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Austria’s transposition of the EU NIS2 Directive into the Netz- und Informationssystemsicherheitsgesetz 2026 (NISG 2026) fundamentally reshapes cybersecurity obligations for critical infrastructure operators Austria-wide, and NIS2 compliance Austria 2026 is now an operational priority for every covered entity. The Austrian Parliament adopted the NISG 2026 bill in late 2025, with staged entry into force commencing on 1 October 2026 and entity registration windows opening shortly after. For telecoms operators, financial-services firms and licensed gambling operators, the law creates new reporting duties, governance requirements and supply-chain controls that run in parallel with, and occasionally overlap, existing GDPR obligations.
This guide provides DPOs, CISOs and in-house compliance teams with a jurisdiction-specific playbook covering scope, timelines, incident reporting, GDPR intersections and sector-specific action checklists.
The NISG 2026 transposes Directive (EU) 2022/2555 (NIS2) into Austrian national law, replacing the original NIS Act and dramatically widening the range of entities subject to cybersecurity governance and incident-reporting obligations. The bill text and explanatory notes, published on the Austrian Parliament’s legislative portal, confirm that the law applies to both “essential” and “important” entities across sectors defined in two annexes that mirror NIS2 Annexes I and II.
Three points every compliance team must act on immediately:
The following timeline consolidates the critical milestones for NIS2 compliance Austria 2026 based on the parliamentary bill record and the NIS Anlaufstelle’s published guidance.
| Date | Event | Practical Action for Firms |
|---|---|---|
| 16 January 2023 | NIS2 Directive (EU) 2022/2555 enters into force at EU level | Begin gap analysis against NIS2 requirements |
| 17 October 2024 | EU transposition deadline (missed by Austria and most Member States) | Monitor Austrian legislative progress |
| Late 2025 | Austrian Parliament adopts NISG 2026 bill | Confirm final text; begin internal scoping exercise |
| 1 October 2026 | NISG 2026 enters into force (staged commencement) | Entity registration, governance structures and security measures must be operational |
| Within 3 months of entry into force | Registration deadline for covered entities with NIS Anlaufstelle | Submit registration via nis.gv.at; appoint points of contact |
| Ongoing from Q4 2026 | Supervisory and audit activities commence | Ensure documentation, policies and incident-response plans are audit-ready |
Transitional provisions in the NISG 2026 allow entities that were already registered under the original NIS Act to update their registrations rather than file afresh. Entities entering scope for the first time, including many telecoms data protection Austria operators and gambling-sector licensees, should treat the three-month registration window as a hard deadline and begin preparing documentation now.
The NISG 2026 annexes mirror the NIS2 Directive’s distinction between “essential entities” (Annex I sectors) and “important entities” (Annex II sectors). As the WKO’s NIS2 overview confirms, the general size thresholds align with the EU medium-enterprise definition: organisations with 50 or more employees or an annual turnover and balance-sheet total exceeding EUR 10 million are presumptively in scope. Certain entities, such as providers of public electronic communications networks, are captured regardless of size.
| Sector | Likely Covered Entity Types | Thresholds & Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Telecommunications | Public electronic communications network operators; internet service providers; managed-service providers | Captured regardless of size for public network/service providers. Managed-service and managed-security-service providers subject to standard size thresholds. |
| Financial services | Credit institutions; payment-service providers; trading venues; central counterparties; insurance undertakings | Medium or large enterprises. Sector-specific regulation (e.g., DORA) may apply concurrently. Coordinate with FMA (Austrian Financial Market Authority). |
| Gambling | Licensed online and land-based gambling operators | Entities meeting medium-enterprise thresholds; AML-obligated entities may face additional scrutiny. Check NISG 2026 Annex II classification. |
| Energy, transport, health, water, digital infrastructure | Electricity/gas operators; airports/rail; hospitals; water utilities; data-centre operators; DNS providers | Essential entities subject to stricter supervisory regime (proactive supervision and audits). |
The NISG 2026 requires covered entities to adopt proportionate technical and organisational measures to manage cybersecurity risk. These obligations closely track Article 21 of the NIS2 Directive and are supplemented by Austrian implementing guidance from the NIS Anlaufstelle.
Entities must implement a risk-based security framework covering at minimum:
Industry observers expect the Austrian Standards Institute to publish supplementary technical guidance mapping NISG 2026 controls to ISO/IEC 27001:2022, enabling organisations already certified to streamline their gap analysis.
A distinctive feature of NIS2 Austria obligations is the explicit requirement to address supply-chain cybersecurity. Covered entities must:
Management bodies (Geschäftsführung / Vorstand) bear direct responsibility under the NISG 2026 for approving cybersecurity risk-management measures and overseeing their implementation. Crucially, the law provides that management may be held personally liable for failures to comply with governance duties. Boards must therefore:
Breach reporting Austria obligations now operate on two parallel tracks. The NISG 2026 introduces a multi-stage incident-reporting regime for significant security incidents, while the GDPR’s 72-hour personal-data-breach notification obligation under Article 33 remains fully in force. Understanding the interaction between these two regimes is essential for NIS2 compliance Austria 2026.
