[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
contracts with freelance employees Austria 2026

Austria 2026: How Banks & Financial Firms Must Update Contracts with Freelance Service Providers, Drafting Checklist & Sample Clauses

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Austria’s sweeping reforms to contracts with freelance employees Austria 2026 took effect on 1 January 2026, introducing statutory termination protections, probation-period caps and, for the first time, the right for social partners to conclude collective agreements covering freelance service providers (freie Dienstnehmer). Alongside these labour-law changes, updated public-procurement transparency requirements and the EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) regime now impose additional contractual obligations on banks, investment firms and fintechs that engage external service providers. The combined effect is a compliance challenge that cannot be solved with a simple contract addendum: institutions must systematically review every freelance, outsourcing and vendor agreement in their portfolio.

This guide provides the practical drafting checklist, sample clauses and implementation roadmap that in-house counsel and procurement teams need to act now.

Executive Summary: What Changed and Immediate Actions Banks Must Take

The reforms that became effective on 1 January 2026 fundamentally alter the rights of freelance employees in Austria. Three headline changes demand immediate attention from financial institutions:

  • Statutory termination protections. Freelance service providers now benefit from mandatory minimum notice periods and a capped probation period (up to one month), mirroring, but not identical to, protections long enjoyed by standard employees.
  • Collective bargaining rights. Social partners may now negotiate collective agreements (Kollektivverträge) covering freie Dienstnehmer, potentially affecting fee levels, working conditions and dispute-resolution procedures across entire sectors.
  • Regulatory overlay for banks. Updated procurement rules and DORA-aligned ICT third-party-risk requirements mean that contracts with freelance employees in Austria must now also satisfy financial-supervisory expectations regarding audit rights, incident reporting and exit strategies.

Banks and funds should prioritise six immediate contract updates: (1) revise termination and probation clauses; (2) add independence and substitution language to mitigate re-classification risk; (3) insert collective-bargaining escalation provisions; (4) align ICT freelancer agreements with DORA requirements; (5) update invoicing and payment terms to remove payroll-like elements; and (6) review procurement-process documentation for threshold compliance. The detailed clause bank and checklist below provide ready-to-use wording for each.

The New Legal Landscape for Contracts with Freelance Employees in Austria

Austria’s freie Dienstnehmer category has long occupied a middle ground between full employment and independent contracting. The 2026 reforms sharpen the legal framework considerably, bringing this category closer to employee-level protection while preserving the flexibility that distinguishes it from standard employment.

Definition and Scope: Who Counts as a Freie Dienstnehmer?

Under Austrian law, a freier Dienstnehmer (freelance employee) is a person who provides services under a continuous service relationship without being personally dependent on the principal in the way a regular employee would be. The key distinguishing features, as set out in official government guidance, include: no obligation to follow detailed instructions on how to perform work; freedom to set working hours; and the right to work for multiple clients simultaneously. Unlike a self-employed contractor (Werkvertragsnehmer), a freelance employee is economically integrated into the principal’s operations to some degree and is subject to social-insurance contributions.

The 2026 reforms did not change the underlying definition of freie Dienstnehmer, but they significantly expanded the protections attached to that status. This distinction matters for banks: the classification test remains unchanged, but the consequences of engaging a freelance employee, and the contractual safeguards needed, are now materially different.

Retroactivity and Transitional Rules: Do Reforms Apply to Pre-Existing Contracts?

The new statutory notice periods and probation limits apply to all freelance-employee relationships that are active on or after 1 January 2026, regardless of when the underlying contract was signed. Industry observers expect this means that any contract executed before 2026 that contains a shorter notice period or a longer probation period than the statutory minimum is now overridden by operation of law. Banks holding legacy freelance agreements must therefore treat those contracts as amended by statute, even if no formal addendum has been signed. The prudent approach is to execute a short confirmatory addendum acknowledging the statutory changes and updating clause references accordingly.

What Banks and Financial Firms Must Worry About: Regulatory and Commercial Overlays

The freelancer-protection reforms do not exist in a vacuum. For regulated financial institutions, three additional risk layers interact with the new rules and create a more complex compliance picture.

