Our Expert in Austria
When an Austrian authority flags potential wrongdoing, the first question every compliance officer, managing director or in-house counsel must answer is whether the matter will be handled as an administrative penalty (Verwaltungsstrafe) or escalate into a full criminal prosecution (gerichtliches Strafverfahren). The distinction between administrative penalty vs criminal prosecution in Austria determines everything that follows, the standard of proof applied, the maximum sanctions, whether a director faces personal custodial risk, and whether statements made early in the process can later be used against the company in court. February 2026 updates to the VStV administrative-penalty handling platform and clarified suspension rules now make this choice more consequential and more time-sensitive than at any point in the past decade.
This article delivers a dimension-by-dimension comparison and a concrete decision framework so that companies, directors and individuals can act immediately, or know exactly when to find a criminal lawyer in Austria.
Austrian law draws a structural line between two enforcement tracks. Option A, administrative penalty proceedings (Verwaltungsstrafverfahren) are governed by the Verwaltungsstrafgesetz (VStG) and handled by district administrative authorities (Bezirksverwaltungsbehörden). They cover regulatory, occupational-safety, environmental, trade-licensing and reporting offences. Sanctions typically take the form of fines, though substitute imprisonment is possible under certain VStG provisions when fines remain unpaid. Option B, criminal prosecution is governed by the Strafgesetzbuch (StGB) and the Strafprozessordnung (StPO). Public prosecutors lead the investigation, and courts adjudicate. Sanctions include imprisonment, substantial fines, and a public criminal record.
The two tracks are not always mutually exclusive: the same set of facts can initially appear administrative and later attract prosecutorial attention, especially where intent or gross negligence is established. Critically, if criminal proceedings in court are initiated, administrative penal proceedings cannot be carried out against the same person for the same conduct. That suspension rule, confirmed in the Arbeitsinspektion’s guidance updated 20 February 2026, makes early assessment essential.
This article is written for compliance officers, company directors, HR heads, in-house counsel and individuals who have received an administrative penalty notice, are facing a regulatory inspection, or have reason to believe a criminal investigation may begin. The goal is to help you decide, quickly and with confidence, whether to defend the matter administratively, prepare for criminal defence, or engage counsel immediately to manage both tracks in parallel.
Administrative penal law (Verwaltungsstrafrecht) in Austria captures a vast range of regulatory offences. The VStG provides the procedural framework, while the substantive offences are defined in sector-specific statutes, the Trade Code (Gewerbeordnung), the Employee Protection Act (ArbeitnehmerInnenschutzgesetz), environmental legislation, data-protection regulations and many others. Section 19 VStG requires that the principles of the Criminal Law Act apply to penalty determination in administrative proceedings, meaning mitigating and aggravating factors are assessed in a structured way, not arbitrarily.
Administrative penalty proceedings usually arise from routine inspections, whistleblower reports processed by regulatory bodies, or automated monitoring systems. Common trigger scenarios include:
If the factual matrix shows a regulatory lapse without evidence of deliberate intent, and the statute prescribes only administrative sanctions, the matter is squarely suited to administrative handling.
Criminal prosecution in Austria is initiated by the public prosecutor (Staatsanwaltschaft) and adjudicated by criminal courts under the StPO. The threshold is higher: prosecution requires sufficient suspicion of a criminal offence as defined in the StGB, typically involving intent (Vorsatz) or, for certain offences, gross negligence (grobe Fahrlässigkeit). The consequences are categorically more severe than administrative penalties.
In criminal proceedings, the accused benefits from stronger procedural safeguards under the StPO, the right to silence, the right to counsel at every stage, the right to challenge evidence, and the presumption of innocence with the “beyond reasonable doubt” standard. Defence strategy must begin before any statement is given. The critical early steps are: invoke the right to silence, preserve all documents, instruct defence counsel, and prevent any employee from making uncoordinated statements that could bind the company. Where administrative proceedings are already underway, defence counsel must assess whether statements already made in that context are at risk of being transferred to the criminal file.
