referencia krajiny

Rakúsko — Pracovný kalendár, referenčný sprievodca platieb a DPH

Najrýchlejšia cesta na dovolenkový kalendár tohto trhu, plánovanie miezd a pravidlá DPH.

🇦🇹 EUREurope/Vienna20% štandardná DPH

Budúci sviatok

Whit Monday · po 25. 5. 2026

national

Pracovné dni

253 pracovné dni v 2026

9 štátne sviatky

Štandardná DPH

20% štandard

10% · 13%

príklad mzdy

4 080,00 € → 2 650,00 € net

Príklad priemerného mesačného

Základné trasy pre tento trh

Otvorte presný pracovný postup, ktorý potrebujete bez opustenia kontextu krajiny.

Nadchádzajúce verejné sviatky

Nasledujúce sviatky sú najdôležitejšie pre lehoty, personál a načasovanie mezd.

DátumSviatokTyp
po 25. 5. 2026Whit Mondaynational
po 26. 10. 2026National Daynational
pi 25. 12. 2026Christmas Daynational
so 26. 12. 2026Boxing Day / St. Stephen's Daynational

2026 mesačná kapacita

Rýchly mesačný pohľad pred otvorením úplnej stránky pracovných dní.

1

20 pracovné dni

2 sviatky v mesiaci

2

20 pracovné dni

0 sviatky v mesiaci

3

22 pracovné dni

0 sviatky v mesiaci

4

21 pracovné dni

1 sviatky v mesiaci

5

18 pracovné dni

3 sviatky v mesiaci

6

22 pracovné dni

0 sviatky v mesiaci

7

23 pracovné dni

0 sviatky v mesiaci

8

21 pracovné dni

0 sviatky v mesiaci

9

22 pracovné dni

0 sviatky v mesiaci

10

21 pracovné dni

1 sviatky v mesiaci

11

21 pracovné dni

0 sviatky v mesiaci

12

22 pracovné dni

2 sviatky v mesiaci

referencia miezd

Snímka plánovania mzdy

Priemerné hrubé mesačne4 080,00 €
Priemerné mesačné čisté2 650,00 €
Minimálna mzda2 100,00 € / monthly
Rok modelu mzdy2026

DPH referencie

Štandardné a znížené sadzby

štandardná sadzba20%
Reduced10%
Special reduced13%

regionálny kontext

Národný základ, miestny prezkum kde je potrebný

Rakúsko má ďalší regionálny kontext, ktorý môže ovplyvniť operačné plánovanie. Čísla vyššie ukazujú prvú národnú líniu.

ViennaTyrolStyriaUpper Austria

Rakúsko — referencia krajiny

Najrýchlejšia cesta na dovolenkový kalendár tohto trhu, plánovanie miezd a pravidlá DPH.

Work culture and weekly rhythm in Austria

Austria runs on a five-day, forty-hour standard workweek that mirrors much of Central Europe, but the rhythm of the working year is unmistakably shaped by two distinctively Austrian features: the thirteenth and fourteenth salary payments, and a notably dense Catholic holiday calendar. The thirteenth salary is paid out around June (the Urlaubsgeld or vacation bonus) and the fourteenth in November or early December (the Weihnachtsgeld or Christmas bonus). Both are taxed at a much lower rate than ordinary salary, which makes the Austrian payslip pattern highly seasonal.

Workplace formality sits between German and Italian norms. Titles still matter in many professional environments: doctors, engineers and academics often introduce themselves by title in business correspondence, and email signatures regularly include the full academic prefix. At the same time, the average startup or modern technology team in Vienna or Linz will be on first-name terms within hours of meeting, so the rule of thumb is to mirror the formality used by the most senior person in the room.

Working time is regulated by the Arbeitszeitgesetz, which permits a daily maximum of twelve hours and a weekly maximum of sixty hours under exceptional circumstances, although the standard daily limit remains eight. Annual leave starts at twenty-five working days for most full-time employees and rises to thirty after twenty-five years of service, which is significantly above the EU minimum and one reason why retention bonuses in Austria are often framed in extra leave rather than cash.

