GlobalTaxBook

Austria tax rates

Europe · headline statutory rates, 2025 · High tax

In Austria, the top statutory personal income tax rate is 55% (ranked #2 of 96 countries), the headline corporate income tax rate is 23%, and the standard VAT/GST rate is 20%. Capital gains for individuals are treated as: 27.5%. Overall it reads as a high tax jurisdiction on headline rates — high headline rates across income, corporate and VAT. These are statutory top rates, not the effective tax most people pay, and not tax advice — verify with Austria's official tax authority.

Source: PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries. Data as of June 2026.

Austria tax rates at a glance

TaxAustria
Top personal income tax rate55%
Corporate income tax rate23%
Standard VAT / GST20%
Capital gains (individuals)27.5%
Employee social securityEmployee ~18% (capped)

Source: PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries. Data as of June 2026.

Headline statutory rates (2025), compiled from PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries and cross-checked against OECD / Tax Foundation data. Rates change — confirm with the official tax authority before relying on them. This is not tax advice.

What these Austria rates mean

The figures above are headline statutory rates: the top marginal personal income tax rate, the standard (not reduced) VAT/GST rate, and the main corporate rate. The top 55% income tax rate only bites on income above the highest bracket — the effective rate an average earner pays is lower. Consumption is taxed through VAT/GST at 20%, usually with reduced rates on essentials. Always layer in social security (Employee ~18% (capped)) and any local taxes for a full picture.

How Austria ranks

Ranking among the 96 countries in GlobalTaxBook, highest headline rate = #1. Statutory rates only.
MeasureAustriaRank (1 = highest)
Top personal income tax55%#2 of 96
Corporate income tax23%#39 of 96
Standard VAT/GST20%#27 of 87

Countries with a similar tax level to Austria

The five countries closest to Austria on overall headline tax level:

Austria and its nearest peers by headline tax burden. Source: PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries, 2025.
CountryTop income taxCorporate taxVAT/GST
Austria (this country)55%23%20%
Sweden52%20.6%25%
Finland52%20%25.5%
Netherlands49.5%25.8%21%
Belgium50%25%21%
Slovenia50%22%22%

Frequently asked questions

What is the income tax rate in Austria?

The top statutory personal income tax rate in Austria is 55%. This is the highest marginal rate, which only applies above the top income threshold — most taxpayers pay less. It ranks #2 of 96 countries in our dataset by top rate. Headline rate as of 2025; verify with the official tax authority.

What is the corporate tax rate in Austria?

Austria's headline corporate income tax rate is 23%, ranking #39 of 96 by headline corporate rate. Effective rates can differ with incentives, surcharges and local taxes. Verify with the official authority.

Does Austria have VAT or sales tax?

Yes — the standard VAT/GST rate in Austria is 20%. Reduced rates often apply to food, medicine and other essentials.

Is Austria a high-tax or low-tax country?

On headline statutory rates, Austria looks like a high tax jurisdiction — high headline rates across income, corporate and VAT. This is a rough signal from top rates only, not the effective tax an average person or company pays. Tax residency, deductions and treaties change the real picture. Not tax advice.

Keep exploring

Sources & accuracy

Headline rates for Austria from PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries, cross-checked with the OECD and Tax Foundation. Data as of June 2026; reflects roughly the 2025 tax year. These are statutory headline rates, not effective rates, and this page is general information, not tax advice — verify with Austria's official tax authority and a qualified adviser before acting. See our methodology and disclaimer.

Last updated: 2026-06-20