Poland Holidays

Have a look at our spectacular selection of holidays in Poland and Poland holiday deals, all at great savings. Book your perfect Poland holiday today with lastminute.com.

You can either check out our special Poland holiday bargains below or simply use our search box to help find you the ideal Poland holiday. What could be easier?

Search holidays

(Ages at time of travel)
Poland shares borders with the Baltic Sea, the Russian Federation, Belarus, Ukraine, Lithuania, the Czech Republic, the Slovak Republic and the Federal Republic of Germany. Warsaw, the capital, was completely destroyed during World War II, but the Old Town has been completely rebuilt. The reconstructed Royal Castle is well worth seeing. The Lazienki Palace is set in a lovely park with an open-air Greek theatre and a monument to Chopin. Krakow, Polands second city, still retains its charming medieval air, having largely escaped destruction during the War. In the centre is the Cloth Hall built in the 14th century. Opposite is St Marys Church, famous for its wooden altar carved by Wit Stwosz. Gdansk, formerly known as Danzig, was also destroyed in World War II, but has also been restored to its former beauty. Sights include the Town Hall, the 17th-century Golden Gate and the largest Gothic church in Poland. Popular dishes include zrazy zawijane (mushroom-stuffed beefsteak rolls in sour cream) served with boiled kasza (buckwheat) and pigs knuckles. Poland has strong theatrical and musical traditions. Warsaw and the main cities have theatres and opera companies that put on a whole range of musical and cultural programmes for both locals and visitors.
  • Palace of Culture & Science
    A "gift" from Joseph Stalin and the Soviet people, Warsaw's Palace of Culture & Science (Palac Kultury i Nauki) remains controversial among Warsovians, given that it had been at the expense of Poland losing its freedom to the East. Modelled on Moscow University, the 42-floor building was, for many years, the tallest in Eastern Europe. Comprising a number of venues, there is also a viewing gallery on the 30th floor, beneath which the whole of Warsaw is displayed.
  • Royal Castle
    Incredibly Warsaw's Zamek Krolewski, the Royal Castle at the edge of the Old Town, is one of the city's newest buildings - built between 1971 and 1984. After the Old Town's complete destruction during the Second World War, it was decided to rebuild the whole area as it original was, dating back to medieval times, when the castle was the original seat of the Polish kings.
  • Chopin Memorial
    On the western edge of Warsaw's splended Royal Lazienki Park, Waclaw Szymanowski's imposing sculpture in honour of Poland's most famous muscial son, Fryderyk Chopin, was erected in 1926. Although destroyed during the ravages of the Second World War, it was restored in 1958 and now is a popular place to go walking.
  • Cloth Hall (Suckiennice)
    Lovers of amber should pay a visit to Krakow's Old Cloth Hall, which stands in the main Market Square. Traders line the long narrow bazaar, while on the walls, emblems depict the families who have traded here since medieval times. Only these families have the authority to carry on the tradition.
  • Warsaw's Old Jewish Ghetto District
    A trip to Warsaw is not complete without seeing the old Jewish district, turned into a ghetto during the Second World War and the setting of Roman Polanski's triple Oscar-winning film, The Pianist. Located just to the north-west of the city centre, the district can again proudly proclaim its Jewish heritage, with the city's Synagogue, a Jewish Institute and Theatre, as well as the stark memorial to the heroes of the ghetto in a park which will one day become the Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
Tell us about Poland in your own free blog at lastminuteliving.com