Lesser Poland (Malopolskie) stretches across southern Poland, covering roughly 15,000 square kilometres from the Tatra Mountains along the Slovak border to the uplands north of Krakow. About 3.4 million people live in the voivodeship, with Krakow alone accounting for around 800,000 residents. The city draws over 14 million visitors annually, making it Poland's top tourist destination after Warsaw.
Krakow's historic centre, particularly the area around Rynek Glowny, Kazimierz, and Podgorze, concentrates the hotel and hospitality infrastructure that supports demand for companion services. Krakow Airport in Balice handles approximately 9 million passengers per year, connecting the city with most major European capitals. Tarnow, the voivodeship's second city with around 109,000 inhabitants, and Nowy Sacz (83,000) also feature on the listings, though on a much smaller scale.
The mountain resort towns of Zakopane and Krynica-Zdroj see seasonal tourism that occasionally generates interest in adult services, particularly during winter sports season and the summer hiking months.
Lesser Poland (Malopolskie) stretches across southern Poland, covering roughly 15,000 square kilometres from the Tatra Mountains along the Slovak border to the uplands north of Krakow. About 3.4 million people live in the voivodeship, with Krakow alone accounting for around 800,000 residents. The city draws over 14 million visitors annually, making it Poland's top tourist destination after Warsaw.
Krakow's historic centre, particularly the area around Rynek Glowny, Kazimierz, and Podgorze, concentrates the hotel and hospitality infrastructure that supports demand for companion services. Krakow Airport in Balice handles approximately 9 million passengers per year, connecting the city with most major European capitals. Tarnow, the voivodeship's second city with around 109,000 inhabitants, and Nowy Sacz (83,000) also feature on the listings, though on a much smaller scale.
The mountain resort towns of Zakopane and Krynica-Zdroj see seasonal tourism that occasionally generates interest in adult services, particularly during winter sports season and the summer hiking months.
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Escort services are legal and explicitly regulated by law.
This reflects national law. Local/municipal rules or enforcement can differ; always follow local regulations.
Selling sexual services in Poland is not a criminal offence. There is no Nordic-model criminalisation of buyers either; purchasing from a consenting adult remains legal. Poland ratified the UN Convention of 1950 and follows classical abolitionism, meaning the state neither regulates nor licenses sex work. Criminal liability attaches to third parties. Procuring or facilitating prostitution is an offence under Article 204, paragraph 1 of the Kodeks Karny, punishable by up to three years in prison. Pimping falls under paragraph 2 with the same maximum penalty. Coercing someone into prostitution carries one to ten years under Article 203. Trafficking in persons under Article 189a is punishable by three to fifteen years. Enforcement lies with the Policja.
Escortservice.com verifies escort websites before listing them in the directory. It bears no responsibility for content on external sites, does not act as an intermediary, and does not arrange bookings. You must be 18 or older to use the platform.
Availability fluctuates, but Krakow has the largest concentration of escort listings in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship due to its size and high tourist volume. Check Escortservice.com for current verified listings.
Selling and buying sexual services between consenting adults is not criminalised in Poland. Third-party involvement such as pimping or procuring is illegal under Article 204 of the Kodeks Karny.