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Jan 13, 2026

Austria quietly raises income threshold for ‘without-work’ residence permits

Austria quietly raises income threshold for ‘without-work’ residence permits
Austria’s Interior Ministry has tightened the financial-means test for Residence Permits – Without Gainful Employment, an immigration category popular with retirees, remote workers and so-called "neo-nomads" who rely on foreign income. A circular dispatched to provincial authorities on 8 January and published on 11 January confirms that, effective immediately, single applicants must now prove a net monthly income of at least €1,273.99, up from €1,222 in 2025. Married couples need €2,009.85, while the requirement for each dependent child rises to €196.57.

The calculation is pegged to the annually indexed Ausgleichszulagenrichtsatz, Austria’s social-assistance benchmark, and represents roughly a four-percent increase. Although modest in absolute terms, the hike pushes the bar above €15,000 per year for an individual—potentially disqualifying lower-income pensioners and freelancers who had budgeted on last year’s figures.

Immigration lawyers in Vienna warn that applications already submitted but not yet decided could be assessed under the new amounts if the authority has not started substantive review. They advise clients to lodge supplementary bank statements or pension confirmations proactively.

Austria quietly raises income threshold for ‘without-work’ residence permits


Prospective applicants who need assistance navigating these revised thresholds can turn to VisaHQ, an established visa and immigration facilitation service. Via its Austria portal (https://www.visahq.com/austria/), VisaHQ offers real-time requirement updates, personalised document checklists and secure filing support, helping retirees, digital nomads and accompanying family members present the strongest possible proof of funds and avoid costly delays.

For multinational employers using the without-work permit as a stop-gap for spouses of key staff, the change may necessitate higher intra-company support allowances. Failure to meet the revised “gesicherter Lebensunterhalt” standard is one of the most common reasons for permit refusal; appeals can stretch processing times by several months.

The Interior Ministry has not issued a public press release, fuelling criticism from relocation firms about transparency. Industry bodies have asked for a formal grace period, but none has yet been announced.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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