The following table summarises the key dimensions of the administrative vs criminal choice in Austria. Use it as a quick-reference framework before reading the detailed analysis below.
| Dimension | Administrative Penalty (Option A) | Criminal Prosecution (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility / trigger | Regulatory breach defined in sector-specific statute; no intent required for most offences | Criminal offence under StGB; typically requires intent or gross negligence |
| Standard of proof | Preponderance of evidence / administrative conviction standard | Beyond reasonable doubt (freie Beweiswürdigung under the StPO, with the in-dubio-pro-reo principle) |
| Maximum sanctions | Fines (statutory maxima vary by offence; substitute imprisonment if fine unpaid) | Imprisonment and/or fines; corporate fines under VbVG for legal entities |
| Typical timeline | Weeks to months (accelerated by VStV platform) | Months to years (investigation → indictment → trial → possible appeal) |
| Typical legal costs | Lower: administrative counsel engagement, limited procedural complexity | Higher: criminal defence counsel, expert witnesses, extended proceedings |
| Director personal liability | Personal fines for responsible officer; substitute imprisonment in rare cases | Personal criminal liability including custodial sentences; criminal record |
| Evidence admissibility / cross-use | Statements and records may be transferred to criminal prosecutors | Criminal evidence subject to stricter procedural safeguards; exclusionary rules apply |
| Enforceability & remedies | Appeal to Verwaltungsgericht; suspension possible; settlement/remediation may reduce fine | Appeal to higher criminal courts; acquittal possible; no informal settlement |
| Corporate consequences | Possible licence conditions, compliance orders, revocation in extreme cases | Corporate fines under VbVG; potential debarment from public procurement; reputational harm |
| Public record / disclosure | Generally not public; no criminal record entry | Public court proceedings; conviction recorded in criminal register |
The clearest tradeoff: administrative proceedings are faster, cheaper and less publicly visible, but the evidence generated in them can migrate to criminal proceedings, and a director who makes admissions administratively may find those admissions used against them in a subsequent prosecution. Criminal prosecution carries far higher personal stakes but offers stronger procedural protections for the accused.
Administrative penalty proceedings operate under a lower evidentiary standard than criminal prosecution. The administrative authority must establish the offence, but the accused does not benefit from the full weight of the in-dubio-pro-reo principle as applied in criminal courts. Criminal prosecution requires the prosecution to prove every element of the offence beyond reasonable doubt, a standard that, in practice, results in a meaningful acquittal rate for complex corporate cases.
Which option favours the accused: Criminal proceedings provide stronger protection through the higher standard of proof.
The financial exposure differs materially between the two tracks. The table below sets out the main cost dimensions.
| Cost item | Administrative Penalty | Criminal Prosecution |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory fines | Varies by sector statute; maxima range from several thousand to six-figure sums for corporate offences | Fines under StGB plus corporate fines under VbVG (calculated as daily rates × number of days); custodial sentences carry no direct financial equivalent but impose enormous indirect cost |
| Lawyer engagement | Typically limited scope, response to penalty notice, possible appeal hearing | Full criminal defence engagement, investigation phase, trial preparation, trial, possible appeal; significantly higher total fees |
| Court / procedural fees | Modest administrative court fees | Criminal court fees; expert witness costs; potential costs of investigation compliance |
| Ancillary costs | Possible compliance programme implementation; licence remediation | Compliance monitor costs; reputational damage mitigation; potential debarment from public contracts |
Which option favours the accused on cost: Administrative proceedings are almost always cheaper, unless the administrative defence is mishandled and evidence leaks into a subsequent criminal prosecution, compounding both costs.
Administrative penalty proceedings benefit from the centralised VStV platform, which has streamlined file handling and reduced processing times. A straightforward administrative penalty can be resolved within weeks. Criminal prosecution follows a longer arc: preliminary investigation, possible pre-trial detention hearings, formal indictment, trial and appeals. Complex corporate criminal cases routinely take one to three years or longer. Crucially, when criminal proceedings are initiated against the same person for the same conduct, administrative penal proceedings must be suspended, a rule confirmed in the Arbeitsinspektion’s guidance updated 20 February 2026.
Which option favours the accused on timing: Administrative proceedings are faster, but the suspension rule means an overlapping criminal investigation halts administrative resolution entirely.
Under Austrian law, corporate criminal liability is established by the Verbandsverantwortlichkeitsgesetz (VbVG), which allows legal entities to be prosecuted and fined for criminal offences committed by their decision-makers or employees. In administrative proceedings, the responsible officer (verwaltungsstrafrechtlich Verantwortlicher), usually the managing director or a delegated compliance officer, faces personal administrative fines and, if those fines go unpaid, substitute imprisonment.
The critical risk: admissions made by a director during administrative proceedings, before criminal counsel is engaged, can later be used to establish intent or knowledge in a criminal prosecution. This is the single most dangerous crossover between the two tracks.
Which option creates greater director risk: Criminal prosecution, by a wide margin, but poorly managed administrative proceedings can build the prosecution’s case.
