This article is a part of Poland Unpacked. Weekly intelligence for decision-makers
Poland’s seasonally unadjusted real GDP expanded by 3.8% in Q3 2025, accelerating from 3.3% in the previous quarter. Quarter-on-quarter, the economy grew by 0.9%.
Poland Statistics (GUS) has also revised its mid-November flash estimate, which had put annual growth at 3.7%. The full release, offering more granular data, paints a clearer picture of the underlying dynamics in the Polish economy.
Growth structure: A shift between consumption and investment
Private consumption remained the main driver of GDP growth in Q3 2025. Yet its contribution (2% y/y) was smaller than in the previous quarter (2.6% y/y). In unadjusted annual terms, household spending rose by 3.5%, down from 4.5% in Q2.
The slowdown surprised analysts. The National Bank of Poland (NBP), for instance, had expected growth of 4.2% in its November forecast. The data suggest that households are still wary of loosening their purse strings after the macroeconomic shocks of recent years.
Public consumption (up 1.5% y/y) also made a notable contribution to growth. Government spending rose by as much as 7.4% year-on-year, which aligns with the sizeable general-government deficit projected at around 7% of GDP. Public outlays therefore continue to prop up GDP – an effect that was especially visible in 2024 but had faded somewhat in the first half of 2025.
A similar pattern may be emerging in investment. It increased by 7.1% in the third quarter, though this component is highly volatile: the previous two quarters saw growth of 6.4% and a contraction of 0.7%. More evidence will be needed before declaring a sustained recovery – something that will likely only become clear next year.
A comparison of headline investment growth with spending by firms employing more than 50 people and by local governments suggests that defense-related outlays may have been a major driver this quarter.
A welcome development is the first positive contribution of net exports to growth since early 2024. Exports rose by 6.1% year-on-year, while imports increased by 5.9% - a solid performance given the muted recovery among Poland’s key trading partners. Also noteworthy is the strong rise in industrial value added, which grew by nearly 5%. At the opposite end of the scale sits construction, where value added hovered around zero.
Key Takeaways
- Growth is solid but still consumer‑driven: GDP rose 3.8% year-on-year in Q3 2025 (0.9% q/q), with private and public consumption remaining key drivers, although households are spending more cautiously than expected after recent shocks.
- Investment and defense spending are picking up, but the trend is not yet stable: total investment grew 7.1% in Q3, and available data suggest defense-related outlays were an important driver, though volatility in previous quarters means it is too early to call a sustained investment recovery.
- External sector and industry are finally adding support: net exports made their first positive contribution to growth since early 2024, with exports outpacing imports, industrial value added rose by nearly 5%, while construction remains flat with value added around zero.
