Certificates of Residence & Withholding Tax Relief in Austria: What the BMF Update of 19 December 2025 means for foreign entrepreneurs

Ansässigkeitsbescheinigung & Quellensteuer in Österreich BIld / Certificates of Residence & Withholding Tax Relief in Austria Image

If you run a busi­ness out­side Aus­tria but receive Aus­tri­an-sourced income, one doc­u­ment can decide whether you ben­e­fit from a dou­ble tax treaty immediately—or whether cash gets stuck in a refund process: the Cer­tifi­cate of Res­i­dence. Austria’s Min­istry of Finance (BMF) pub­lished an impor­tant update on 19 Decem­ber 2025, address­ing long-stand­ing prac­ti­cal issues with the ZS-QU1 / ZS-QU2 forms and final­ly enabling a tru­ly dig­i­tal work­flow.

Short summary

  • For­eign “Cer­tifi­cates of Res­i­dence” can be accept­ed in spe­cif­ic cases—no apos­tille, but authen­tic­i­ty must be ver­i­fi­able.
  • ZS-QU1/ZS-QU2 can be com­plet­ed and qual­i­fied e‑signed (EU/EEA) by both the recip­i­ent and the for­eign tax authority—no phys­i­cal orig­i­nals need­ed.
  • Sim­pli­fied coun­try arrange­ments remain in place (e.g., US IRS Form 6166).

1. Why Austria cares so much about residence documentation

In many cross-bor­der sit­u­a­tions, Aus­tri­an pay­ers must with­hold tax on pay­ments to for­eign recip­i­ents. Dou­ble tax treaties may reduce that burden—but only if the recipient’s treaty enti­tle­ment is prop­er­ly doc­u­ment­ed. In prac­tice, Aus­tri­an pay­ers need reli­able proof before pay­ment. If doc­u­men­ta­tion is incom­plete, they often with­hold by default or face lia­bil­i­ty.

For treaty relief at source, Aus­tria gen­er­al­ly requires the offi­cial forms:

  • ZS-QU1 for indi­vid­u­als
  • ZS-QU2 for legal enti­ties

This is exact­ly where work­ing with Heinz Kobled­er – Tax Advi­sors, your Tax Advis­er in Aus­tria, helps for­eign entre­pre­neurs build a clear, repeat­able process.

2. The BMF update 2025: three changes you can actually use

2.1 Foreign Certificates of Residence—when the foreign authority refuses Austrian forms

A com­mon real-life prob­lem: some for­eign tax author­i­ties sim­ply do not sign Aus­tri­an forms. The BMF now explic­it­ly allows an alter­na­tive if it can be cred­i­bly shown that the for­eign author­i­ty gen­er­al­ly refus­es to con­firm res­i­dence on Aus­tri­an ZS-QU forms. In that case, a for­eign Cer­tifi­cate of Res­i­dence may be attached to an oth­er­wise ful­ly com­plet­ed ZS-QU form.

Key require­ments:

  • It must cov­er at least the rel­e­vant point in time when the Aus­tri­an with­hold­ing oblig­a­tion aris­es.
  • Authen­tic­i­ty must be ver­i­fi­able (e.g., QR code or ver­i­fi­ca­tion code/check).
  • No apos­tille/over-legal­i­sa­tion required.
  • Lan­guage must be Ger­man or Eng­lish; oth­er­wise a cer­ti­fied Ger­man trans­la­tion is required.

2.2 Fully digital ZS-QU1/ZS-QU2 with qualified electronic signatures

The biggest step for­ward: ZS-QU forms can be com­plet­ed elec­tron­i­cal­ly and signed with a qual­i­fied elec­tron­ic sig­na­ture—by both the for­eign income recip­i­ent and the for­eign tax author­i­ty. Cru­cial­ly, the sig­na­tures must be issued in the EU/EEA so they can be val­i­dat­ed.

Two prac­ti­cal pit­falls to avoid:

  • Print­ing an elec­tron­i­cal­ly signed form is not enough—the sig­na­ture must remain dig­i­tal­ly ver­i­fi­able.
  • Hybrid solu­tions (one sig­na­ture dig­i­tal, the oth­er hand­writ­ten) are not accept­ed.

2.3 Special country arrangements remain available

Aus­tria con­tin­ues to recog­nise sim­pli­fied doc­u­men­ta­tion routes for cer­tain coun­tries based on mutu­al agree­ments. The BMF lists, among oth­ers, Mex­i­co, Thai­land, Turkey, the USA (IRS Form 6166), Chile, Spain, Por­tu­gal, Bel­gium and Greece.

3. Practical checklist: how foreign entrepreneurs avoid delays and unnecessary withholding

Treaty relief is not “just paperwork”—it is a cash­flow and risk man­age­ment top­ic. With the new BMF rules, for­eign entre­pre­neurs can stream­line the process—if they imple­ment it cor­rect­ly.

Checklist used by Heinz Kobleder – Tax Advisors (Tax Adviser in Austria):

  1. Iden­ti­fy the pay­ment type & treaty posi­tion: Decide whether relief at source is pos­si­ble or a refund route is more real­is­tic.
  2. Use the cor­rect form: ZS-QU1 vs. ZS-QU2; com­plete all required sec­tions. (service.bmf.gv.at)
  3. Go dig­i­tal prop­er­ly: If you use e‑signatures, use qual­i­fied e‑signatures con­sis­tent­ly (EU/EEA) for both sig­na­to­ries.
  4. If the author­i­ty won’t sign Aus­tri­an forms: Attach a for­eign Cer­tifi­cate of Res­i­dence and ensure ver­i­fi­a­bil­i­ty and trans­la­tion rules are met.
  5. Doc­u­ment reten­tion: Keep the dig­i­tal orig­i­nals and ver­i­fi­ca­tion evi­dence in a way that can be pro­duced quick­ly in an audit.
  6. Tim­ing: Aim to have doc­u­men­ta­tion ready before pay­ments are made to avoid unnec­es­sary with­hold­ing.

4. How Heinz Kobleder – Tax Advisors supports you as a Tax Adviser in Austria

The 2025 BMF update cre­ates new flexibility—but it also intro­duces tech­ni­cal require­ments (ver­i­fi­ca­tion, qual­i­fied sig­na­tures, con­sis­tent exe­cu­tion). Heinz Kobled­er – Tax Advi­sors acts as your Tax Advis­er in Aus­tria by help­ing you:

  • assess treaty enti­tle­ment and struc­ture Aus­tri­an pay­ment flows effi­cient­ly
  • set up com­pli­ant ZS-QU process­es (includ­ing dig­i­tal sig­na­ture work­flows)
  • coor­di­nate doc­u­men­ta­tion with Aus­tri­an pay­ers and for­eign tax author­i­ties
  • pre­pare refund strate­gies when relief at source is not fea­si­ble

If you plan to do busi­ness in Austria—or already receive Aus­tri­an-sourced income—getting the res­i­dence doc­u­men­ta­tion right is one of the sim­plest ways to reduce fric­tion, pro­tect cash­flow and keep Aus­tri­an with­hold­ing tax expo­sure under con­trol. With Heinz Kobled­er – Tax Advi­sors, you have a Tax Advis­er in Aus­tria who focus­es on mak­ing the rules work in prac­tice.

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