two years.
The two-year validity and the 90-day-per-visit limit are separate: you can come and go as often as you like while the ESTA is valid, provided no single stay exceeds 90 days, which cannot be extended. The ESTA is tied to the passport you applied with, so if you renew or replace your Polish passport you will need a new ESTA linked to the new document.
ESTA covers tourism, a defined set of business activities and transit β but not employment. As a Polish ESTA holder you can:
You cannot work for a US employer, earn income from a US source, study for a degree, work as a journalist for hire, or stay longer than 90 days on a single visit. If you need to work, study long-term or stay longer, apply for the appropriate US visa instead.
Most Poles only need an ESTA: it is applied for online and is usually approved within minutes. Choose a B1/B2 visa instead if you are not eligible for the Visa Waiver Program, plan to stay longer than 90 days, will study for academic credit, will be paid from a US source, or have had a previous ESTA or visa refusal. A B1/B2 visa requires an in-person interview at a US embassy, with wait times that can run to weeks or months in some countries. For a standard short holiday or business trip, ESTA is faster and entirely online.
An approved ESTA lets Poles board the plane, but it does not guarantee entry β the final decision rests with a CBP officer at your port of entry. On arrival you proceed to Customs and Border Protection, where the officer reviews your passport, takes your fingerprints and photo, and asks about the purpose and length of your trip. Carry your passport, proof of onward or return travel, proof of accommodation, and evidence that you can support yourself financially. Provided everything is in order, your passport is stamped 'Admitted under VWP / WT' and you are free to enter the United States β whether that is New York, the national parks, or the beaches of Florida and California.
Every traveller needs their own ESTA, including children and infants, because each authorization is linked to an individual biometric passport. A parent or guardian can complete the application for a child using the child's own Polish passport details. If you are travelling as a Polish family, simply submit a separate ESTA application for each member β each traveller is assessed individually under the Visa Waiver Program, regardless of age.
No traditional visa is needed for short trips β Poland is in the US Visa Waiver Program, so Poles travel on an approved ESTA for stays of up to 90 days. You apply online and it is linked to your passport, with no embassy interview. A B1/B2 visa is only needed for longer stays, work, study for credit, or if you are not VWP-eligible.
Up to 90 days per visit. The ESTA is valid for two years from approval (or until your passport expires) and allows multiple entries, but no single stay can exceed 90 days, and the limit cannot be extended.
Most are approved within minutes, with the result emailed to you; some take up to 72 hours if flagged for manual CBP review. Poles should apply at least 72 hours before departure and never book a non-refundable flight before approval.
No. ESTA is for tourism, business visitor activities and transit only β it does not allow paid work, US-source income or study for a degree. You can attend meetings and conferences, but for employment you need a US work visa such as H-1B, L-1 or O-1.
Yes. Every traveller needs an individual ESTA linked to their own biometric passport, including newborns and infants. A parent or guardian can complete and submit the application on the child's behalf.
No. The ESTA lets you board the plane, but the CBP officer at the port of entry makes the final decision. Carry proof of return travel, accommodation and funds, and be ready to explain the purpose and length of your trip.
You cannot use the Visa Waiver Program for that trip and must apply for a B1/B2 visa at a US embassy. A denial is not a permanent ban. Common causes include past travel to restricted countries, prior visa refusals, undisclosed criminal records, or simple typos.