Polish identity card
| Polish national identity card (Dowód osobisty) | |
|---|---|
Polish national ID card in the common EU design – issued from 8 November 2021 | |
Polish national ID card – 2015 version (front and back) | |
| Type | Identity document, travel document (in the listed countries) |
| Issued by | Poland |
| First issued | 1 January 2001 (plastic card) 4 March 2019 (biometric version) 27 November 2020 (current version) |
| Valid in | European Union and the rest of Europe (except Belarus, Russia, Ukraine and United Kingdom) Georgia Montserrat (max. 14 days) Overseas France Turkey |
| Expiration | 5 years (children up to 12 years) 10 years (children 12-18 years, adults over 18) |
The Polish Identity Card is a national identity document issued to Polish citizens. As Poland is a European Union member state it is also serves a European Identity card. Every Polish citizen 18 years of age or older residing permanently in Poland is required to have an identity card (Polish: Dowód osobisty, lit. 'personal proof') issued by the local office of civic affairs. Children as well as Polish citizens living permanently abroad are entitled, but not required, to have one. Identity cards are valid for a period of 10 years (5 years for children under the age of 12 on the date of issue).
The front bears a photo of the holder, surname, forenames, date of birth, nationality, card number, gender and expiry date. It also contains the coat of arms of Poland. Below that, the card access number can be found. That number is necessary to connect with an embedded microchip (when using e-signature for instance).
On the back can be found the holder's place of birth (city or village in Poland or foreign country's name), date of issue, repeated card number, issuing authority, legal ascendant(s) name(s) and personal number (PESEL – Powszechny Elektroniczny System Ewidencji Ludności – universal electronic population database). Below the card number the bearer's photo is repeated. On the top of the back side the card access number is represented in a bar code.
The Polish identity card also functions as a travel document within Europe (except Belarus, Russia, Ukraine and United Kingdom) as well as French overseas territories, Turkey, Georgia and Montserrat (for max. 14 days) instead of a Polish passport.