Last updated: 27 April 2026
The reintroduction of an inheritance tax in Austria has moved from political wish-list to active parliamentary debate in 2026, creating immediate uncertainty for heirs, executors, trustees and family-business owners on both sides of the Austrian–German border. Austria abolished its inheritance and gift tax (Erbschafts- und Schenkungssteuer) in 2008 after the Constitutional Court found the existing valuation rules unconstitutional, and for almost two decades the country has remained one of the few EU member states without such a levy. Now, several political parties, backed by prominent MEPs and supported by OECD data on wealth concentration, are pressing concrete proposals that could see rates of up to 25–30 per cent applied to larger estates.
This guide explains the current status of the inheritance tax proposals in Austria, maps the cross-border traps for estates with connections to Germany, walks through worked calculation examples, and provides an immediate action checklist so that affected individuals and businesses can prepare rather than react.
What this guide covers:
Austria does not currently levy an inheritance or gift tax. The Austrian Federal Ministry of Finance (BMF) confirmed this baseline in its official Steuerbuch 2026. However, the political landscape has shifted markedly since the formation of the 2025–2029 coalition government, whose programme, analysed in detail by Deloitte Austria, left the door open for wealth-related taxation measures during this legislative period. Several developments have since accelerated the debate around whether Austria will reintroduce an inheritance tax in 2026 or shortly thereafter.
The Greens and the SPÖ have been the most vocal proponents, with an Austrian Green MEP making international headlines in February 2026 by calling for inheritance levies on estates above €1 million as part of a broader “tax the rich” platform, as reported by Euronews. The ÖVP remains cautious, publicly opposing blanket inheritance taxes but leaving room for “targeted measures” on very large estates. The BMF has not released a draft bill but has commissioned internal feasibility studies, according to practitioner analysis published by CMS. Meanwhile, the FPÖ opposes any new wealth-based tax. The result is a fluid negotiation that industry observers expect will produce either a formal government bill or a cross-party private member’s bill before year-end.
| Date / Event | Description | Action for Heirs / Executors |
|---|---|---|
| Dec 2025 | First practitioner analyses published (Harlander & Partner briefing) flagging concrete policy signals | Begin reviewing estate plans and cross-border exposure |
| Feb 2026 | Green MEP publicly proposes 25% rate up to €5m, 30% above €5m (Euronews report) | Quantify potential tax liability under reported proposal ranges |
| Q2 2026 (current) | BMF feasibility studies underway; cross-party committee discussions expected | Obtain professional asset valuations; update wills |
| Q3–Q4 2026 (projected) | Formal government bill or private member’s bill likely introduced in Nationalrat | Engage cross-border tax counsel; finalise liquidity planning |
| 2027 (earliest projected) | Committee debate, Nationalrat vote, Bundesrat review, presidential signature | Implement restructuring, staged transfers and insurance strategies before effective date |
Industry observers expect that even an optimistic legislative timetable would mean the earliest effective date for a new Austria inheritance tax 2026 bill would be 1 January 2027, though retroactive application to transfers made after a bill’s introduction date cannot be ruled out. This makes immediate planning essential.
No rates have been enacted into law. All figures below are drawn from reported proposals circulating in media and practitioner commentary and should be treated as indicative, not definitive. The most widely reported proposal, cited by Euronews in February 2026, suggests a two-tier structure:
Other proposals reported by Austrian practitioners would set lower entry-level rates (as low as 5–10%) for estates below €1 million, with progressive brackets above that level. Until a bill is published, heirs and executors should model exposure under multiple scenarios.
| Scenario | Taxable Estate Value | Tax Under 25%/30% Reported Proposal |
|---|---|---|
| A, Small family home (Vienna apartment, savings) | €650,000 | €162,500 (25% flat on full amount) |
| B, Mid-value family business (GmbH shares, real estate, accounts) | €3,200,000 | €800,000 (25% on €3.2m) |
| C, High-net-worth mixed portfolio (business, securities, foreign real estate) | €8,000,000 | €1,250,000 on first €5m (25%) + €900,000 on remaining €3m (30%) = €2,150,000 |
Important: These examples assume no exemptions, reliefs or deductions, which any final law would almost certainly include. If a primary-residence exemption or spousal relief applies (as in Germany), actual liabilities could be significantly lower. These figures are intended to illustrate maximum exposure and motivate early planning. The practical effect of any Austrian inheritance tax will depend entirely on the exemption structure Parliament adopts.
