PL · ISO 13616
Poland IBAN — format, length, example & validator
IBANs issued in Poland are 28 characters long and begin with the country code PL. Validate a Poland IBAN below, or read on for the full structure, an example, and how the MOD 97 check digits work.
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How a Poland IBAN is structured
A Poland IBAN is read left to right: a 2-letter ISO 3166 country code (PL), 2 MOD 97 check digits, then a 24-character BBAN. The BBAN is split into 2 fields: 8 digits, 16 digits.
Poland IBAN example
A sample Poland IBAN that passes all checks (format, length, MOD 97):
How Poland IBAN check digits work
The two digits at positions 3–4 are a MOD 97-10 checksum computed from the country code and the BBAN. To verify it, the IBAN is rearranged (BBAN first, country code and check digits last), letters are converted to numbers (A = 10, B = 11, …), and the whole integer is taken mod 97. A valid IBAN has a remainder of 1. This catches any single-digit typo and most transposition errors — which is why a one-character mistake is enough to make a Poland IBAN fail validation instantly.
Poland IBAN FAQ
- How long is a Poland IBAN?
- A Poland IBAN is always 28 characters long: 2 letters for the country code (PL), 2 check digits, and a 24-character BBAN. Any Poland IBAN that is shorter or longer than 28 characters is invalid.
- What country code does a Poland IBAN start with?
- A Poland IBAN starts with the ISO 3166 country code PL. The first two characters are always PL, followed by two MOD 97 check digits, then the country-specific BBAN.
- How do I validate a Poland IBAN?
- Paste the IBAN into the validator on this page — it checks the character set, the 28-character length, and the MOD 97 check digits, all in your browser. You can also open the full IBAN validator with a Poland example pre-filled.
- Does a valid Poland IBAN mean the account exists?
- No. Validation only confirms the IBAN is structurally well-formed and the check digits are correct per ISO 13616. It does not verify the account exists, is open, or belongs to anyone. Always confirm with the recipient or their bank before sending money.
⚠️ Validation only checks structure and check digits against ISO 13616. A valid Poland IBAN does not guarantee the account exists or is open. Always confirm with the recipient or their bank before initiating a transfer.