Legalisation
Legalisation is a certification that the document has been issued by a proper office - my means of legalisation the consul certifies the authenticity of a signature and stamp/seal of a foreign official. This allows you to use a foreign official document in Poland.
Legalisation applies to states non-members of the Hague Convention Abolishing the Requirement of Legalisation for Foreign Public Documents of 5 October 1961.
IMPORTANT! The consul can only legalise originals and official copies of documents. Photocopies and computer printouts cannot be legalised. The documents must be authenticated by the competent local authority before you present them to the consul. In most countries authentication is made by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Justice or another central authority of the document's country of origin.
The consul will refuse to legalise documents without prior superlegalisation.
To make an appointment in a consulate, choose legal issue appointment on the e-Konsulat website call or e-mail a relevant consular office.
Legalisation fee is 27 GBP.
If a foreign authority requires legalisation of a Polish document, please read the information available on Polish MFA website.
Legal basis
The Convention Abolishing the Requirement of Legalisation for Foreign Public Documents of 5 October 1961
The Consular Law Act of 25 June 2015
The Act of 17 November 1964 – Code of Civil Procedure
Regulation of the Minister of Foreign Affairs on consular fees of 5 May 2022