Housing
& Immigration
House hunting
Registering your residence
Registering yourself in Austria
FAQ on residence – settlement – integration agreement
I would like to bring
my family to Austria
Right of residence & title
Other registrations
House hunting
Housing exchanges
- In daily & complimentary newspapers
- Property scout
- I want
- Housing exchange
- Immodirekt
- TT Immo
- The Standard
Property brokers
Property brokers or real estate agents can help you find an apartment or a house. You may contact them either online or in person at a real estate office. They charge a fee for their services – the costs for the commission must be paid by the landlord. Visiting and viewing various properties with real estate agents is free of charge for you.
Who can help me with legal issues?
Austrian Tenants’ and Homeowners’ Association (OEMB)
Information on property and tenancy law issues, initial advice on all housing law issues is free of charge at ÖMB (even without membership).
www.mieterbund.at
Tenant Protection Association Austria – Tyrol Regional Association
Help with housing-related problems
- 6020 Innsbruck - Muellerstrasse 27 / 1st floor
- +43 512 574035
- office@msv-tirol.at
- www.mieterschutzverband.at
Austrian Tenants’ Association
Regional office Tyrol: Counselling in all matters relating to housing.
Note: Turkish interpreting every 1st Tuesday of the month
- Alois Kemter-Straße 1, 6330 Kufstein
- +43 5372 62682
or
- Adamgasse 9, 6020 Innsbruck
- +43 512 582431
- tirol@mietervereinigung.at
- www.mietervereinigung.at
Registering your residence
All citizens must register with the registration office of their home municipality within 3 days of their arrival. The address is available in the municipality section.
What do I need to bring with me?
- Identity card or passport
- Completed registration form:
which must be signed by the landlord. A signed tenancy agreement is not sufficient.
The registration form is available as a PDF download here.
Registering yourself in Austria
I am an EU or EEA citizen or a Swiss citizen
Applying for a registration certificate (for stays longer than 3 months)
Close relatives of EEA citizens who come from third countries receive a residence card that is valid for 5 years. Thereafter, you can apply for a permanent residence card.
Where?
District authority team in Kufstein home municipality
Bozner Platz 1, 6330 Kufstein
An appointment must be sought online for this
What do I need to bring with me?
- Registration form
- Identity card or passport
- Proof of income (payslip, employment contract or bank balance)
- Proof of insurance or e-card
- 15.00 € fee
- for spouses: Marriage or partner certificate
- for children: birth or adoption certificate
Close relatives are: Spouses, registered partners and cohabiting partners, parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, biological children, adopted and foster children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, as well as biological children of spouses, registered partners and cohabiting partners living in the same household.
I am not an EU/EEA/Swiss citizen (= third country)
Application for residence title for Austria (for stays longer than 6 months)
Third-country nationals generally require a visa for a temporary stay of up to 6 months. You can obtain a visa from the Austrian representative authorities abroad. These are the Austrian embassies or consulates. People from some countries may also enter Austria without a visa for tourism purposes. A residence visa can be issued for certain types of work (especially seasonal work) (Visa D).
Where?
Austrian embassy, consulate in your home country before entering Austria
What do I need to bring with me?
What do I need to bring with me? Ask at the Austrian embassy or consulate or look under Applying for Visa.
There are countries that are exempt from the visa requirement, which you can find here:
Visa list (English)
Application for residence title for Austria (for stays longer than 6 months)
There are 3 different types of residence permit:
- Residence permit: Issued for a stay of more than six months and limited to 12 months for a specific purpose (e.g., for school children or students). They can be extended under certain conditions.
- Settlement permit: With a settlement permit, you can stay in Austria for a longer period, for example, as a family member of Austrians. Residence is limited in time and can be extended under certain conditions. Some settlement permits only allow a certain number of people to come to Austria per year.
- Permanent residence – EU: If you have lived in Austria for 5 years and you have completed Module 2 of the Integration Agreement (see ”What is the Integration Agreement?”), you can stay in Austria indefinitely with this residence title.
Where?
In person at the Austrian embassy or consulate in your home country before travelling to Austria Exception: In Austria, you must submit the application to extend your residence permit to the district authority.