Austrian succession law distinguishes between testamentary heirs (named in a will), statutory heirs (under the Allgemeines Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, ABGB) and Pflichtteil claimants (entitled to a compulsory share regardless of the will). If an inheritance tax is reintroduced, each category faces different exposure. Practitioner analyses published by CMS and Harlander & Partner suggest that any politically viable bill will include category-based exemptions, but the detail will matter enormously for estate planning in Austria in 2026 and beyond.
In neighbouring Germany, surviving spouses enjoy a personal exemption of €500,000 and children receive €400,000 each under the Erbschaftsteuergesetz (ErbStG). Industry observers expect Austria to adopt a broadly similar approach, given political sensitivity around taxing family homes. A spousal and child exemption in the range of €300,000–€500,000 per beneficiary has been discussed in practitioner circles. Primary-residence relief, exempting the family home entirely where the surviving spouse or child continues to live there, is considered likely, mirroring provisions already common across the EU. However, until a formal bill is published, these expectations are speculative and should not be relied upon for firm planning.
Austria’s Pflichtteil entitles children, and in some cases the surviving spouse, to one-half of their statutory intestate share, payable in cash. The interaction between Pflichtteil claims and a future inheritance tax raises several practical questions. If the Pflichtteil is deductible from the taxable estate (reducing the testamentary heir’s base), the tax burden shifts towards the Pflichtteil recipient. If it is not deductible, the testamentary heir faces tax on an estate already diminished by the compulsory payout. Valuation timing also matters: the estate’s value may be fixed at the date of death, but a Pflichtteil claim might not be quantified and paid until months later.
Early indications suggest that lawmakers will address this interaction explicitly, but contested Pflichtteil scenarios, especially where litigation delays settlement, will require careful professional management to avoid over-taxation or double-counting.
Any inheritance tax regime must guard against avoidance through lifetime gifts. Austria’s former system included a gift tax (Schenkungssteuer) that was abolished alongside the inheritance tax in 2008. Practitioner commentary from CMS notes that a reintroduced inheritance tax would almost certainly be accompanied by either a standalone gift tax or a “clawback” provision deeming gifts made within a specified look-back period (commonly five to ten years) as part of the taxable estate. This makes accelerated gifting before legislation passes a double-edged strategy: if the look-back window is long enough, pre-emptive transfers could still be caught.
| Heir / Entity Type | Potential Exemption or Relief | Practical Planning Note |
|---|---|---|
| Surviving spouse | Personal exemption (est. €300k–€500k); primary-residence relief | Ensure family home is registered in spouse’s name or joint ownership; review will |
| Children (direct descendants) | Personal exemption per child (est. €200k–€400k) | Model exposure net of exemption; consider staged lifetime gifts within safe period |
| Parents / grandparents | Lower exemption expected; possibly taxed at higher rate | Document reverse-inheritance scenarios carefully |
| Unrelated beneficiaries | Minimal or no exemption expected | Highest exposure category; consider testamentary trusts or insurance pay-outs |
| Family business (GmbH / KG shares) | Business succession relief likely but conditional (continued operation, employment) | Prepare valuation reports now; explore holdco structures and shareholder agreements |
| Pflichtteil claimant | May bear own tax on compulsory share; deductibility for estate uncertain | Negotiate Pflichtteil settlements with tax allocation clauses |
For the substantial number of estates that span both Austria and Germany, whether because heirs reside in different countries, assets include real estate on both sides of the border, or a decedent held dual residency, the reintroduction of an inheritance tax in Austria creates a serious double-taxation risk. Germany already levies inheritance tax at progressive rates from 7% to 50%, depending on the heir’s relationship and estate value. Austria and Germany do not have a bilateral double-taxation agreement (DTA) specifically covering inheritance and gift taxes, which means relief depends on domestic unilateral credit mechanisms.
