
Austria’s Foreign Ministry has refreshed its country guidance for Uzbekistan, stamping the page with a reference date of 30 April 2026. The advisory maintains Security Level 2 but expands the entry-requirements section to spell out registration rules, land-border opening hours and the status of Austria’s electronic ID cards, which are not yet recognised by Uzbek authorities.
Travellers and programme managers who need hands-on assistance with these evolving requirements can tap into VisaHQ’s Austria portal (https://www.visahq.com/austria/), which aggregates real-time embassy updates and offers a concierge service that can arrange police registrations, hotel confirmations and business-visa filings for stays longer than 30 days—helping companies avoid the fines and exit delays highlighted in the advisory.
The timing is significant: just one day earlier Vienna announced its forthcoming Mobility Agreement with Tashkent. Consular officials stress that the advisory is a routine update, yet they also acknowledge that increased charter traffic linked to deportation operations could create ‘operational frictions’ at Taschkent International Airport. Austrian citizens are therefore urged to carry printed hotel registrations and to avoid overland travel near the Afghan frontier. For mobility managers the practical implications are clear. Staff on short-term assignments must register with the police within three days—usually handled by the hotel but sometimes overlooked in serviced apartments. Failure to produce the registration slip can result in exit delays or fines. The ministry also reiterates that visa-free entry is capped at 30 days; overstays attract penalties and may complicate future Schengen applications. While the advisory does not modify risk levels, insurers and security providers working with Austrian corporates have begun reviewing evacuation plans, noting that consular assistance in Uzbekistan remains ‘very limited’. Companies sending engineers to energy or rail-modernisation projects should ensure that duty-of-care protocols are up to date and that travellers are enrolled in the Foreign Ministry’s Auslandsregister app.
Travellers and programme managers who need hands-on assistance with these evolving requirements can tap into VisaHQ’s Austria portal (https://www.visahq.com/austria/), which aggregates real-time embassy updates and offers a concierge service that can arrange police registrations, hotel confirmations and business-visa filings for stays longer than 30 days—helping companies avoid the fines and exit delays highlighted in the advisory.
The timing is significant: just one day earlier Vienna announced its forthcoming Mobility Agreement with Tashkent. Consular officials stress that the advisory is a routine update, yet they also acknowledge that increased charter traffic linked to deportation operations could create ‘operational frictions’ at Taschkent International Airport. Austrian citizens are therefore urged to carry printed hotel registrations and to avoid overland travel near the Afghan frontier. For mobility managers the practical implications are clear. Staff on short-term assignments must register with the police within three days—usually handled by the hotel but sometimes overlooked in serviced apartments. Failure to produce the registration slip can result in exit delays or fines. The ministry also reiterates that visa-free entry is capped at 30 days; overstays attract penalties and may complicate future Schengen applications. While the advisory does not modify risk levels, insurers and security providers working with Austrian corporates have begun reviewing evacuation plans, noting that consular assistance in Uzbekistan remains ‘very limited’. Companies sending engineers to energy or rail-modernisation projects should ensure that duty-of-care protocols are up to date and that travellers are enrolled in the Foreign Ministry’s Auslandsregister app.