Re-Classification and Employment Law Risk

Austria’s social-insurance authorities have historically scrutinised arrangements where a so-called freelance employee is, in substance, an employee. The 2026 reforms heighten this risk because the expanded protections narrow the practical gap between the two categories. If a bank exercises too much day-to-day control, setting fixed hours, requiring exclusivity, denying substitution rights, it risks the freelancer being reclassified as a full employee, triggering back-payments for social-insurance contributions, holiday pay, severance and more. The top five red flags for likely employee classification are:

  • Fixed working hours dictated by the bank rather than the provider.
  • Exclusive engagement, the provider works only for one institution.
  • No substitution right, the provider must perform personally without exception.
  • Payroll-style payments, monthly salary transfers rather than invoiced fees.
  • Integration into internal hierarchy, the provider reports to a line manager and attends mandatory team meetings.

Public Procurement Act 2026 Austria: Procurement Triggers and Contract Requirements

Where banks and state-linked financial institutions procure freelance services above applicable value thresholds, updated procurement transparency requirements demand formal documentation of supplier-selection criteria, competitive tendering (where thresholds are exceeded) and contract-term transparency. Even privately owned banks should monitor these developments: procurement-law principles are increasingly cited in regulatory expectations around outsourcing governance. The likely practical effect will be greater documentation burdens when onboarding freelance providers for high-value or critical-function engagements.

DORA, FMA and ICT Outsourcing: Banking Outsourcing Compliance Austria

For any freelance provider delivering ICT-related services, from software development to cybersecurity consulting, Austria’s Financial Market Authority (FMA) requires compliance with DORA’s third-party risk-management framework. This means that contracts must include, at minimum, provisions on service-level descriptions, security requirements, incident-notification obligations, audit and access rights, sub-outsourcing controls and exit-strategy clauses. These obligations apply regardless of whether the provider is a large vendor or an individual freelancer. For a deeper examination of what constitutes ICT services under DORA, institutions should review their provider classification carefully.

Drafting Checklist: 12 Contractual Changes for Contracts with Freelance Employees

The following vendor contract checklist covers every clause area that Austrian banks and financial firms must address when updating contracts with freelance employees in Austria for 2026 compliance. For each item, a short legal rationale, red-flag indicator and sample clause summary are provided.

  1. Precise definitions. Define “Freelance Service Provider” (freier Dienstnehmer), the deliverables, and excluded activities explicitly. Ambiguity in scope is the single greatest source of re-classification risk. Red flag: contract uses the word “employee” or “Arbeitnehmer” anywhere.
  2. Control and supervision limits. State that the provider determines the method, sequence and timing of work performance. The bank may define deliverables and quality standards, but not the manner of execution. Red flag: contract references “reporting to” a named manager or “attending” scheduled team meetings.
  3. Working hours and exclusivity. Confirm that the provider is not bound to fixed working hours and may engage with multiple clients simultaneously. An exclusivity restriction, even a partial one, is a strong indicator of employee status. Red flag: any clause requiring “full-time availability” or “prior written consent” to work for others.
  4. Substitution and subcontracting rights. Permit the provider to delegate or substitute performance, subject to reasonable vetting requirements (e.g., security clearance, professional qualifications). A blanket prohibition on substitution is one of the clearest indicia of employment. Red flag: clause stating “services must be performed personally by the Provider at all times.”
  5. Payment and invoicing terms. Structure compensation on a fee-for-service or milestone basis, payable against invoices that include VAT where applicable. Avoid monthly fixed-sum payments that mirror payroll. Red flag: “salary,” “monthly compensation,” or any reference to payslips.
  6. Probation and termination timing. Align with the new statutory framework: a probation period of up to one month (during which either party may terminate without notice) and statutory minimum notice periods thereafter. Red flag: a six-month probation clause or termination “at will” without notice after the probation period.
  7. IP ownership and moral-rights licence. Assign all work-product IP to the bank upon creation, or license it on exclusive, irrevocable, perpetual terms. Include a moral-rights waiver to the extent permitted by Austrian law. Red flag: no IP clause at all, or a clause that grants only a “non-exclusive licence.”
  8. Confidentiality and data protection. Include GDPR-compliant confidentiality obligations, data-processing terms (where the provider processes personal data) and, for ICT providers, DORA-aligned security and incident-notification requirements. Red flag: generic confidentiality clause with no data-protection annex.
  9. Audit and compliance rights. Grant the bank reasonable audit rights over the provider’s compliance with contractual, regulatory and security obligations. For ICT freelancers, align audit scope with DORA requirements. Include materiality thresholds to keep the clause proportionate for individual providers. Red flag: no audit clause, or unlimited audit rights that may signal an employment-like control structure.
  10. Insurance and indemnities. Require the provider to maintain professional-indemnity insurance and to represent that all social-insurance contributions are current. Include an indemnity for losses arising from misclassification. Red flag: bank pays the provider’s insurance premiums or makes social-insurance contributions on their behalf.
  11. Collective-bargaining contingency. Insert a clause acknowledging that a collective agreement may become applicable to the engagement and setting out a mechanism for adjusting fees and conditions if that occurs. Red flag: contract is silent on collective bargaining despite the provider performing work in a sector where negotiations are underway.
  12. Governing law, dispute resolution and severability. Specify Austrian law, nominate a dispute-resolution forum (courts or arbitration) and include a severability clause ensuring that if one provision is struck down, the remainder survives. Red flag: no governing-law clause, or a foreign-law choice that may not be enforceable for Austrian labour-law protections.

