Nomadsurance
Change passport or destination

Austria visa options for Italy passport holders

Tourist / short stay

Visa-free

Enter without a visa, usually for a set number of days.

Visa types & longer-stay routes for Austria

Freedom of movement

No visa or residence permit needed

As a Italy (EU/EEA/Swiss) citizen you have full free-movement rights in Austria: you can live, work, study and retire there indefinitely — no visa, no residence permit. You only register with the local authorities after about three months. The visa routes below are for non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals; you don’t need them.

For reference, the routes Austria offers non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals:

  • Most nomadsTourist

    Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C)

    Up to 90 days within any 180-day period across the Schengen area

    Insurance
    Requiredtravel health insurance with minimum EUR 30,000 coverage including emergency medical treatment and repatriation, valid across the entire Schengen area and for the full duration of the stay; the certificate is a mandatory part of the application.
    Good for
    Tourists, business visitors and people visiting family/friends from visa-required third countries; visa-exempt nationals (e.g. US, UK, Canada, Australia) may enter without it but follow the same 90-day limit.
    Requirement
    Valid passport (issued within last 10 years, valid 3+ months beyond intended departure), proof of sufficient funds, evidence of ties to home country and intent to leave; no employment permitted.
  • Work

    National Long-Stay Visa (Type D), incl. Jobseeker Visa

    91 days to 6 months (exceptionally up to 12 months, e.g. under an international agreement); jobseeker variant is 6 months and cannot be extended in Austria

    Insurance
    Requiredhealth insurance valid in Austria covering the period of stay; the exact policy depends on the specific D-visa purpose.
    Good for
    Third-country nationals needing to stay 91 days to ~6 months - e.g. to collect a residence permit, for short employment, or highly qualified people searching for a job (the 6-month 'jobseeker' D visa toward a Red-White-Red Card).
    Requirement
    Documented purpose of stay, sufficient financial means and valid travel document; the jobseeker variant requires at least 70 points under the Very Highly Qualified points system, and taking up employment is not permitted until a Red-White-Red Card is granted.
  • Most nomadsWork

    Red-White-Red Card (skilled / key worker)

    Generally issued for 24 months, employer-tied; renewable and a path toward settlement

    Insurance
    Requiredevidence of health insurance covering all risks (statutory/compulsory insurance or an equivalent policy), payable in Austria per the NAG; Austrian statutory insurance typically applies once employed.
    Good for
    Qualified third-country workers with a concrete Austrian job offer - very highly qualified persons, skilled workers in shortage occupations, other key workers, graduates, start-up founders, etc., assessed via a points system.
    Requirement
    Binding job offer matching qualifications and meeting the minimum salary (approx. EUR 3,465/month gross for Other Key Workers in 2026) and the required points; an AMS labour-market test applies (no equally qualified jobseeker registered with the Public Employment Service) outside certain shortage categories.
  • Most nomadsWork

    EU Blue Card

    Issued for 24 months, tied to the qualifying employment; renewable

    Insurance
    Requiredevidence of health insurance covering all risks (compulsory insurance or an equivalent policy) valid in Austria; statutory insurance applies via the employment.
    Good for
    Highly qualified third-country nationals with a university degree (min. 3 years) or, for IT/management roles, 3+ years' comparable experience, holding a high-salary job offer in Austria.
    Requirement
    Binding job offer of at least 6 months matching the qualification, meeting the Blue Card salary threshold of at least EUR 55,678 gross/year (annual salary plus special payments) effective 1 Jan 2026, plus an AMS labour-market test.
  • Work

    Residence Permit - Self-Employed Key Worker / Freelancer

    Temporary residence permit, commonly issued for 12 months and renewable

    Insurance
    Requiredproof of health insurance covering all risks valid and payable in Austria, per the NAG.
    Good for
    Third-country nationals running an Austrian business or freelancing (Freiberufler) whose activity brings macroeconomic benefit - the closest legal route for remote workers/entrepreneurs, as Austria has no dedicated digital nomad visa.
    Requirement
    Evidence the self-employment delivers macroeconomic benefit (e.g. investment, job creation or technology transfer) and sufficient means to support yourself (2026 standard rate approx. EUR 1,308.39/month single); assessed case-by-case.
  • Study

    Residence Permit - Student

    Typically 12 months, renewable annually for the duration of the studies

    Insurance
    Requiredhealth insurance covering all risks; students can meet this via OeGK student self-insurance (approx. EUR 78.84/month in 2026) after enrolling, with travel health insurance (EUR 30,000+) needed for entry beforehand.
    Good for
    Third-country nationals admitted to an Austrian university, university of applied sciences or recognised study/preparatory programme.
    Requirement
    Proof of admission/enrolment, accommodation, and sufficient funds (2026: approx. EUR 722.58/month if under 24, approx. EUR 1,308.39/month if 24+, with extra required if rent exceeds approx. EUR 386.43/month); academic progress required for renewal.
  • Residence

    Settlement Permit / Long-Term Residence (incl. family reunification)

    Initial permits usually 12 months; leads to long-term residence (Daueraufenthalt - EU) after ~5 years of continuous lawful settlement plus completion of Integration Agreement Module 2 (B1)

    Insurance
    Requiredproof of comprehensive health insurance covering all risks for the applicant (and joining family members), maintained at issuance and renewal, per the NAG.
    Good for
    Third-country nationals settling in Austria long-term - family members of residents/citizens, researchers, artists, and those moving toward EU long-term resident status; family reunification is subject to annual quotas.
    Requirement
    Adequate and stable income (2026 standard rate approx. EUR 1,308.39/month single, EUR 2,064.12 couple, plus EUR 201.88 per child, after fixed costs exceeding approx. EUR 386.43), suitable accommodation, integration/German-language requirements, and (for family reunification) a qualifying sponsor; many categories are quota-limited.
  • Transit

    Airport Transit Visa (Type A)

    Transit only - holder stays in the international transit area and does not enter Austria/Schengen

    Insurance
    OptionalNot required by the rules for the transit zone itself; note that any connecting Schengen entry would instead trigger Type C insurance rules.
    Good for
    Nationals of a specific list of countries (e.g. Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, Sri Lanka and others) transiting through the international zone of an Austrian airport.
    Requirement
    Valid passport plus onward travel documentation; required only for the listed nationalities, others transit visa-free.

Visa rules change frequently; always confirm current requirements with the Austrian embassy/consulate or migration.gv.at before relying on this. Last checked: 2026-06.

Last verified June 2026

Visa-free isn’t insurance-free

Whatever route you take into Austria, 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.

ItalyAustria: frequently asked

Do Italy passport holders need a visa to visit Austria?
No. As a Italy (EU/EEA/Swiss) citizen you have freedom of movement in Austria and need no visa for any length of stay.
Can a Italy passport holder live or work long-term in Austria?
Yes — under EU/EEA/Swiss free movement you can live, work and study in Austria indefinitely with no visa or residence permit.
Do I need travel insurance for Austria?
Entry to Austria never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several Austria 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.