Warsaw's technology sector is entering the second half of 2026 with a concrete pipeline rather than vague ambitions. Three major infrastructure projects, at least two sovereign AI initiatives and a cluster of product launches are scheduled between now and the first quarter of 2027, according to planning documents reviewed by The Daily Warsaw and confirmed by industry sources familiar with the programmes.
The timing matters. With Iran's political future suddenly uncertain after Ayatollah Khamenei's death, energy markets rattled and the World Cup tourism boom reshaping where money flows in the Americas, European capitals with stable tech ecosystems are attracting a disproportionate share of relocated investment. Warsaw, already home to more than 1,400 IT companies according to the Polish Agency for Enterprise Development, is positioning itself to absorb a portion of that shift before Berlin or Prague can move faster.
The Służewiec Overhaul and What Moves In Next
The most visible transformation is happening in Służewiec, the sprawling office district south of Mokotów that spent most of the 2010s haemorrhaging tenants to newer buildings near Rondo Daszyńskiego. The city's Urban Development Office confirmed in May that the Służewiec Revitalisation Programme — a 380 million złoty public-private initiative — is on track to deliver its first repurposed campus by March 2027. The centrepiece is a former corporate park on Taśmowa Street that will house a 4,200-square-metre AI research facility operated jointly by the Warsaw University of Technology and a consortium of four domestic software firms including Asseco Poland.
Across town, the Wola district continues to consolidate its position as the city's primary fintech corridor. Hub:raum, Deutsche Telekom's startup accelerator at Chmielna 85, is running its third Warsaw cohort this autumn with a specific focus on payment infrastructure and embedded finance products aimed at Central and Eastern European markets. Six of the 12 selected startups are building tools designed to integrate with the National Bank of Poland's BlueCash instant-transfer network, which processed over 47 million transactions in 2025.
AI Regulation, Quantum Pilots and What Launches When
Poland's implementation of the EU AI Act — the high-risk provisions kick in fully on 2 August 2026 — is forcing Warsaw-based developers to accelerate compliance roadmaps that many had quietly deferred. That regulatory pressure is, paradoxically, generating product opportunity. At least three local legaltech firms have pre-announced AI auditing tools priced between 8,000 and 22,000 złoty per annual licence, targeting mid-sized enterprises that lack in-house compliance capacity.
The quantum side is smaller but real. The Łukasiewicz Research Network, whose Warsaw hub sits on Długa Street in the Old Town's administrative shadow, is piloting a 50-qubit processor developed with Poznań-based Beit in a programme funded by the National Centre for Research and Development. Early access for commercial users is scheduled for Q1 2027, with priority given to logistics and pharmaceutical firms. That is not consumer-ready quantum computing, but it puts Warsaw ahead of most EU capitals outside Munich in terms of domestically operated hardware.
Meanwhile, CD Projekt — whose headquarters remain on Jagiellońska Street in Praga-Północ — has confirmed that its REDengine successor platform, codenamed Orion internally, will enter external developer preview before the end of 2026. The company's investor relations materials point to licensing the engine to third-party studios as a revenue stream, which would mark a significant strategic shift for a business built on proprietary IP.
For companies and investors tracking this market, the practical priority is straightforward: the Służewiec campus and Hub:raum cohort represent the earliest entry points for partnerships in the next 12 months. The AI Act compliance window closes fast — firms that have not begun conformity assessments for high-risk systems are already behind the curve. And the Łukasiewicz quantum pilot, while narrow in scope, is the clearest signal yet that Warsaw intends to compete on deep tech, not just software services. The roadmap is set. The question is execution speed.