What do I need to bring with me?
Please enquire at the Austrian embassy/consulate and have a look here: General conditions for the issue of residence permits.
You will receive a residence permit if the following general requirements are met:
- You have health insurance that covers “all risks“.
- You must prove that you live in a house/apartment
that is big enough for the family. - The livelihood must be secured. This means that the stay must not lead to any financial burden for the general public
= in other words, you have to earn more than you spend. - The stay must not jeopardise public order or security, be connected with terrorist or extremist activities or significantly impair Austria’s relations with other countries.
What does ”German before immigration” mean (only relevant for third-country nationals)
If you want to stay in Austria, you must provide proof of basic German language skills at level A1 (CEFR) when applying for a residence permit for the first time. You must have this proof
before you come to Austria. Only certificates from an examination institution recognised by the Austrian Integration Fund (OeIF) are recognised. You can find detailed information about this here OeIF.
FAQ on residence - settlement - integration agreement
What is the integration agreement? (important for third-country nationals)
The integration agreement is proof that you are learning German and the basic values of the Republic of Austria and that you want to live in Austria.
Modul 1
Module 1 of the integration agreement is mandatory and consists of proof of German language skills (level A2 CEFR) and knowledge of the fundamental values of the Republic of Austria. You must provide proof of German language skills and knowledge of the values within 2 years of the first issue of the settlement permit.
Modul 2
Module 2 of the Integration Agreement is voluntary and consists of proof of German language skills (level B1 CEFR) and in-depth knowledge of the most important values of the Republic of Austria. As a third-country national, you must have this knowledge if you wish to stay in Austria permanently (permanent residence permit – EU) or become an Austrian citizen.
CEFR = The European Framework of Reference for Languages is used as reference for the language level. language levels
For detailed information on this, click here OeIF Integration Agreement.
I would like to bring my family to Austria
Family reunification for relatives of Austrians
This immigration is exempt from the quota obligation. If members of the nuclear family meet the general requirements, they will receive the residence title issued to family members. Other relatives of Austrians receive a settlement permit – family member – under certain conditions. This includes, for example, parents, adult children, grandparents or life partners. They are not part of the nuclear family and must fulfil the general requirements. They are not allowed to work in Austria. Before entering the country, they must submit a declaration of liability that they will pay all costs if they live in Austria.
Family reunification for relatives of persons from the EU/EEA and Switzerland
Family reunification of third-country nationals
Nuclear family
- Spouses – only from the age of 21
- Registered partners – only from the age of 21
- unmarried, underage children – this also includes adopted children and stepchildren
The general requirements for authorisation are
- sufficient means of subsistence
= Income of at least €1,110.26 for you, €1,751.56 for married couples and €171.31 for each child. - Health insurance cover
- Rental agreement
Right of residence & title
I would like to extend my residence permit
Your residence permit can be extended at the earliest 3 months before it expires. You must submit the application in good time before your old residence permit expires.
If you submit the application after the expiry of the validity period, it is considered a first-time application. You must submit this again to the competent Austrian representative authority (embassy, consulate general) abroad. It is possible that such an application is subject to quotas.
When will I receive a permanent right of residence?
- As an EEA citizen, you will receive a permanent right of residence if you have resided legally and continuously in Austria for 5 years.
- As a third-country national, you can apply for a permanent residence permit – EU if you:
- you have been allowed to live in Austria for the last 5 years and
- fulfil module 2 of the integration agreement
- Persons entitled to asylum or subsidiary protection also have the option of applying for the residence title “Permanent residence – EU” after 5 years. The right of residence is unlimited once this residence title has been issued, but you must renew the card every 5 years.
The permanent right of residence may expire if you stay outside the EEA for longer than 12 months.
Helpful contact points
District administration (Kufstein)
Bozner Platz 1, 6330 Kufstein
An appointment must be made online.
