In March 2026, Poland’s Ministry of Digitization published the “Assumptions for the Policy for the Development of Quantum Technologies,” a strategic document setting national goals for the 2027–2036 period. According to reporting on the announcement, the government set a minimum funding floor of approximately EUR 1 billion (PLN 4.3 billion) for quantum sector investment over the ten-year horizon, with money from the state budget supporting basic research, infrastructure development, and workforce education.
Officials had previously conducted public consultations that drew 238 comments from universities, companies, and research institutes. The document included a new pillar devoted to scientific research and provisions for long-term financing at every level of technology development. The Ministry of Digitization will establish an inter-ministerial coordination team to oversee implementation, with annual verification of policy assumptions through published reports.
Workforce measures include the creation of new academic programs, scholarship funding, testing laboratories at universities, and quantum technology content in secondary school curricula. Enterprises will receive tax incentives and support from a special capital fund. Existing infrastructure centered on the PIONIER-Q communication network is to be expanded and integrated with European programs including EuroQCI and EuroHPC.