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Oct 30, 2025

Austria raises 2026 minimum-salary thresholds for Red-White-Red and EU Blue Cards

Austria raises 2026 minimum-salary thresholds for Red-White-Red and EU Blue Cards
Austria has quietly published the new minimum-salary requirements that will apply to most work-authorisation routes from 1 January 2026. According to specialist immigration firm Fragomen, the gross monthly threshold for the standard Red-White-Red Card (key employee category) will rise to €3,225, while the EU Blue Card minimum will increase to €3,678.57. The super-key-employee and Wage & Social Dumping Act (LSD-BG) exemption ceilings jump to €7,740. These figures are calculated over 14 annual salary payments, Austria’s customary pay structure.

Employers must ensure that foreign staff continue to meet any higher amounts stipulated in sectoral collective-bargaining agreements. Although existing Red-White-Red Card holders are not automatically required to uplift salaries, companies will have to factor in collective-agreement rises and show compliance when filing renewals or amendments. Benefits and allowances generally cannot be counted toward the threshold.

The Ministry of Labour also restated the net-income test used by immigration officers to assess a foreign national’s ability to support dependants: a single applicant must retain at least €1,273.99 after deductions, rising to €2,009.85 for a couple plus €196.57 for each child. Employers posting EU/EEA staff to Austria remain exempt from posted-worker notifications only if the individual earns at least €7,740 gross per month.

For global mobility managers the changes have immediate budgeting implications. Offer letters for staff transferring in the first quarter of 2026 will need to reflect the new numbers; HRIS systems should be updated, and shadow-payroll teams alerted. Companies with salary benchmarking tied to earlier thresholds risk having applications returned or delayed once authorities switch their internal templates in January.

Finally, recruiters should note that the higher Blue Card salary still sits well below prevailing market rates for many engineering and ICT roles in Vienna, meaning Austria remains competitive compared with neighbouring Germany. However, the super-key-employee hike may dissuade multinationals from designating certain C-suite executives for Vienna-based roles, especially given parallel increases in social-security ceilings.
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