Under Germany’s Erbschaftsteuergesetz, the general principle is worldwide taxation for German-resident heirs, with a situs rule for real property. If Austria reintroduces an inheritance tax, Austrian real property will be taxable in Austria regardless of the heir’s residence, and German-resident heirs will also owe German tax on the same asset (subject to credit). Movable assets and financial accounts are typically taxed by the state of the heir’s residence. Company shares follow the situs of the business (for operating entities) or the heir’s residence (for holding structures). Without a bilateral DTA, cross-border inheritance between Austria and Germany could see both jurisdictions asserting taxing rights over the same asset, with only partial or uncertain credit relief available.
| Feature | Austria (Proposed) | Germany (Current) | Action for Heir / Executor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Status | Under parliamentary debate; no enacted law yet | Fully operational (ErbStG) | Monitor Austrian legislative calendar weekly |
| Reported top rate | 25–30% (reported proposal) | Up to 50% (Tax Class III, large estates) | Model combined exposure under worst-case rates |
| Spousal exemption | Expected but unconfirmed (est. €300k–€500k) | €500,000 | Do not assume Austrian relief mirrors Germany; plan for zero until confirmed |
| Child exemption | Expected (est. €200k–€400k) | €400,000 per child | Same caution as above |
| Bilateral DTA for inheritance | No bilateral inheritance-tax DTA exists between Austria and Germany | Rely on unilateral credit; document foreign tax paid meticulously | |
| Real property rule | Likely situs-based (taxed in Austria) | Situs-based + worldwide for residents | Dual-jurisdiction filing probable for Austrian real estate inherited by German residents |
Family-owned enterprises account for a significant share of Austria’s economy, and the estate planning implications of a reintroduced inheritance tax are particularly acute for these businesses. Unlike liquid assets, a GmbH or KG interest cannot be easily divided or sold to meet a tax liability without potentially destroying the business itself. Valuation is the critical first step: most inheritance-tax regimes use fair-market-value or capitalised-earnings methods, both of which can yield substantially different results for the same business. Heirs and current owners should commission professional valuations now to establish a defensible baseline.
Depending on the structure ultimately adopted, the reintroduction of an inheritance tax in Austria may require new reporting obligations for both the estate and the receiving entity. The table below summarises projected obligations based on comparable regimes and practitioner expectations.
| Entity Type | Projected Reporting Timeline | Key Documents Required |
|---|---|---|
| Sole proprietorship / individual assets | Within 3 months of death (by analogy to German practice) | Death certificate, will, asset schedule, valuations |
| GmbH (private limited company) | Notification upon share transfer; annual return may need to disclose change of ownership | Share-transfer deed, company valuation, shareholder register extract |
| KG (limited partnership) | Similar to GmbH; partnership agreement may trigger additional disclosure | Partnership agreement, capital-account statement, enterprise valuation |
| Cross-border holding structure | Dual filing likely (Austria + heir’s residence state) | All of the above plus foreign-tax-credit documentation, transfer-pricing records if applicable |
Waiting for a final bill is a common mistake. The most effective estate planning Austria 2026 strategies are those implemented while proposals are still in flux, because structural changes, holding-company formation, insurance policies, staged gifts, take months to execute properly. Below are two focused checklists designed for the next 30 and 90 days respectively.
Effective preparation requires more than checklists. The following resources, available as part of Global Law Experts’ Austria inheritance planning toolkit, are designed to support heirs, executors and family businesses navigating the reintroduction of an inheritance tax in Austria:
For tailored advice based on your specific estate structure, cross-border connections and business interests, contact an Austria inheritance law specialist through our lawyer directory.
The political momentum behind the reintroduction of an inheritance tax in Austria in 2026 is the strongest it has been since the levy’s abolition in 2008. While no bill has yet been enacted, the proposals reported by media and analysed by leading practitioner firms are sufficiently concrete to warrant immediate preparation. Heirs, executors and family-business owners, particularly those with cross-border inheritance exposure between Austria and Germany, face a narrow window in which to audit assets, commission valuations, restructure holdings and establish liquidity reserves before any effective date is fixed. Waiting for certainty is itself a risk, because many of the most effective planning measures, insurance procurement, staged transfers, holding-company formation, require months of lead time.
The practical checklists, worked examples and comparison tables in this guide are designed to convert uncertainty into a structured action plan. For estates of any complexity, engaging qualified cross-border counsel now is the single most impactful step available.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Senad Albani M.A. at Rechtsanwaltskanzlei Albani GmbH, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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