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					Tips for the Business Visitor Coming to  Krakow
                  Visas:
                	Visitors from the member-states of the European Union and/or 
					NATO as well as other Western European nations do not need 
					visas to enter Poland. Otherwise, when a country wants 
					Polish citizens to acquire a visa the general rule is that 
					Poland requires citizens of that country to secure one for 
					admission to Poland as well.  
                   Apart from the citizens 
					of the EU countries - and Switzerland, Iceland, 
					Liechtenstein, and Norway - all aliens need a visa to reside 
					in Poland beyond 90 days. Nationals of EU member states as 
					well as Switzerland, Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway need 
					to register their stay in Krakow when it lasts longer than 
					three months.  
					
  
                   Anyway, when planning to 
					visit Poland businesspersons from outside the European Union 
					should rather check with the nearest Polish consulate for 
					the current entry requirements.  
                  
					Note:
                  Krakow’s
                  Office for Civic Affairs and Foreigners, Wydzial Spraw 
					Obywatelskich i Cudzoziemcow Malopolskiego Urzedu 
					Wojewodzkiego, is situated at 6 Przy Rondzie street (ground 
					floor). It handles formalities pertaining to visa extension, 
					permanent and temporal residency, work permits, etc. Opening 
					hours are  
					9 a.m. to 5 p.m.  on 
					Mondays and  between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. on Tuesdays, 
					Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays 
                
				Employment:
                
                Foreign businesspersons, as any aliens from outside the European 
				Union, need work permits to be employed legally in Poland. 
                  
					Travel:
                  
                	There are regular 
					 direct flights 
					to the  
					Krakow 
					International Airport  
					 from major 
					European hubs such as Amsterdam, Berlin, 
					Brussels, Frankfurt, London, Paris, Rome, Vienna, and Zurich, 
					as well as Barcelona, Budapest, Bristol, Cologne, 
					Copenhagen, Dublin, Dusseldorf, Edinburgh, Leeds, Liverpool, 
					Madrid, Milan, Moscow, Munich, Oslo, Stockholm, and some 
					other destinations. Transit connections via Warsaw link Krakow 
					with New York, Los Angeles and Miami in the USA, and with 
					Bangkok, Brussels, Cairo, Damascus, Dubai, Helsinki, 
					Istanbul, Kiev, Larnaca, Lyon, Minsk, Beijing, Riga, 
					St. Petersburg, and Vilnius among other 
					destinations. Express trains from several European capitals, 
					such as Austria's Vienna, Czech Prague, Germany's Berlin 
					(and Hamburg), Hungary's Budapest, Rumania's Bucharest, and 
					Ukraine's Kiev, run to or through Krakow. Also, there is 
					express train shuttle service between this city and Poland’s 
					capital Warsaw in addition to express railroad links with 
					all big cities in the country. And no place in Poland is so 
					easily accessible from the entire Europe by car as Krakow.  
                   
					When in the city, the most convenient 
					means of transport
                  are taxis – cheap, plentiful, and largely dependable.  
                  
					Note: Natives often use a dated English spelling for the 
					name of the city, 
					Cracow. The original Polish spelling is Kraków. 
					  
                Leonardo da Vinci's Lady with an Ermine  
					in Krakow's Czartoryskich Museum is a must-see   
                
				Communication:
                
                Public phones are still available throughout Krakow in street 
				booths, post offices, and other public venues – they can be fed 
				with special cards with a chip, available at the nearest 
				newsstand. If you bring a cell phone from abroad, it will 
				probably work in Krakow as in any other city in the European 
				Union.  
                   
					 In the open air wireless Internet is available 
					on the Rynek Glowny central square plus the adjoining 
					streets to the south and in the  
					Kazimierz historic district
                  near the 
					Old Synagogue. 
					Also, WiFi hotspots are accessible in many 
                
                	cafes
                
                	in Krakow as well as 
                
                	shopping centers
                  
                
                
                	and other public spaces. There 
					a few Internet cafes in the city center though they are 
					usually hard to spot.   
                
