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Oct 24, 2025

Austria Introduces New Residence Permit for Non-EU Cross-Border Commuters

Austria Introduces New Residence Permit for Non-EU Cross-Border Commuters
In a late-night sitting on 24 October 2025, Austria’s Bundesrat gave the green light to a brand-new residence permit tailored to so-called “Grenzgängerinnen und Grenzgänger” – third-country nationals who live just across the Austrian border but already hold an unlimited work permit in their country of residence. The new title amends both the Settlement and Residence Act and the Aliens’ Employment Act and will enter into force in January 2026. Holders will be able to take up dependent employment in Austria without having to move their primary residence, an arrangement similar to commuter permits already used within the EU – but so far unavailable to non-EU nationals.

According to Social Minister Korinna Schumann, only around 250 people are likely to qualify in the first year, keeping the measure tightly focused on genuine labour-market needs rather than opening the floodgates to additional migration. Before a permit is issued, Austria’s Public Employment Service (AMS) must certify that no suitable resident job-seeker is available – a safeguard intended to calm domestic concerns about wage competition.

For multinationals operating production sites on both sides of Austria’s borders with Slovakia, Hungary, Slovenia or the Czech Republic, the permit promises far simpler staff allocations. Companies will no longer have to run full residence-and-work-permit procedures when they want to second a non-EU expert who lives just a short commute away. Human-resources departments are advised to review assignment planning cycles now so they can take advantage of the new route the moment it opens.

Immigration advisers also note that the scheme brings Austria in line with similar commuter permits already offered by Germany and Switzerland, removing an administrative hurdle that has long frustrated cross-border clusters in the automotive, electronics and life-science sectors. Provided implementation guidance arrives on time, the permit could become a template for other EU member states grappling with regional skills shortages without triggering large-scale immigration.

Businesses should watch for forthcoming ordinances that will spell out quota management, admissible proof of labour-market access abroad, and renewal limits. Early engagement with AMS regional offices is recommended, as case volumes – though modest – will be new territory for desk officers.
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