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Oct 25, 2025

Heightened Kufstein Border Checks Cause 8-Kilometre Tailbacks on Austria’s Inntal Autobahn

Heightened Kufstein Border Checks Cause 8-Kilometre Tailbacks on Austria’s Inntal Autobahn
Drivers entering Austria from Germany via the A93/A12 corridor on 25 October experienced stop-and-go traffic for most of the day after police on both sides of the Kufstein–Kiefersfelden frontier stepped-up passport and vehicle checks.

According to the live traffic desk of travel portal Reisereporter, queues stretched up to eight kilometres at peak times, adding up to 90 minutes to the Munich-Innsbruck run. Austrian officers said the operation targets people-smuggling networks and cross-border crime following an uptick in irregular entries along the Western Balkan route. Germany’s Bundespolizei cited the continuing terrorism threat in pre-holiday travel as a reason for the coordinated action.

The Inntal Autobahn (A12) is Austria’s busiest east-west freight and holiday artery, linking Bavaria with Tyrol, South Tyrol and Switzerland. Long-distance coaches and high-value cargo consignments bound for Italy were forced to re-route via the Brenner corridor or use rail piggy-back services. Freight associations warned members to factor extra lay-over time into drivers’ hours calculations; several logistics firms shifted time-sensitive loads onto the ÖBB-operated Rolling Highway to avoid fines for exceeding tachograph limits.

For mobility managers the incident is another reminder that the re-imposition of ‘temporary’ Schengen internal controls is now business-as-usual. Companies running cross-border assignments or shuttling staff between Munich Airport and Tyrol are advised to issue employees with hard-copy passports (ID cards alone may not suffice during spot checks) and allow at least two additional hours for ground transfers during holiday weekends.

Tyrol’s provincial government reiterated its long-standing call for a joint EU traffic management scheme on the Brenner and Inntal corridors. Vienna, meanwhile, said it will keep internal border controls with Slovakia and the Czech Republic until at least April 2026, suggesting intermittent checks at the German frontier will also continue.
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