United States visa options for Austria passport holders
Tourist / short stay
Electronic travel authorisation (eTA)
Apply online for a quick travel authorisation before you go.
Visa types & longer-stay routes for United States
Most foreign nationals need a US visa; citizens of ~41 Visa Waiver Program countries (most of the EU, UK, Japan, South Korea, Australia) may enter visa-free with an approved ESTA. Long-stay and immigration routes are visa-based.
- Tourist
Visa Waiver / ESTA (tourist & business)
Up to 90 days per entry; ESTA valid ~2 years
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required by law — strongly recommended; US medical costs are very high
- Good for
- Citizens of the ~41 Visa Waiver countries, tourism or business
- Requirement
- Approved ESTA before travel; no US employment or local-market work
- Tourist
Tourist visa (B-2)
Admission usually up to 6 months per entry; visa often valid up to 10 years
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required by law — recommended given high US healthcare costs
- Good for
- Non-Visa-Waiver nationals visiting for tourism, family or medical treatment
- Requirement
- Proof of ties abroad and funds; in-person interview
- Business
Business visa (B-1)
Admission usually up to 6 months per entry; visa often valid up to 10 years
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required — recommended
- Good for
- Meetings, conferences, contract negotiation (no US employment)
- Requirement
- Legitimate business purpose, non-immigrant intent; interview
- Work
Work visa (H-1B specialty occupation)
Up to 3 years initially, extendable to 6 years total
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot government-mandated — employer/private health cover recommended
- Good for
- Professionals in a degree-level role sponsored by a US employer
- Requirement
- Employer petition + Labor Condition Application; usually subject to the annual cap/lottery
- Work
Investor / transfer / talent visas (E-2, L-1, O-1)
E-2/L-1 in 2–3 year blocks (L-1A up to 7 yrs, L-1B up to 5); O-1 up to 3 yrs then 1-yr extensions
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot government-mandated — private cover recommended
- Good for
- Treaty investors (E-2), intracompany transferees (L-1), extraordinary ability (O-1)
- Requirement
- Substantial at-risk investment (E-2), qualifying prior employment abroad (L-1), or sustained acclaim (O-1)
- Study
Student visa (F-1)
Duration of the program plus authorised practical training
- Insurance
- OptionalNot federally mandated, but most schools require students to carry health insurance
- Good for
- Full-time students at an accredited (SEVP) US school
- Requirement
- Form I-20 from an SEVP school, proof of funds, SEVIS fee
- Study
Exchange visitor visa (J-1)
Varies by program; some carry a 2-year home-residency requirement
- Insurance
- Required— J-1/J-2 must hold insurance for the whole program (min USD 100,000 medical, USD 25,000 repatriation, USD 50,000 evacuation; 22 CFR 62.14)
- Good for
- Approved exchange participants: scholars, researchers, interns, au pairs
- Requirement
- Form DS-2019 from a designated sponsor
- Residence
Green Card — employment (immigrant visa, EB-1/2/3)
Permanent residence; 10-year renewable card, path to citizenship
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required for status — private/employer cover recommended
- Good for
- Permanent immigration: priority workers, advanced-degree professionals, skilled workers
- Requirement
- Usually an employer petition (often with PERM labor certification); subject to annual/per-country caps
- Residence
Green Card — investor (immigrant visa, EB-5)
Permanent residence (conditional 2-year card, then permanent)
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required for status — private cover recommended
- Good for
- Investors creating jobs through a qualifying US enterprise
- Requirement
- Invest USD 1,050,000 (or USD 800,000 in a Targeted Employment Area) and create 10 US jobs
- Transit
Transit visa (C)
Short transit (up to ~29 days)
- Insurance
- RecommendedNot required — recommended
- Good for
- Immediate and continuous transit through the US to another country
- Requirement
- Onward ticket, funds, and permission to enter the onward country
The US has no general entry-insurance mandate, but US healthcare is extremely expensive — travel/expat medical cover is strongly recommended. Immigrant-visa wait times vary widely by category and country of birth (see the monthly Visa Bulletin). Last checked: 2026-06 — confirm with travel.state.gov / uscis.gov.
Last verified June 2026
Routes that depend on your nationality
Some of United States’s long-stay routes are open only to citizens of specific countries. Here’s where a Austria passport stands:
E-2 Treaty Investor Visa
You qualify — open to Austria passport holders
Treaty Investor visa for nationals of countries with which the US maintains a qualifying treaty of commerce/navigation or a bilateral investment treaty. Requires a substantial investment in a US enterprise the investor directs. No quota; renewable indefinitely in 2-year increments. List is the US Dept of State treaty-country table (June 2026); ~80 eligible nationalities — all well-documented entries included. 'China (Taiwan)' mapped to TW; 'Korea (South)' to KR; 'Macedonia' (North Macedonia) to MK; the legacy 'Yugoslavia' entry is covered by successor states and omitted to avoid an invalid code.
E-1 Treaty Trader Visa
You qualify — open to Austria passport holders
Treaty Trader visa for nationals of countries with a treaty of commerce/navigation permitting E-1, to carry on substantial international trade principally between the US and the treaty country. Subset of the E-visa treaty list (some treaty countries qualify only for E-2). No quota; renewable indefinitely in 2-year increments. Source: US Dept of State treaty-country table (June 2026). 'China (Taiwan)'=TW, 'Korea (South)'=KR, 'Macedonia'=MK; legacy 'Yugoslavia' entry omitted.
E-3 Specialty Occupation Visa (Australians)
Not open to Austria passport holders
Open only to Australian nationals (Australia–US Free Trade Agreement). For specialty occupations requiring a bachelor's degree or higher; needs a certified Labor Condition Application and US job offer. Annual cap of 10,500; granted in 2-year increments with unlimited renewals.
H-1B1 Specialty Occupation Visa (Chile & Singapore)
Not open to Austria passport holders
Open only to nationals of Chile and Singapore under their respective US Free Trade Agreements. Specialty-occupation professional work; requires US job offer and Labor Condition Application. Annual sub-cap of 6,800 (1,400 Chile / 5,400 Singapore) within the H-1B cap; 1-year increments, indefinitely renewable.
TN USMCA Professional Visa (Canada & Mexico)
Not open to Austria passport holders
Open only to citizens of Canada and Mexico under USMCA (formerly NAFTA). For a defined list of professional occupations with a prearranged US job. Permanent residents of CA/MX do not qualify — citizenship required. No annual cap; renewable in increments of up to 3 years.
Visa-free isn’t insurance-free
Whatever route you take into United States, your entry stamp never includes health cover. Many longer-stay visas also require proof of insurance before they’re granted. That part is on you — and it’s what we actually do.
Austria → United States: frequently asked
- Do Austria passport holders need a visa to visit United States?
- Electronic travel authorisation (eTA). Apply online for a quick travel authorisation before you go. Always confirm with the official source before booking.
- Can a Austria passport holder live or work long-term in United States?
- Yes, via a long-stay visa. United States has 10 documented visa types covering work, study, residence and — where it exists — digital-nomad routes.
- Do I need travel insurance for United States?
- Entry to United States never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several United States visas also require proof of insurance before they're granted.
Last updated
Visa rules can change at short notice and depend on your purpose of travel, length of stay and onward tickets. Always confirm with the destination’s embassy or the IATA Travel Centre before you book. Visa-free entry never includes travel health insurance. That’s still on you.