ZeMiT/AST
- Every Thursday, 08:00-12:00 noon
- Feldgasse 12, 6330 Kufstein (Kufstein Youth Centre)
- +43 5372 63230
Or in Innsbruck
- Andreas-Hofer-Strasse 46, 6020 Innsbruck / 1st floor
- +43 512 577170
- office@zemit.at
- www.zemit.at
Helpful links
- Information page of the Federal Government
- Tyrolean Bar Association (contact point for legal issues)
- Austrian Integration Fund
How long am I allowed to stay in Austria?
This depends on which country you come from and which visa/residence permit you have. Without work or other activity (e.g., studying), you are allowed to stay in Austria for a maximum of 3 months. Thereafter, you need a permanent residence certificate. Citizens of third countries need a visa for a stay of up to 6 months and a residence permit after these 6 months in order to stay in Austria.
Detailed information is available here under Subsidiary in Austria.
Other registrations
Registering your car
Those who have their primary residence in Austria may use a car or trailer with a foreign licence plate for one month in Austria. After that, the car must be registered in Austria. The new residential address must be registered at a regional transport office.
More information here: Driving with a foreign licence plate
Before a car/motorbike/moped can be registered at a regional transport office, you must buy third party liability insurance policy valid in Austria.
You will need the following documents:
- Identity document
(Licensing office makes an enquiry with the register of residents) - Insurance certificate of the car
- Proof of authorisation (one of them):
Type certificate/individual approval/proof of registration/last approval document/both parts of the registration certificate (the latter for vehicles from another EU member state). - For new cars (one of them): Purchase contract/invoice/confirmation of sale/type certificate of the new owner(s)
- For used cars (one of these): Valid test assessment certificate/personal declaration of the previous owner at the regional transport office/gift deed
Detailed information is available here: Vehicle registration
The current data must also be disclosed to the motor vehicle insurance company. A letter stating the new address is usually sufficient.
Re-registration/change of driving licence = application for an Austrian driving licence
If you are a resident of the EU or the EEA, you do not have to have your driving licence transferred. If you are a non-EU or non-EEA citizen resident in Austria, your driving licence is valid for 6 months. After that, you must have it transferred. In exceptional cases, you may also have to take a practical driving test.
The following documents are required for the transfer:
- Passport
- Foreign driving licence (with translation if necessary)
- Photo (portrait format 35 x 45 mm)
- Medical certificate
- Possibly confirmation of the notification (facilitates processing by the authority, but can also be replaced by an enquiry by the authority with the register of residents)
For detailed information on this, please click under Checklist for motor vehicles and driving licences in Austria for third-country nationals
Registering for electricity
In Austria, you are free to choose your electricity provider. For example, you can go to the homepage of “e-control” to compare electricity providers and choose the best one for you. If you have a contract with an electricity provider, you must inform the local grid operator that the occupant(s) of the apartment/house has/have moved. You must then also conclude a usage contract with the grid operator or take over the contract of the previous tenant.
Detailed information on electricity registration is also available here at “durchblicker”. (only in German)
You should compare internet tariffs online and see which provider is available in your area. Have you made your decision? Then take out a contract online (sometimes a WLAN router has to be purchased).
Register dog
If your dog is older than 3 months, you must pay dog tax for it. The amount of dog tax is determined by the municipality. Registration takes place at the respective municipal office or the municipal police.
Forward mail
Internet login
You should compare internet tariffs online and see which provider is available in your area. Have you made your decision? Then take out a contract online (sometimes a WLAN router has to be purchased).
Further information on electricity registration and a comparison of Internet providers can be found on “durchblicker“. (only in German)
Further information
General information
Can I become an Austrian? Can I become an Austrian? What rights do I have as a resident and which authorities exist in Austria?
Working in Austria
How do I find a job in Austria? How do I apply for a work permit and what is the red-white-red card?
Children & Education
What childcare options are there in Austria? Where can I continue my education or learn German?
Family & Social Affairs
What do I need to consider during pregnancy? Is there any financial support from the state?
Health & Insurance
How can I insure myself? How do I apply for an e-card and what do I need to know about the healthcare system?
Counselling centres
Who do I turn to with problems and questions? Which regional advice centres are there?
Regional recreational activities
What leisure activities are available in the region and the surrounding area? Are there any special offers?