Sample Clauses for Banks: Control, Substitution, Termination, IP and Audit

The following sample clauses are illustrative. They should be adapted to each institution’s specific regulatory context and reviewed by qualified Austrian counsel. For a foundational overview of the key terms that shape a service agreement, legal teams may refer to additional drafting resources.

Control and independence clause:

“The Provider shall perform the Services as an independent freelance service provider (freier Dienstnehmer) and not as an employee (Arbeitnehmer) of the Bank. The Provider shall determine the manner, method, sequence and timing of service delivery at their sole discretion, provided that deliverables conform to the specifications set out in Schedule A. The Bank shall not issue instructions regarding day-to-day working methods, require the Provider to work from Bank premises on a regular basis, or integrate the Provider into the Bank’s organisational hierarchy.”

Substitution clause:

“The Provider may delegate performance of the Services, in whole or in part, to a qualified substitute, provided that (a) the substitute meets the professional-qualification and security-clearance requirements set out in Schedule B, (b) the Provider notifies the Bank in writing at least five (5) business days before the substitution takes effect, and (c) the Provider remains liable for the substitute’s performance.”

Termination clause (reflecting freelancer termination protections Austria):

“During the Probation Period (one month from the Commencement Date), either party may terminate this Agreement without notice and without cause. After expiry of the Probation Period, either party may terminate this Agreement by giving written notice of not less than four (4) weeks, to expire at the end of a calendar month. After two years of continuous engagement, the minimum notice period shall extend as required by applicable statutory provisions. Either party may terminate this Agreement with immediate effect for Cause, which includes material breach, insolvency, or conduct that would justify summary dismissal under Austrian law.”

IP assignment clause:

“All Intellectual Property created by the Provider in the course of performing the Services (‘Work Product’) shall vest in the Bank upon creation. To the extent that any Work Product does not vest automatically, the Provider hereby assigns all rights, title and interest in such Work Product to the Bank. The Provider waives, to the fullest extent permitted by Austrian law, all moral rights in the Work Product and shall not assert any such rights against the Bank or its successors.”

Audit-rights clause (DORA-aligned for ICT providers):

“The Bank and its regulators (including the FMA) shall have the right, upon reasonable notice and during normal business hours, to audit the Provider’s compliance with this Agreement and applicable regulatory requirements, including DORA and related FMA guidance on ICT third-party risk. The Provider shall cooperate fully with any such audit and grant access to relevant records, systems and personnel. Audits shall be conducted no more than once per calendar year unless triggered by a material incident or regulatory request.”

Termination, Notice and Disputes: Minimising Cost and Liability

The statutory termination framework introduced on 1 January 2026 marks one of the most operationally significant changes for contracts with freelance employees in Austria. Banks that relied on short-notice or at-will termination clauses must now budget for longer exit timelines and plan workforce transitions accordingly.

