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Austria’s tenancy law framework underwent its most significant overhaul in over a decade when the 2026 Austrian tenancy reform package took effect on 1 January 2026, amending key provisions of the Mietrechtsgesetz (MRG). The reforms introduce a statutory index cap on inflation pass-through in rent adjustments, restrict rent increases to a single annual window, extend minimum fixed-term durations for residential leases and strengthen tenant protections at every stage of the tenancy lifecycle. For landlords, property managers and institutional investors, these changes demand immediate operational adjustments, from lease-template redrafting to portfolio-level indexation risk reviews. This guide delivers a structured, action-oriented walkthrough of every compliance obligation under the new rules, with worked examples, template clauses and a phased implementation checklist.
The 2026 amendments to the MRG, published in the Austrian Federal Law Gazette (Bundesgesetzblatt) and accessible via the Austrian Legal Information System (RIS), introduced four headline changes that reshape tenancy law in Austria:
What to do first: Audit every active lease against the new index-cap formula and confirm that your next scheduled rent increase falls within the statutory annual window. Any increase issued outside that window or exceeding the cap is challengeable by the tenant and may be voided by the competent court or the Schlichtungsstelle (conciliation board).
Not every lease in Austria is governed by the MRG. Understanding which regulatory tier applies to a specific tenancy is the essential first step in determining compliance obligations under the 2026 package.
The full force of the 2026 amendments applies to residential tenancies that fall under the MRG’s full-application regime (Vollanwendungsbereich). This includes most apartments in multi-unit buildings constructed before 1945 and, in practice, a large share of Vienna’s rental housing stock. Tenancies in buildings completed after 1945 but before 2002 typically fall under the MRG’s partial-application regime, where the index cap and annual-window rules still apply but category-based rent ceilings (Richtwertmietzins) may not. Buildings constructed after 2002 or single-family homes are generally governed solely by the Austrian Civil Code (Allgemeines Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, ABGB), where parties retain greater contractual freedom, though the index-cap provisions extend even here for residential lettings, as confirmed in the government’s official guidance.
Commercial leases (Geschäftsraummiete) are treated differently. Where a lease relates exclusively to commercial premises, the statutory index cap does not apply by default; instead, the parties’ contractual indexation clause governs. However, mixed-use leases, where a unit serves both residential and commercial purposes, are assessed on the basis of predominant use. Industry observers expect an increase in disputes over classification, particularly for home-office arrangements that blur the residential–commercial boundary. Landlords holding mixed portfolios should document the designated use of each unit clearly in the lease.
Under the amended MRG, any fixed-term residential lease must now run for at least three years. A lease drafted for a shorter period is not void in its entirety, rather, the fixed-term limitation is disregarded and the tenancy is treated as open-ended. This has immediate implications for landlords who previously used short fixed terms (twelve or eighteen months) as a portfolio-management tool. The three-year rule does not apply to subleases of a single room within a landlord’s own apartment, or to tenancies that fall entirely outside the MRG’s scope. Tenants may still terminate a fixed-term lease early after the first year, subject to a three-month notice period, as provided by the amended statute.
The centrepiece of the Austrian tenancy reform is the restructured rent-increase mechanism. Under the pre-2026 rules, landlords with compliant indexation clauses could adjust rent whenever the relevant index threshold was crossed, often semi-annually or even quarterly in high-inflation periods. The 2026 amendments compress this into a single annual opportunity with strict procedural requirements.
Landlords subject to the full or partial MRG regime may now implement a rent adjustment only once per calendar year. The increase takes effect on the first day of the month following the expiry of a statutory notice period. For most residential tenancies, this notice period is one full calendar month, meaning a landlord who wishes the increase to take effect on 1 April must serve written notice by 28 February at the latest. The notice must state the new monthly rent, the percentage increase, the index reference used and the calculation methodology.
