Poland's Clean Media Fee Will Raise Device Prices From November
The Polish Ministry of Culture has signed provisions extending a reprography levy to smartphones, tablets, laptops, and televisions, a measure critics call a device tax that will land on consumers from November.

The Polish Ministry of Culture signed provisions on 2 May 2026 expanding a reprography levy to smartphones, tablets, laptops, and televisions — devices that can reproduce copyrighted content. The measure, colloquially called the "clean media" fee, comes into effect in November, meaning retailers will need to factor the levy into pricing for affected products before the autumn shopping season.
The reprography fee is not new to Poland. It has existed for years as a levy on photocopiers, blank media, and recording equipment, with revenues distributed to authors, performers, and publishers through collective management organisations. What changes now is the category of devices captured by the provisions. The Ministry's rationale is straightforward: if a device can store or reproduce music, film, or text, its manufacturer or importer should contribute to a compensation pool for creators, mirroring the private copying exception recognised across EU member states.
Critics argue the fee is structurally regressive and poorly targeted. Consumer electronics retailers have warned that the levy will push prices upward at a time when Poles are already managing elevated costs across multiple spending categories. The fee does not distinguish between a device used primarily for work and one used for pirating films — it applies by category, not by usage pattern. Manufacturers and importers, rather than consumers directly, pay the levy at the point of import or first sale, but industry representatives argue the cost is passed forward through higher retail prices in practice.
The policy also raises implementation questions. Retailers will need to determine which specific products fall under the provisions, particularly for devices with hybrid functions — a laptop used for video conferencing and one used for downloading media are taxed identically under the current framework. The sources do not specify the levy rate or whether a tiered structure exists for different device categories.
Proponents within the cultural sector counter that the fee represents overdue alignment with EU copyright directives. The EU's 2019 Copyright in the Digital Single Market Directive included provisions onoutie copying compensation, and several member states already apply levies to digital devices. From this perspective, Poland is catching up rather than innovating, and the compensation pool will directly benefit writers, musicians, and filmmakers whose work is reproduced privately at scale.
The broader stakes are economic and political. If the levy is set at a level that meaningfully contributes to collective rights management, it could channel several million złoty annually to Polish cultural institutions and individual creators. If it is set low enough to avoid significant price pressure, critics will note it accomplishes little beyond adding a compliance burden for retailers. The November deadline gives the sector six months to adjust pricing systems, renegotiate supplier contracts, and communicate the change to consumers — a timeline that industry groups describe as tight.
What remains unclear from the available sources is the precise fee schedule: whether a flat rate applies per device, a percentage of value, or a graduated scale based on storage capacity. The Ministry of Culture has not yet published the full fee table, and the signed provisions reference regulations that will follow. Until that schedule appears, the actual price impact for consumers remains speculative, though the direction of travel is unambiguous.
Desk note: This publication covered the signing as a consumer-affecting regulatory change. The wire framing led with the device-category expansion and the "clean media" framing; we foregrounded the pricing mechanism and the implementation gap.