Who / Entity New Statutory Change (from 1 Jan 2026) Practical Impact for Banks
Freelance service providers (freie Dienstnehmer) Statutory minimum notice period (four weeks, extending with tenure); probation period capped at one month; right to collective agreements. Update termination language; avoid implied employment by controlling hours/exclusivity; plan for potential collective bargaining affecting rates.
Banks & financial firms (outsourcers) Procurement thresholds and transparency requirements under the Public Procurement Act 2026 (where applicable); DORA-aligned ICT contractual standards. Ensure procurement processes and contract templates reflect new procurement rules and DORA vendor controls to avoid enforcement risk.
ICT / fintech providers Stronger DORA obligations covering ICT risk management and contractual security requirements. Add DORA-aligned security, incident-reporting and audit clauses to all vendor contracts, including freelancers performing ICT services.

When negotiating termination terms with existing freelance providers, banks should adopt a practical settlement approach. Early indications suggest that disputes over transition periods and handover obligations will increase as freelancers assert their new rights. Institutions should maintain contemporaneous records of all deliverables, milestones and communications to support any future termination decision. A quick-fix clause for existing contracts, deployable as a standalone addendum, might read:

“Notwithstanding any contrary provision in the Agreement, the parties acknowledge that as of 1 January 2026, the statutory minimum notice period and probation-period cap applicable to freie Dienstnehmer under Austrian law apply to this engagement. To the extent that any clause of this Agreement provides for a shorter notice period or longer probation period, such clause is hereby deemed amended to reflect the statutory minimum.”

Operational Playbook: From Legal Review to Procurement Roll-Out

Updating contracts with freelance employees requires more than clause-level redlining. Banks need a structured, institution-wide implementation programme that coordinates legal, procurement, tax and line-management functions. The following eight-step roadmap provides a suggested sequence:

  1. Inventory. Compile a complete register of all active freelance-service-provider contracts, identifying provider name, engagement type, function, fee structure, notice period and ICT classification.
  2. Risk-stratify. Categorise each contract as high, medium or low risk based on re-classification exposure, ICT/DORA relevance and value threshold.
  3. Fast-track high-risk amendments. Prioritise contracts where re-classification risk is high (e.g., exclusive, long-tenure, fixed-hours providers) and where DORA obligations apply. Deploy the addendum template and sample clauses from this guide.
  4. Align procurement processes. Update procurement-process documentation, supplier-selection criteria and tendering templates to reflect the public procurement act 2026 Austria requirements where applicable.
  5. Execute sign-off workflows. Route amended contracts through legal, compliance and business-line approval before execution. Ensure regulatory sign-off for critical or important ICT outsourcing under DORA.
  6. Coordinate payroll and tax. Verify that invoicing and payment processes are structured on a fee-for-service basis and that social-insurance classifications are correct. Engage payroll and tax advisory teams to confirm no misclassification exposure.
  7. Train hiring managers. Deliver targeted training to business-line managers who engage freelancers, covering the independence markers that must be observed in day-to-day management, including guidance on legal drafting skills relevant to service instructions and scope-of-work documents.
  8. Monitor and audit. Establish a quarterly review calendar to track new collective-bargaining developments, regulatory guidance from the FMA, and any re-classification challenges from social-insurance authorities.

Suggested Sequence for Negotiating Amendments with Existing Suppliers

Begin with providers where the bank has the strongest commercial leverage and where the re-classification risk is highest. Propose a collaborative approach: frame the addendum as a mutual benefit that clarifies rights and provides statutory protections to the provider. Where a provider resists amendments, particularly on substitution or independence language, this resistance may itself indicate that the relationship is closer to employment than the contract suggests, warranting escalation to legal and compliance.

Implementation Checklist and Downloadable Annex

The following 20-point checklist summarises the actions required to achieve full compliance. Legal teams should work through each item and mark it as complete before signing off on the institution’s outsourcing agreement Austria 2026 update programme.