                
                Tip:
                
                Never bet overly on the language skills of the Krakow natives, 
				on average they speak English only somewhat better than 
				Frenchmen.  
                    
                  
					Rynek Glowny, Krakow's 
					huge central square   at the heart of the 
                  Old Town  historic district remains the city's social 
					hub.    
                
				Currency:
                
                
                The zloty (zl), divided into 100 grosze (gr), is the he Polish 
				currency. Denominations in circulation: notes zl10, zl20, zl50, 
				zl100, zl200, and coins: zl1, zl2, zl5, gr1, gr2, gr5, gr10, 
				gr20, gr50. Gold and silver collector coins of higher 
				denominations are also a legal tender but their actual worth far 
				exceeds the face value. The zloty is convertible, see the 
				current exchange rate at our 
                
                Krakow News
                
                section. 
                  
					Paying:
                	Cash payments are still most popular in Poland. At the same 
					time, major credit cards are accepted practically everywhere 
					except the smallest establishments. But nobody pays by 
					check. ATMs are plentiful in downtown Krakow.  
                  /more 
					on money matters in Krakow/ 
                
				Electricity:
                230 volts, 50 Hz AC, continental (two-prong or three-prong with 
				built-in grounding plug) outlets. 
                
				Weights and measures: Metric. 
                
				Time:
                CET as Berlin or Vienna, i.e. GMT/UTC plus one hour. 
                
				Business hours: Polish office workers usually start at 
				8 a.m., have an eight-hour day without a normal lunch break, and 
				leave at 4 p.m. Business pauses on weekends. Banking hours are 
				different in different banks, yet most branches open at 9 a.m. 
				or 10 a.m. and close at 6 p.m. or 7 p.m. on workdays. Most of 
				Krakow’s downtown shops remain open till 7 p.m. and beyond on 
				weekdays, while some grocery stores trade round the clock. Most 
				stores sells also on Sundays, usually till 3 p.m. Most  
				shopping centers in Krakow
                stay open between 10 a.m. and 10 p.m. Monday to Friday and till 
				8 p.m. on weekends. 
                
				Holidays: 
				New Year’s Day, January 6th (Epiphany), 
				Easter Sunday and 
				Monday, May 1 (Labor Day), May 3 (Constitution Day, Corpus 
				Christi Feast, August 15 (Assumption), November 1 (All Saints 
				Day), November 11 (Independence Day), December 25 and December 
				26 (Krakow
				Christmastide).  
                
				Dates and numbers: Day, month, year is the regular 
				order in dates, so July 4, 2016 is 04.07.2016 in brief. Thousands 
				are usually denoted by blanks and sometimes periods (1 
				000=1.000=one thousand) whereas fractions are separated with 
				commas (1,5 equals one and half). 
                
				Local customs: Foreigners are welcome by Krakow 
				residents. Any place save home and any time save merrymaking is 
				good for talking business here.  
 				When eating out, business is a legitimate topic before, during 
				and after meal. It is usual to say ‘smatchnago’ (bon 
				appétit) before eating, and ‘na zdrovye’ (cheers) before 
				drinking. 
                On visiting people’s homes standard courtesies are observed. 
				With hugging and cheek kissing reserved for relatives of any 
				gender and for close friends of the opposite sex, universal 
				handshakes customarily begin and end every encounter. (Note: 
				during negotiations in Poland a handshake means rather “talk 
				is over” than “it is a deal”.) It is important to 
				take business cards to meetings and give one to each person 
				present.  
 				Politeness in Poland requires men to open doors for women and 
				generally let them lead, the same applies to your seniors and 
				guests of any sex.  
 				Flowers are very popular with Poles who give them on many 
				occasions, notably birthday and name-day celebrations, weddings 
				and visits to Polish homes.  
 				Casual wear befits most social occasions, but you'd better dress 
				up for evening entertainment, dining out, or theater.  
                Click here for more tips 
                
				Polish phrase book for visitors to Krakow 
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