Languages of Poland
Polish is the only official language recognized by Poland's constitution, and the majority of the country's population speak it as a native language or use it for home communication. However, there are various regional languages and languages brought by immigrants. Deaf communities in Poland use Polish Sign Language, which belongs to the German family of Sign Languages.
Languages other than Polish that have existed in the region for at least 100 years can gain recognition as a regional or minority language, which have appropriate rules of use. In areas where the speakers of these languages make up more than 20% of the population, the language can receive the status of auxiliary language, while Polish remains the official language.
According to the Act of 6 January 2005 on national and ethnic minorities and on the regional languages, 16 languages have been recognized as minority languages; 1 regional language, 10 languages belonging to 9 national minorities and 5 languages belonging to 4 ethnic minorities. Jewish and Romani minorities each have 2 recognized minority languages.
Household languages
Language used in households by population as reported in the 2021 national census:- Polish
- English
- Silesian
- German
- Kashubian
- Russian
- Ukrainian
- French
- Italian
- Spanish
- Dutch
- Belarusian
- Norwegian
- Swedish
- Polish Sign Language
- Rusyn
- Romani
- Lithuanian
- Greek
- Czech
- Danish
- Vietnamese
- Arabic
- Portuguese
- Turkish
- Japanese
- Chinese
- Slovak
- Armenian
- Others
- Unreported
National minority languages
Ethnic minority languages
- Karaim
- Rusyn, called Lemko in Poland
- Two Romani languages are officially recognised: Polska Roma and Bergitka Roma.
- Tatar, called Tartar in the English translation of the act.
Regional languages
Official recognition as a regional language:Unrecognised regional languages
- Silesian
- Wymysorys is a West Germanic endangered language with very few speakers. It is native to Wilamowice, Silesian Voivodeship, but, unlike the similarly endangered Karaim language, it was practically unknown during the preparation of the aforementioned Act.
- Alzenau, is an East Central German dialect spoken in the former village of Hałcnów, which is now a district of Bielsko-Biała, Silesian Voivodeship
Auxiliary languages
The bilingual status of gminas (municipalities) in Poland is regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish. The following is a list of languages by the number of gminas that have them as auxiliary languages.Languages of bilingual settlements
A settlement can use any officially recognised, regional, or minority languages in their name. Currently only 5 settlements have exercised this power. The following is a list of languages by their use in settlements dual language names.Languages of diasporas and immigrants
These languages are not recognised as minority languages, as the Act of 2005 defines minority as "a group of Polish citizens striving to preserve its language, culture or tradition, whose ancestors have been living on the present territory of the Republic of Poland for at least 100 years":- Greek: the language of the Greek diaspora in Poland of 1950s.
- Vietnamese: the language of the biggest immigrant community in Poland since the 1960s, having their own newspapers, schools, churches etc.