Wojciech Sztuba

Wojciech has extensive experience in the field of tax and business advisory services dedicated in particular to companies from the real estate and energy sectors. His areas of expertise include tax planning, transactional support, effective corporate taxation, and tax compliance management systems.

He is a renowned expert in the renewable energy and commercial real estate sectors. Wojciech has been a keynote speaker at numerous specialty conferences and webinars. He is a lecturer at the postgraduate tax program at Warsaw School of Economics (SGH). Since 2020, he has been a contributor to reports on taxation of establishment in Poland for the International Bureau of Fiscal Documentation (IBFD).

Between 1999 and 2004, he was a senior manager of a tax advisory team at one of the Big Four companies. Since 2004, he has been a co-founder and partner in Corporate Tax Consulting, which in 2005 was transformed into TPA Poland, where he still holds the position of the Managing Partner.

He is a graduate of Management and Marketing at the Faculty of Law and Administration of Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań. In 1994-1995 he studied at Otto-Friedrich-Universität in Bamberg, Germany. Wojciech has been a licensed tax advisor since 1999.

He is a Doctor of Laws (specialization: tax law) as of December 2015. His doctoral dissertation on effective corporate taxation was defended at the Department of Tax Law at the University of Łódź under the supervision of Professor Włodzimierz Nykiel.

Since 2016 he has been the President of the Board of Directors of the Polish branch of the International Fiscal Association, and since 2019 – Member of the Executive Committee IFA European Region.

Publications

Tax relief for innovative employees

Wind energy in Poland 4.0

50% tax deductible costs for the IT industry

Global Dealmakers 2022: M&A market update

TPA Group Study: Labour Costs in CEE

Polish Living Sector 2.0

Fiscal representative for real estate companies

The “Onshore wind energy in Poland” report

IP BOX

R&D relief