๐ฆ๐น Austria visa for Australians
Australia passport holders can enter Austria visa-free for up to 90 days. No application, no fee, just a passport valid for at least six months.
The verdict
Schengen 90/180 rule
Austria is in the Schengen Area. Any visa-free time counts toward the 90 days in any 180 shared across all Schengen countries, not per country.
Track it with the Schengen calculatorFor Australia passport holders specifically
Australia passport holders get 90 days visa-free entry into Austria, part of the broader Schengen Area. This means you can stay for up to 90 days within any 180-day period for tourism or business without needing a visa. The entry is typically granted at the border, and no pre-application is required. You won't be applying through an online portal or at a consulate beforehand for this standard tourist stay.
While there's no fee for the visa-free entry itself, you must be able to prove sufficient funds for your stay and an onward or return ticket. Most rejections for Australia passport holders stem from not having adequate financial means readily available upon arrival, or failing to clearly demonstrate the purpose of their visit beyond tourism. Keep bank statements or credit card limits visible.
Austria visa, the full picture
US, UK, Canadian, and Australian citizens get 90 days visa-free in Austria. Most other developed nations do too. For everyone else, it gets complicated fast.
Who can waltz into Austria visa-free?
If your passport is from the EU/EEA/Switzerland, you can stay as long as you want. No visa, no fuss. For citizens of US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and most Latin American countries, you get 90 days within a 180-day period under the Schengen Agreement. That means if you spend 30 days in Austria, you can only spend 60 more days in the entire Schengen zone before you have to leave for 90 days.
If you're from a country not on that list, you'll likely need a Schengen visa before you travel. Think of the former Yugoslavian states (except Croatia), many African nations, and several Asian countries. Applying for a Schengen visa usually means a visit to the Austrian embassy or consulate in your home country, a pile of documents (proof of funds, travel insurance, flight bookings), and a waiting period. Don't leave this to the last minute.
How long can you really stay and what's the catch?
The 90/180 rule for Schengen citizens is the main thing to watch. It's not 90 days per country, it's 90 days total across the whole zone. Austria is part of this. The biggest gotcha? No exit stamps are officially required for Schengen citizens entering or leaving the zone. This makes tracking your 90 days tricky if you're hopping between Schengen and non-Schengen countries. Keep your own log. Overstaying is a serious business. While specific fines vary, expect penalties that can include immediate deportation, a ban from re-entering the Schengen area for 1 to 5 years, and fines that can run into hundreds or even thousands of Euros. It's not worth the risk.
Can you actually work remotely on a tourist stamp?
This is where things get murky. Officially, a Schengen tourist visa or visa-free entry is for tourism, not work. Working remotely for a company outside Austria while on a tourist stamp is a grey area. Austrian authorities can technically enforce this, but in practice, it's rarely checked for short-term visitors. Most digital nomads working on their laptops in coffee shops aren't actively being monitored. However, if you're looking for long-term stays or plan to engage in local employment, you absolutely need the correct visa. The risk is that if immigration officials decide to dig, you could face issues. Itโs best to assume that any form of paid work, even remote, is technically not allowed without a proper work permit or a specific digital nomad visa.
What's new with Austrian visas?
Austria hasn't rolled out a specific "digital nomad visa" like some other European countries. The closest option for longer stays for remote workers would be exploring Austria's national visa options for self-sufficiency or other purposes, though these often have strict financial requirements and are not designed for typical nomad lifestyles. The general Schengen visa rules and application processes remain the primary pathway for most non-EU/EEA citizens. Fee structures for Schengen visas typically hover around โฌ80 for adults, though this can change. Always check the official Austrian embassy or consulate website for the most current information on fees, required documents, and processing times, as these can fluctuate based on geopolitical events or policy changes.
How other passports enter Austria
The rule changes entirely with the document. Open the row that matches yours.