The maximum permissible increase in any single annual adjustment is capped by the index-cap formula (detailed in the next section). Even where a contractual indexation clause theoretically permits a larger increase, the statutory cap overrides it. The landlord must:
Worked example: A landlord charges €900 per month. The VPI increased by 4.2 % over the twelve-month reference period. The statutory cap for the year is 3.5 %. The maximum permissible increase is €900 × 3.5 % = €31.50, bringing the new rent to €931.50, not the €937.80 that a full 4.2 % pass-through would produce.
A tenant who believes the increase exceeds the cap or was served outside the annual window may challenge it before the local Schlichtungsstelle (in municipalities where one exists, including Vienna, Graz and Linz) or before the district court (Bezirksgericht). The challenge must be filed within the statutory limitation period. If the increase is found non-compliant, it is reduced to the lawful amount retroactively.
The index cap is the single provision that has generated the most operational complexity for landlords and property managers. It establishes a legislated ceiling on how much of the annual Consumer Price Index movement a landlord may pass through to the tenant, irrespective of what the lease contract provides.
Austrian tenancy law references the Verbraucherpreisindex (VPI) published by Statistik Austria. Under the amended MRG, the relevant reference period is the twelve-month period ending two months before the intended effective date of the increase. This two-month lag allows landlords time to obtain the published index figure and prepare the notice. Landlords should note that the VPI 2020 base year applies; leases still referencing the VPI 2015 or older bases should be updated at the next contractual opportunity.
The cap operates as an override: where the VPI movement exceeds the statutory ceiling for that year, the landlord may only pass through the capped percentage. Where the VPI movement is below the cap, the landlord may pass through the actual VPI movement in full (subject to any lower contractual limit). The cap rate is set by regulation and may be adjusted annually. For 2026, the cap has been set at a level designed to moderate the impact of sustained above-average inflation on residential tenants.
The following table illustrates how the cap works across two scenarios:
| Scenario | VPI movement (12 months) | Statutory cap rate | Permissible rent increase | Monthly rent (before / after) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low inflation | 2.1 % | 3.5 % | 2.1 % (cap does not bind) | €1,200 → €1,225.20 |
| High inflation | 5.8 % | 3.5 % | 3.5 % (cap binds) | €1,200 → €1,242.00 |
Landlords are required to provide tenants with a written breakdown showing the VPI reference period, the published index value, the percentage movement and the applied cap. This breakdown must accompany the rent-increase notice. Property managers using automated billing systems should update their software to include this output as a mandatory field. Failure to provide the breakdown does not void the increase per se, but it strengthens a tenant’s position in any subsequent challenge and may result in the increase being suspended by the Schlichtungsstelle pending verification.
Meeting the new landlord obligations under Austria’s tenancy reform requires a structured, phased approach. The checklist below is designed for individual landlords, property managers and institutional portfolio teams alike.
| Checklist item | Action required | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Identify regulatory tier per lease | Cross-reference building age, unit type and use designation | 30 days |
| Review indexation clause | Confirm VPI base year; add cap-override language | 30 days |
| Check fixed-term duration | Flag any sub-three-year terms; prepare conversion notices | 30 days |
| Update notice templates | Include VPI breakdown, cap calculation and effective-date fields | 60 days |
| Train property-management staff | Briefing on annual window, cap mechanics and dispute handling | 60 days |
| Communicate with tenants | Issue information notice; update tenant handbook or portal | 90 days |
The scale and urgency of compliance actions vary significantly depending on the type of landlord. The following comparison table summarises the key obligations and practical timeframes.
| Entity type | Key reporting / procedural obligation under 2026 reforms | Practical timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Individual landlord (single property) | Update lease templates; send revised notices during annual increase window; retain CPI calculation evidence | 30–90 days |
| Professional landlord / property manager | System updates for CPI cap, batch notice process, tenant communication, compliance audit | 30 days (audit); ongoing |
| Institutional investor / fund | Portfolio review for indexation exposure; renegotiate commercial lease baskets; disclosure to investors | 90 days + board approval cycle |
While the statutory index cap does not apply by default to purely commercial leases, the 2026 reform environment has shifted market expectations. Tenants negotiating new commercial leases increasingly demand cap-style protections as a contractual term, even where the statute does not impose one.