Public holiday landscape in Austria

Austria observes thirteen public holidays at the national level, which puts it among the most holiday-rich countries in the European Union for full-time workers. The list combines secular dates (New Year's Day, Labour Day, Austrian National Day on 26 October, Christmas Day, Boxing Day) with a strong layer of Catholic feast days (Epiphany, Easter Monday, Ascension, Whit Monday, Corpus Christi, Assumption, All Saints' Day and Immaculate Conception). The density of religious holidays in spring and autumn is particularly noticeable in production planning.

Unlike Germany, the public holiday list is uniform across the federal provinces, which simplifies cross-state planning. There are however regional patron saint days that close many businesses in particular Länder even though they are not legally protected federal holidays. Saint Florian's Day in Upper Austria, Saint Joseph's Day in several southern provinces and Saint Leopold's Day in Lower Austria can produce a quiet day for an entire regional office without appearing on the national calendar.

Austria has a strong long-weekend tradition known locally as Fenstertage (window days). Whenever a national holiday falls on a Tuesday or Thursday, large parts of the workforce take the Monday or Friday off as personal vacation. Major bridge windows around Easter, Pentecost, Corpus Christi and the long weekend leading into the National Day on 26 October regularly produce weeks where office occupancy drops below thirty percent.

Salary and payroll fundamentals in Austria

Austrian salaries are typically quoted as monthly gross figures and almost always come with the assumption of fourteen payments per year. When comparing an Austrian offer to an offer from Germany or France, multiplying the monthly gross by fourteen rather than twelve is essential to get an honest comparison: a thirty-five thousand euro annual gross expressed as fourteen payments looks identical to a forty-one thousand euro annual gross expressed as twelve payments before tax.

The thirteenth and fourteenth payments are taxed at a flat reduced rate (Begünstigungsbesteuerung) of six percent up to a substantial annual ceiling, instead of the regular progressive income tax that climbs above forty percent for middle incomes. This means a gross salary increase that pushes ordinary monthly pay into a higher tax bracket has a different impact on take-home than the same percentage increase routed through the bonuses, which is a common subject of negotiation when a senior employee asks for restructuring rather than a raise.

Employer-side payroll costs are heavier in Austria than in many EU peers. On top of the gross salary an employer typically funds employer social security contributions, the municipal payroll tax (Kommunalsteuer), the employer contribution to the family burden equalisation fund and several smaller mandatory levies. As a working approximation, full employer cost for a standard employee runs at roughly 1.27 to 1.32 times the gross pay, which is why Austrian salary calculators built for budgeting purposes usually present employer cost as the headline number rather than the gross.

VAT, invoicing and the business framework in Austria

Austria applies a standard VAT (Umsatzsteuer) rate of twenty percent, a reduced rate of ten percent for groceries, books, public transport, restaurant food consumed on premises and rent for residential property, and a special rate of thirteen percent for accommodation, cultural events and certain agricultural products. The thirteen percent rate is unusual in Europe and frequently mistakenly entered as ten or twenty percent in international invoicing software, which generates compliance errors during the annual VAT review.

Invoice content rules in Austria are aligned with the broader EU framework: full supplier and customer details, sequential invoice number, supply date, clear description, net and gross amounts, the VAT rate applied and the VAT amount itself in euros. A simplified invoice format is permitted for transactions below 400 euros gross, which is more generous than the German limit of 250 euros and makes day-to-day retail invoicing slightly easier in Austria.

Small business owners with annual turnover below 35,000 euros may apply for the Kleinunternehmerregelung, which exempts them from charging VAT on their sales but also prevents them from reclaiming input VAT on purchases. The threshold was raised in 2025 from the long-standing 30,000 euro figure, and many freelancers near the boundary now choose to opt out of the regulation in order to deduct VAT on equipment, software and professional services.