  • Compile full inventory of active freie Dienstnehmer contracts.
  • Confirm each provider’s classification status (freelance employee vs. employee vs. self-employed).
  • Flag contracts with no substitution clause or with exclusivity restrictions.
  • Identify all ICT-related freelance engagements subject to DORA.
  • Review and update definitions clauses (provider status, deliverables, excluded activities).
  • Revise control and supervision language to reinforce independence.
  • Remove fixed-hours and exclusivity provisions.
  • Insert or expand substitution and subcontracting rights.
  • Convert payroll-style payments to fee-for-service invoicing.
  • Update probation and termination clauses to statutory minimums.
  • Add or update IP assignment and moral-rights waiver.
  • Attach GDPR data-processing annex where applicable.
  • Insert DORA-aligned audit, security and incident-notification provisions for ICT providers.
  • Add professional-indemnity insurance and social-insurance compliance representations.
  • Insert collective-bargaining contingency clause.
  • Confirm governing-law and dispute-resolution provisions.
  • Execute confirmatory addendum for all pre-2026 contracts.
  • Update procurement documentation and tendering templates.
  • Deliver hiring-manager training on independence markers.
  • Establish quarterly compliance monitoring and audit calendar.

A comprehensive contract annex, the Freelance-Provider Clause Bank (Austria 2026) for Banks, containing full-length sample clauses, redline language and implementation notes is available as a downloadable resource. Legal teams should use this annex as a starting template, adapting each clause to their institution’s specific regulatory and commercial context.

Conclusion

The 1 January 2026 reforms represent the most significant change to contracts with freelance employees Austria 2026 in a generation. For banks, investment firms and fintechs, the compliance window is already open, and regulators, social-insurance authorities and newly empowered social partners are watching closely. Institutions that act decisively now, deploying updated clauses, structured implementation programmes and ongoing monitoring, will avoid the costly re-classification disputes, regulatory sanctions and commercial disruptions that will catch slower-moving competitors. Legal teams seeking specialist guidance on outsourcing, vendor contracts and financial-regulation compliance can explore the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with qualified Austrian practitioners.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Roman Hager at WMWP – Act Legal Austria, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Schoenherr, Enhanced termination rules and collective bargaining agreements
  2. Deloitte Österreich, Breaking news: Labor Law Changes 2026
  3. USP.gv.at, Independent contractors (official government guidance)
  4. Kinstellar, New legal framework for freelance employees in Austria (1 Jan 2026)
  5. CMS (Austria), New regulations for freelance workers
  6. Eversheds Sutherland, Freelancers: what will change from 2026?
  7. FMA Austria, DORA / managing ICT third-party risk
  8. WageIndicator, Austria: collective agreements for freelancers possible from 2026

FAQs

What is a "freelance employee" (freie Dienstnehmer) under Austria's 2026 reforms?
A freier Dienstnehmer is a service provider who works under a continuous engagement without the personal dependency that characterises standard employment. They set their own working methods and hours but are economically integrated into the principal’s operations and subject to social-insurance contributions. The 2026 reforms expanded their protections but did not change this core classification.
Yes. From 1 January 2026, freelance employees benefit from statutory minimum notice periods and a probation-period cap of one month. These protections apply by operation of law to all engagements active on or after that date, overriding any contractual clause that provides for lesser protections. Banks must update existing contracts to reflect the new statutory minimums.
Banks should ensure contracts contain explicit independence language, permit substitution, avoid fixed working hours and exclusivity restrictions, and structure payments as fee-for-service invoicing rather than payroll. The 12-point drafting checklist in this guide addresses every key re-classification indicator.
Yes. The 2026 reforms enable social partners to negotiate collective agreements covering freie Dienstnehmer for the first time. Banks should insert contingency clauses that address potential fee adjustments and condition changes if a collective agreement becomes applicable to their freelance providers.
Yes. The statutory protections, including notice periods and the probation-period cap, apply to all active freelance-employee relationships from 1 January 2026 onward, regardless of when the contract was executed. Pre-existing clauses that conflict with the statutory minimums are overridden automatically.
DORA requires financial institutions to include specific provisions in contracts with any ICT service provider, including individual freelancers. These provisions cover service-level descriptions, security standards, incident notification, audit and access rights, sub-outsourcing controls and exit-strategy obligations. The FMA oversees compliance with these requirements in Austria.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Austria 2026: How Banks & Financial Firms Must Update Contracts with Freelance Service Providers, Drafting Checklist & Sample Clauses

Send welcome message

Custom Message