Institutional investors and fund managers holding Austrian commercial portfolios should consider three structural responses to the new environment. First, recalibrating return models to reflect capped indexation on any residential component of mixed portfolios. Second, staggering lease renewal dates across the calendar year to avoid concentration risk on a single annual adjustment window. Third, incorporating “look-back” ratchet mechanisms that allow partial catch-up of capped amounts in subsequent years where the VPI movement falls below the cap. For foreign investors operating in Austria, it is also worth reviewing how Austria’s 2026 immigration changes and pay transparency requirements interact with employment-related property provisions in staff-housing arrangements.
The 2026 package significantly strengthens the position of tenants challenging non-compliant rent increases and facing eviction proceedings.
In municipalities with an established Schlichtungsstelle, including Vienna, Graz, Linz, Salzburg, Innsbruck and several others, tenants must first submit rent-increase disputes to the conciliation board before commencing court proceedings. The conciliation board reviews the calculation, verifies compliance with the index cap and annual-window rules and issues a binding decision that either party may appeal to the district court within four weeks. This two-tier process is designed to resolve the majority of disputes without full litigation. The government’s official tenancy guidance provides municipality-specific contact details and procedural instructions for tenants.
The 2026 amendments tighten the grounds on which a landlord may terminate a tenancy or seek eviction. Termination for own use (Eigenbedarf) now requires a more detailed justification and, in full-application MRG tenancies, a longer lead-time notice. Retaliatory termination, where a landlord seeks to end a tenancy within twelve months of a tenant filing a rent-increase challenge, is expressly prohibited. Tenants facing termination should be aware that the standard notice period under the MRG is one full calendar month for periodic tenancies, though longer periods may apply depending on the duration of the tenancy and any contractual provisions.
The following annotated clause templates are provided as starting points. They should be adapted to the specific lease, regulatory tier and commercial context of each tenancy. Legal review is recommended before adoption.
1. Indexation clause with statutory cap override:
“The monthly rent shall be adjusted annually in accordance with the movement of the Consumer Price Index (VPI 2020) published by Statistik Austria. The adjustment shall be calculated over the twelve-month reference period ending two months before the effective date of the increase. Where the VPI movement exceeds the statutory cap applicable under the Mietrechtsgesetz as amended, the adjustment shall be limited to the statutory cap rate.”
2. Annual increase notice (key fields):
“Notice of Rent Adjustment, pursuant to [MRG section]. Current monthly rent: €[X]. VPI reference period: [Month/Year] to [Month/Year]. VPI movement: [X.X]%. Applicable statutory cap: [X.X]%. Applied increase: [X.X]%. New monthly rent: €[X]. Effective date: [Date]. Calculation breakdown attached.”
3. Mutual amendment clause (for updating existing leases):
“The Parties agree to amend the Lease Agreement dated [Date] as follows: Clause [X] (Indexation) is deleted and replaced with [new indexation clause incorporating cap override]. This amendment takes effect on [Date] and applies to all subsequent rent adjustments.”
Disclaimer: These templates are illustrative and do not constitute legal advice. Landlords and tenants should obtain professional guidance before using or relying on any template clause. Statutory provisions prevail over any contractual term to the extent of any inconsistency.
The 2026 Austrian tenancy reform is not a distant legislative prospect, it is in force and actively shaping landlord–tenant relations across the country. Every landlord, property manager and institutional investor with Austrian residential exposure needs to act now. The following five priorities should guide immediate decision-making:
For landlords navigating Austria’s residence permit requirements in the context of tenant eligibility, or managing properties where family reunification arrangements affect household composition, the new tenancy rules intersect with broader regulatory compliance. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can connect property owners with Austrian real-estate practitioners who advise on tenancy law in Austria on a daily basis.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dorian Schmelz at Schmelz Rechtsanwalte / Attorneys At Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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