This is the dimension that most directly affects when to hire a criminal lawyer in Austria. As analysed in EUCRIM’s study on the use of administrative evidence in criminal proceedings in Austria, documents and statements collected in administrative proceedings can, under certain conditions, be introduced into criminal proceedings. The Austrian StPO does not contain a blanket exclusionary rule for evidence originating in administrative processes. The practical effect: inspection reports, written responses to penalty notices, and even informal statements made during an administrative hearing may appear in the criminal prosecution file.
Which option favours the accused on evidence control: Criminal proceedings offer stronger safeguards; the real risk lies in the administrative track generating evidence that criminal prosecutors can access.
Administrative penalties can be appealed to the Verwaltungsgericht (administrative court), with the possibility of suspension pending appeal. Settlement through demonstrated corrective action is common. Criminal convictions are appealed through the criminal appellate courts; there is no equivalent of an informal settlement or fine reduction for cooperation, though mitigating factors are considered at sentencing under Section 19 VStG principles as applied by analogy, and under StGB sentencing provisions.
Two developments in 2026 materially affect the administrative penalty vs criminal prosecution calculus in Austria.
First: the VStV platform centralisation. The Verfahren zur Verwaltungsstrafen (VStV) platform, developed by Rubicon, now provides a centralised digital infrastructure for administrative penalty proceedings across Austrian authorities. The practical effect is that administrative files, including penalty notices, inspection reports and written submissions, are stored in a unified system accessible to multiple authorities. This means faster cross-authority flagging: if one authority’s administrative file reveals potential criminal conduct, the referral to the public prosecutor occurs more quickly and with a more complete evidence package.
Second: clarified suspension rules. The Arbeitsinspektion’s guidance, updated 20 February 2026, confirms the existing legal position: if criminal proceedings in court are initiated, administrative penal proceedings cannot be carried out against the same person for the same conduct. What has changed operationally is that the VStV platform now facilitates the identification of parallel proceedings, reducing the previously common scenario where administrative and criminal tracks ran in parallel without coordination for extended periods.
These changes shift the hiring calculus. Under the pre-2026 regime, companies sometimes handled administrative matters informally, with administrative counsel or in-house, before assessing criminal risk. The centralised platform and faster cross-referral mean that the window between receiving an administrative penalty notice and a potential criminal referral has shortened. Early engagement of criminal defence counsel is now advisable whenever any administrative penalty notice involves conduct that could, even theoretically, meet a criminal threshold. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a measurable increase in early criminal-counsel engagement for administrative matters involving workplace safety, environmental compliance and financial reporting.
Use the following framework to determine your immediate course of action when an administrative penalty vs criminal prosecution question arises in Austria.
| If your priority is… | Choose… | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Minimise publicity and resolve quickly | Administrative defence (Option A) | Faster resolution, no public record, possibility of fine reduction through cooperation |
| Protect directors from personal criminal liability | Criminal defence counsel immediately (Option B) | Criminal counsel ensures right to silence is preserved and prevents self-incriminating admissions |
| Prevent administrative evidence from being used in a later prosecution | Engage criminal counsel before any response | Once statements are in the administrative file, they may be accessible to prosecutors |
| Manage corporate liability under VbVG | Criminal defence counsel with corporate experience | VbVG exposure requires specialist defence strategy at entity level |
| Resolve a purely regulatory breach with no intent element | Administrative defence (Option A) | No criminal threshold met; administrative counsel is sufficient and cost-effective |
Choose administrative defence when:
Choose criminal defence counsel immediately when:
If in doubt, take these steps immediately:
Not every administrative penalty notice requires a criminal law specialist. But the consequences of misjudging the boundary between administrative and criminal exposure are severe and often irreversible. The following specific triggers should prompt immediate engagement of criminal defence counsel:
There is a practical distinction between administrative counsel (who specialises in regulatory proceedings and administrative court appeals) and criminal defence counsel (who is trained in the StPO, evidence exclusion, custodial strategy and trial advocacy). For purely regulatory matters with no criminal indicators, administrative counsel is appropriate and cost-effective. The moment any criminal indicator appears, intent, police involvement, evidence of fraud, serious harm, the matter requires criminal defence expertise. In the 2026 environment, with centralised VStV files and faster cross-referrals, the safest approach is to instruct criminal counsel for an initial risk assessment on any administrative matter that is not unambiguously minor.
The recommended sequence of immediate steps:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nikolaus Sauerschnig at Gheneff – Rami – Sommer – Sauerschnig Rechtsanwälte GmbH & Co KG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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