Apartment Rental Prices
in Warsaw 2026
How much does rented housing in Warsaw actually cost right now. Data for every apartment type, every major district — from primary sources: NBP, Otodom Analytics, CBRE Poland, Investropa.
Article Contents
01 · Market Overview
The Warsaw rental market in 2026 has emerged from the turbulence of 2022–2024 and become structured and predictable — but still competitive.
The Warsaw rental market in 2026 has emerged from the turbulence of 2022–2024 and become structured and predictable — but still competitive. According to Investropa and Bankier.pl (Otodom Analytics), rental prices have risen 4–6% compared to early 2025 — noticeably slower than the sharp peaks of the past two years.
The average city-wide rent is 85 PLN/m²/month. In Śródmieście it reaches 100–150 PLN/m², while in outer residential districts it drops to 65–75 PLN/m². Investropa, April 2026
📊 Data sources: National Bank of Poland (NBP) — quarterly real estate reports; Otodom Analytics — November 2025; CBRE Poland Q3 2025 Warsaw Living Figures; Bankier.pl — monthly reviews; Investropa — cross-verified with NBP, CBRE and Cushman & Wakefield. Data confirmed as of April 2026.
What changed compared to 2025
Autumn 2025 brought another seasonal peak — followed by winter 2025–2026 with a moderate correction. By early 2026, the market stabilised. Several important trends:
Wola — supply oversaturation
The influx of new residential complexes in 2025–2026 increased supply. Tenants have more room for negotiation here compared to 2024.
M2 westward to Bemowo
New stations Łazurowa, Chrzanów, Karolin have increased Bemowo's appeal — prices there are trending upward in 2026.
PRS operators growing
Heimstaden, Resi4Rent, Catella are expanding their portfolios. Standardised contracts, online signing — convenient for foreigners.
Żoliborz and Mokotów — shortage
A good apartment here goes in 7–10 days. Supply can't keep up with the consistently high demand from families and expats.
02 · Prices by Apartment Type
Below are current price ranges across Warsaw generally, without reference to a specific district. The price of a specific apartment depends on location, finish and parking availability.
💡 The "× 3" rule: banks, employers and most landlords expect your monthly income to be at least 3 times the rent. For an apartment at 4,500 PLN — minimum confirmed income of 13,500 PLN/month.
The average rent for a 1-bedroom apartment in Warsaw in early 2026 is around 4,200 PLN/month, plus czynsz administracyjny 700–1,200 PLN. Investropa, January 2026
03 · By District
Rental prices across Warsaw range from 65–150 PLN/m² depending on district. Below is a summary table for all key districts. Investropa + Otodom Analytics, Q1 2026
| District | PLN/m²/mo | Studio | 2-bedroom | Segment | Vacancy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Śródmieście | 100–150 | 3,800–5,200 | 6,500–9,500+ | Premium | 2–3% |
| Żoliborz | 95–130 | 3,400–4,800 | 5,500–8,000 | Premium | 2–4% |
| Wilanów | 95–130 | 3,500–4,800 | 6,000–10,000 | Premium | 3–5% |
| Mokotów | 90–140 | 3,000–4,500 | 4,800–7,000 | Premium | 2–4% |
| Wola | 85–115 | 2,900–4,200 | 5,500–7,500 | Business | 4–7% |
| Ochota | 80–110 | 2,700–3,800 | 4,000–5,800 | Central | 4–6% |
| Praga Północ | 75–105 | 2,400–3,600 | 3,500–5,500 | Bohemian | 5–8% |
| Praga Południe | 70–105 | 2,300–3,400 | 3,500–5,000 | Right bank | 5–9% |
| Ursynów | 78–105 | 2,600–3,700 | 4,200–5,800 | Family | 3–6% |
| Bemowo | 72–98 | 2,400–3,400 | 3,800–5,200 | Affordable | 5–8% |
| Bielany | 68–95 | 2,200–3,200 | 3,500–5,000 | Green | 6–9% |
| Białołęka | 65–88 | 2,000–2,900 | 3,200–4,500 | Budget | 7–11% |
| Targówek | 63–85 | 1,900–2,800 | 3,000–4,200 | Budget | 8–12% |
⚠️ Prices in the table: these are the rental rate without czynsz administracyjny. Add 700–1,200 PLN to each figure depending on area and building. See section 5 for details.
04 · What Affects the Price
Two apartments in the same building can differ by 1,000 PLN/month — and both be "market rate". Here are the key factors that shape the price.
Distance to metro
Apartments within 500 m of a metro station cost 15–25% more than comparable ones without walkable metro access. The strongest effect comes from M1 and M2.
Year of construction
New builds (2018+) with insulation, lift and parking cost 20–30% more than the block housing heritage of the 1970s–1990s. But well-maintained blocks are competitive on price/quality.