The NISG 2026, reflecting NIS2 Article 23, establishes a tiered reporting process for “significant incidents”, those causing or capable of causing substantial operational disruption or financial loss:
| Entity Type | NISG (NIS2) Reporting Obligations | GDPR Reporting Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Telecom operator | Report significant incidents to NIS Anlaufstelle: early warning within 24 hours, full notification within 72 hours, final report within one month. Register as operator; provide technical incident details and mitigation steps. | If a personal data breach occurs: notify the Austrian DPA (Datenschutzbehörde, dsb.gv.at) within 72 hours where risk to data-subject rights/freedoms exists. Inform affected data subjects without undue delay where high risk. |
| Financial service / payment systems | Same multi-stage reporting to NIS Anlaufstelle. Higher supervisory scrutiny; coordinate with FMA and, where DORA applies, meet concurrent financial-sector reporting requirements. | Same GDPR notification duties. DPIAs likely required for high-risk processing. Coordinate with DPA and financial regulators under sector-specific rules. |
| Gambling operator | Report incidents affecting availability or integrity of services to NIS Anlaufstelle within same timelines. May also need to notify gambling licensing authority. | Same GDPR duties for personal data breaches. Ensure AML/identity-verification data is handled in accordance with GDPR and that breach notifications account for special-category data risks. |
The intersection of GDPR and NIS2 creates overlapping duties that, if not carefully coordinated, can generate compliance gaps. The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) has initiated consultations on guidance addressing the interplay between NIS2-mandated security measures and data-protection obligations, industry observers expect formal guidance to solidify during 2026.
The NISG 2026 does not create a separate “NIS officer” role, but the DPO obligations NIS2 framework creates are substantial. Where NIS2-mandated security measures involve monitoring network traffic, logging user activity or deploying intrusion-detection systems, these processing activities may constitute the processing of personal data. The DPO must:
Any security measure that introduces systematic monitoring of employees, customers or network users is likely to trigger a Data Protection Impact Assessment under GDPR Article 35. The Austrian DPA’s published list of processing operations requiring a DPIA should be checked against each new security control deployed under the NISG 2026.
Cloud providers, managed-security-service providers and other processors supporting a covered entity’s NIS2 obligations must be contractually bound under both GDPR Article 28 and the NISG 2026 supply-chain provisions. Existing Data Processing Agreements (DPAs) should be reviewed and, where necessary, supplemented with:
Telecoms data protection Austria obligations under the NISG 2026 are among the most demanding because public electronic communications network operators are captured regardless of size. Operators should prioritise:
Financial-services firms face a multi-regulator landscape. Where the Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA) applies concurrently, the NISG 2026 defers to DORA for ICT-incident reporting where DORA’s requirements are at least equivalent. In practice:
Licensed gambling operators entering NIS2 scope for the first time face a compressed implementation timeline. Gambling operator compliance requires attention to the overlap between cybersecurity, anti-money-laundering (AML) and data-protection obligations:
All covered entities must register with the Austrian NIS Anlaufstelle through the portal at nis.gv.at. Registration requires submission of the entity’s name, sector classification, contact details of the designated point of contact, IP address ranges and, where applicable, the Member States in which the entity provides services.
Essential entities (Annex I sectors, including telecoms and significant financial-service providers) are subject to proactive, ex-ante supervision, meaning the competent authority may conduct audits, on-site inspections and security scans without waiting for an incident. Important entities (Annex II sectors, including many gambling operators) are subject to reactive, ex-post supervision, typically triggered by evidence of non-compliance or a reported incident.
The NISG 2026 adopts the penalty framework from NIS2 Article 34. Early indications suggest the following maximum administrative fines:
In addition, the law provides for personal liability of management-body members who fail to fulfil their governance duties, and the competent authority may impose temporary prohibitions on the exercise of managerial functions in cases of serious non-compliance.
Every covered entity relying on external processors, cloud providers or cross-border service providers should audit and update its contractual framework. A practical contract-review checklist includes:
The following nine-step roadmap provides a practical implementation timeline for entities aiming to achieve readiness by 1 October 2026.
| Step | Action | Owner | Milestone / Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scoping assessment, confirm in-scope status under NISG 2026 annexes | Legal / Compliance | Documented scoping memo with sector/threshold analysis |
| 2 | Gap analysis against NISG 2026 technical/organisational requirements | CISO | Gap-analysis report mapped to ISO 27001 controls |
| 3 | Board briefing and approval of cybersecurity risk-management framework | CEO / Board | Board resolution; training records |
| 4 | Appoint or confirm CISO, DPO and NIS point of contact | HR / Legal | Appointment letters; organisational chart updates |
| 5 | Update or draft incident-response plan (dual-track NISG + GDPR) | CISO + DPO | Approved IRP; notification templates prepared |
| 6 | Review and update contracts with processors, cloud and supply-chain partners | Legal / Procurement | Amended DPAs and supplier contracts with NISG clauses |
| 7 | Conduct or update DPIAs for new monitoring/logging measures | DPO | Completed DPIAs filed with ROPA |
| 8 | Register with NIS Anlaufstelle via nis.gv.at | Legal / CISO | Registration confirmation from authority |
| 9 | Tabletop exercise simulating significant incident + personal-data breach | CISO + DPO + Legal | Exercise report with lessons-learned and plan updates |
Entities already certified to ISO/IEC 27001:2022 will find that many NISG 2026 controls map directly to existing Annex A controls. The likely practical effect will be a targeted uplift rather than a full re-implementation, but supply-chain, governance and reporting obligations will still require dedicated attention.
NIS2 compliance Austria 2026 represents the most significant expansion of cybersecurity regulation in Austria’s history. For telecoms operators, financial-services firms and gambling operators, the NISG 2026 creates binding obligations around governance, technical security, supply-chain management and rapid incident reporting, all of which must be coordinated with existing GDPR duties. The window between now and 1 October 2026 is narrow, and entities that delay scoping, registration and dual-track incident-planning risk substantial fines and management-level liability. Early engagement with experienced Austrian data-protection and regulatory counsel is strongly recommended to ensure a compliant and defensible implementation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact János Böszörményi at Schönherr Rechtsanwälte GmbH (‘Schoenherr’), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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