Employing Staff in Austria – without a Permanent Establishment and for Temporary Projects (Installations, Assembly & On-site Work)

Summary
Foreign companies can legally employ staff in Austria even if they do not (yet) have an Austrian permanent establishment or local entity. The key is choosing the right route based on nationality (EU/EEA/Swiss vs. third-country nationals), the correct residence/work entitlement, and strict compliance with AMS procedures, posting rules, and notifications. This guide explains the most common business scenarios—local staff hired by a foreign employer, temporary project assignments (installations/assembly), intra-group transfers—and highlights the practical steps that prevent delays, penalties, and unexpected tax exposure. For end-to-end support, “Heinz Kobleder — Tax Advisors” is your Tax Adviser in Austria.
1. The core rule: work permission depends on residence status — and vice versa
In Austria, employees generally need a right to stay and a right to access the labour market. Some residence titles provide free labour market access, others are employer-tied combined permits, and some require an additional AMS approval. A practical control step: for third-country nationals, the card’s notes (often on the back) typically indicate the labour market entitlement.
2. Scenario A: Hiring employees who work in Austria – while your company has no Austrian PE / local entity
Many international businesses place sales, service or project staff in Austria before setting up an Austrian branch. From an immigration and compliance perspective, three questions matter most:
2.1 EU/EEA/Swiss citizens: usually straightforward
EU/EEA nationals and Swiss citizens generally benefit from freedom of movement and can be employed in Austria without a specific work permit. Your main focus shifts to payroll setup, social security position, and Austrian labour law minimum standards.
2.2 Third-country nationals: choose the correct permit pathway
For third-country nationals, common solutions include:
- Red-White-Red Card (RWR) and the EU Blue Card (combined residence and work authorisation tied to a specific employer),
- subsequent access to broader work rights via RWR Card plus once certain employment periods are met,
- or, depending on the person’s existing status in Austria, an employment permit (Beschäftigungsbewilligung) issued via the AMS as an additional layer.
From a planning standpoint, note that employment permits are commonly time-limited, require timely renewals, and are granted only if statutory criteria are met (including compliance with Austrian pay and working conditions and, in many cases, a labour market check).
2.3 Tax reality: “no permanent establishment” does not automatically mean “no obligations”
Even without an Austrian PE, employing staff who physically work in Austria often triggers practical obligations, such as:
- payroll withholding and reporting,
- social security clarification (posting vs. local Austrian coverage),
- compliance with Austrian minimum employment standards (e.g., minimum pay under collective agreements).
This is exactly where a Tax Adviser in Austria adds value. “Heinz Kobleder — Tax Advisors” helps you structure your Austrian staffing model in a way that is operationally workable while managing PE risk and ensuring payroll is audit-ready.
3. Scenario B: Temporary projects in Austria (assembly, installations, commissioning, on-site service)
Temporary assignments require a precise classification: Is it a posting/secondment or labour leasing? The compliance route, notifications and risk level differ significantly.
3.1 Posting from a non-EU country (employer outside the EU)
If your company is based outside the EU and sends employees to Austria to fulfil a contract, the AMS framework typically involves:
- a posting authorisation for shorter periods (commonly limited in duration),
- a shift to an employment permit if the assignment exceeds certain time limits,
- stricter rules for construction and related sectors, where an employment permit may be required even for shorter assignments,
- and, in many cases, a security certificate needed before the employee can obtain the appropriate visa (C/D).
Project managers’ takeaway: Start the immigration and AMS timeline early. Installation projects often fail on lead times—not on technical capability.
3.2 Posting within the EU/EEA/Switzerland: ZKO notification and AMS confirmation for third-country staff
If an EU/EEA/Swiss company posts workers to Austria, a ZKO notification (anti-illegal-employment control unit) is typically required before work starts. If posted workers are third-country nationals, an additional AMS EU posting confirmation may be needed. Typical conditions include:
- a genuine posting scenario (real business activity in the sending state; temporary assignment),
- lawful employment in the sending state beyond the posting period,
- compliance with Austrian pay, working time and social security requirements.
4. Cross-border labour leasing: highest risk – verify early
Austria assesses labour leasing by its economic reality, not the contract label. If workers are integrated into the Austrian client’s organisation and follow its instructions, it may be treated as labour leasing—with stricter requirements, more approvals, and greater sanction exposure.
This is a common pitfall in practice: teams are contracted as “work contractors” but managed like leased employees. A pre-check can prevent site stoppages and compliance disputes.
5. Intra-group solution: Intra-Corporate Transfer (ICT)
For multinational groups, ICT permits can be an efficient route for temporarily relocating executives, specialists or trainees into an Austrian group company. Typical requirements include prior minimum employment periods within the group, proof of genuine business activity, and compliance with Austrian pay and working conditions.
6. Notifications and penalties: small oversights can escalate quickly
Employers generally must notify the AMS of the start and end of an employment relationship within short statutory deadlines (with limited exceptions). Breaches can lead to fines. Most importantly, employing a person without the required labour market access—without the correct permit or confirmation—can trigger very significant penalties.
7. Practical checklist for foreign companies (10 steps)
- Confirm nationality/status (EU/EEA/Swiss vs. third-country).
- Define the model: local hire, posting, or labour leasing?
- Confirm duration and sector (construction? installation? service?).
- Select the correct permit route (RWR/Blue Card/AMS permit/confirmation).
- Build a realistic timeline and assign responsibilities.
- Ensure Austrian pay and working conditions (minimum pay, working hours).
- Clarify social security coverage (posting vs. Austrian system).
- File ZKO/AMS notifications on time.
- Structure payroll and tax (incl. PE risk).
- Keep documentation ready for audits and site controls.
Next step
If you want to employ staff in Austria or run temporary projects safely and efficiently, we can support you end-to-end. “Heinz Kobleder — Tax Advisors” is your Tax Adviser in Austria—specialised in helping foreign entrepreneurs navigate Austrian payroll, compliance, and tax risk in a pragmatic way.