Practical planning tips for Austria

Treat the Friday after Ascension and the Friday after Corpus Christi as effectively non-working days for any cross-functional Austrian team. Even if those days are technically working, the Fenstertag tradition usually leaves only a skeleton crew in the office and any decision deadline that requires multiple stakeholders should be moved to the following week.

When negotiating Austrian salaries, agree the annual gross paid in fourteen instalments rather than the monthly figure. This anchors expectations correctly for both the employer and the candidate, makes the payroll calculation simpler and avoids the misunderstanding where a monthly gross is mentally annualised by twelve.

If your Austrian business approaches the small business VAT threshold mid-year, take stock of expected purchases for the coming six months before deciding whether to remain inside the scheme or opt out. A single major equipment purchase often turns the optional opt-out into an immediate cash advantage even if turnover stays below the limit.

Často kladené otázky

Krátke odpovede na najčastejšie kladené otázky, kým sa na túto stránku spoľahnete.

What is included on the Rakúsko page?
The country page links together holidays, working days, salary planning, VAT references and the most relevant calculators.
How should I use the country page?
Use it as the starting point for that market, then open the holiday, salary or VAT route that matches your task.
Are regional differences covered?
The page highlights regional considerations where they matter, but local verification may still be needed for final decisions.
Are the salary and VAT figures legal advice?
No. They are planning references and should be confirmed against official country sources before regulated use.
Čo mi zobrazuje stránka krajiny Rakúsko?
Stránka Rakúsko kombinuje štyri piliere: kalendár sviatkov pre aktuálny a nadchádzajúce roky, počet pracovných dní za mesiac, model plánovania miezd s aktuálnymi daňovými pásmami a odvodmi a rámec DPH so všetkými platnými sadzbami a fakturačnými pravidlami. Každý pilier vedie k vyhradenému kalkulátoru alebo ročnej detailnej stránke.
Ako sa Rakúsko porovnáva so susednými krajinami?
Sekcia Susedné krajiny v spodnej časti stránky priamo odkazuje na blízke trhy. Najužitočnejšie porovnania sú zvyčajne hrubá-čistá rozdiel, DPH a počet sviatkov.
Sú údaje o platoch Rakúsko spoľahlivé pre ponuku?
Kalkulátor odráža aktuálne pásma a sadzby a poskytuje rozumný odhad pre plánovanie ponuky. Pre skutočnú výplatnú pásku v záväznej zmluve potvrďte u miestneho mzdového účtovníka.
Odkiaľ pochádzajú dátumy sviatkov Rakúsko?
Údaje sledujú oficiálne vládne a ministerské publikácie. Regionálne sviatky sa zaznamenávajú samostatne, aby HR plánovači mohli zostaviť presné kalendáre pre distribuované tímy.
Môžem plánovať termín projektu pomocou počtu pracovných dní Rakúsko?
Áno. Mesačný počet už odpočítava štátne sviatky a štandardné víkendy. Pre projekty závislé od mesta alebo regiónu skontrolujte aj regionálnu sekciu.
Zobrazuje stránka Rakúsko pravidlá DPH pre cezhraničný predaj?
Štandardné a znížené sadzby sú viditeľné priamo; kalkulátor pokrýva bežné scenáre. Pravidlá B2B a B2C v rámci európskeho jednotného kontaktného miesta sú vysvetlené v prepojených zdrojových článkoch.

Kalkulačky platov

Preskúmajte všetky mzdové nástroje tejto krajiny: hrubá-čistá, čistá-hrubá a náklady zamestnávateľa.

Roky sviatkov

Pozrite si sviatky za viac rokov pre komplexné plánovanie dovoleniek.

Pracovné dni podľa mesiaca

Vŕtajte do akéhokoľvek mesiaca na presný zoznam pracovních dní, verejných sviatkov a úplný prehľad plánoovania.

Súvisiace krajiny