Furnishing and finish
Fully furnished + new kitchen + parquet vs empty and after a market renovation — the difference is 800–1,500 PLN for the same area in the same building.
Parking space / garage
An underground parking space adds 300–600 PLN to the rate. In districts without metro — often a deciding factor for car owners.
Balcony / terrace
A balcony or loggia adds 200–400 PLN to the rate. A terrace in the premium segment — 500–1,000+ PLN. Especially valued since COVID.
Area: the small apartment effect
The price per m² in studios and small one-bedrooms is higher than in large apartments. 28 m² may cost 120 PLN/m², while 80 m² costs 90 PLN/m² in the same district.
📍 Micro-location matters more than district. An apartment 200 m from Rondo Daszyńskiego (Wola) can cost the same as Mokotów Górny — even though the average district prices are very different. Always compare the specific address, not just the district name.
05 · Real Cost
The number in the listing is not your monthly payment. Add the mandatory czynsz administracyjny to the rental rate, plus metered utilities. Here is a full breakdown for two scenarios.
Comparison: Mokotów (mid-range) vs Bielany (budget)
Mokotów · 2-bed · 55 m²
Bielany · 2-bed · 55 m²
What is czynsz administracyjny
Czynsz administracyjny is a monthly payment for building maintenance: cleaning, rubbish collection, lift servicing, security, shared meters. This is NOT rent — it is a contribution to the residents' community (wspólnota mieszkaniowa or SM). It is paid separately to the landlord's invoice or included in it — depending on the contract.
Amount: 17–21 PLN/m²/month for most Warsaw buildings. Investropa, 2026 averages. For a 55 m² apartment — 935–1,155 PLN per month on top of the rent. Always ask for the exact amount before signing — and request statements for the past 12 months.
For a detailed automatic calculation, use our Warsaw rent expense calculator.
06 · Price Trend: 5 Years
Over 5 years, average Warsaw rental prices have risen by approximately 47%. The sharpest jump was 2022–2023: the influx of 100,000+ Ukrainians in a matter of months pushed the market up 25–30%. Investropa, NBP
Average 2-bedroom rent in Warsaw (PLN/month)
* Median values for Warsaw overall, excluding czynsz admin. Sources: NBP, Otodom Analytics, Investropa. 2026 — Q1 data.
Forecast for 2026–2027
According to Investropa and CBRE Poland estimates, Warsaw rental prices will grow by 3–7% per year over the next 12–18 months. Drivers: continued inflow of highly qualified specialists, limited institutional rental supply, metro expansion. Correction risk: a significant drop in mortgage rates pulling tenants toward ownership — but rates currently remain at 7–8%.
07 · Seasonality: When Is It Cheaper
The Warsaw market has clear seasonal logic. Knowing it means saving 5–15% on cost — or having a choice rather than taking whatever's available.
📅 August–October: hottest season. Students return, companies relocate staff. A good apartment goes in 7–15 days. December–February: best time to search. Landlords offer 5–10% discounts, competition is minimal. Investropa, Bankier.pl / Otodom Analytics
08 · Warsaw vs Other Polish Cities
Warsaw is the most expensive rental market in Poland. Comparison of average city-wide rent (all apartment types): Otodom Analytics, Q1 2026
Renting in Warsaw is 15–25% more expensive than Kraków and Wrocław — but salaries are also higher: the average net salary in Warsaw's IT sector is 30–40% above the same roles in Kraków. If your work is not location-bound — compare both markets before relocating.
09 · How to Negotiate: 5 Techniques
A landlord always builds a buffer into the listing price — typically 3–8%. This is room for negotiation if you know the approach.
Search in winter (December–February)
In low season apartments sit for 3–6 weeks. The landlord already sees "zero" on the account for every empty day. That's when a 5–10% discount passes easily without extra arguments.
Offer 2–3 months upfront
Landlords value predictability. "I'm ready to pay 3 months in advance" — instantly motivates a 5–7% discount: they see real money now rather than eviction risks.
Show market comparables
Find 2–3 similar apartments on Otodom that are cheaper or of equal quality. "I see something similar for 4,200, but your apartment suits me better — could we do 4,500?" — concrete and non-confrontational.
Offer a longer contract
The standard is 12 months. Offer 18–24 months at a fixed price — the landlord gets stability and avoids the hassle of finding a new tenant. Worth a 3–5% discount.
Negotiate on czynsz, not rent
Some landlords psychologically resist lowering "their" rental rate. Propose: "keep the rate, but include czynsz in it" — you save 600–900 PLN/month and the landlord doesn't feel they've conceded.
⚠️ Don't negotiate in August–September. At peak season there are 5–15 candidates for a good apartment. A counter-offer below asking price may simply mean the landlord picks the next person. Save your negotiating power for the low season.
10 · FAQ
Answers to the most popular questions about prices and renting.