Working in Austria without permits: why this quickly becomes expensive for foreign contractors and principals

Austria is not a “start first, fix later” jurisdiction—especially on construction sites and cross-border service projects. Recent reporting on a major data-center project in Upper Austria illustrates how fast issues surface during audits: authorities identified multiple breaches involving social security rules, a trade-law violation, and several infringements under Austria’s anti wage-and social-dumping framework (LSD-BG), with substantial fines expected.
Even more critical are cases where foreign subcontractors deploy third-country nationals without the required labour-market permissions. In a separate reported audit, arrests were made and penalty proceedings were initiated not only against the foreign posting business, but also against the Austrian principal under the Foreign Employment Act (AuslBG).
For international entrepreneurs, the message is clear: non-compliance is rarely “just paperwork” in Austria. It can stop a project, block payments, and trigger fines per worker. As Heinz Kobleder – Tax Advisors (your Tax Adviser in Austria), we often see problems arise from avoidable gaps: incorrect posting notifications, missing on-site documents, trade-licence issues, or late social-security registration.
1. The three permit “hot spots” foreign companies must get right
1.1 Posting and labour leasing: ZKO notification, A1, and documents available in Austria
For companies established in the EU/EEA/Switzerland, Austria’s posting regime typically requires:
- ZKO notification (ZKO3/ZKO4) in time
- A1/PD A1 social-security proof (where applicable)
- Availability of wage and posting documents at the place of work—or via an Austrian representative (including a tax adviser)
Austria’s official ZKO framework explicitly allows storing required documents at the worksite or with a professional representative in Austria (such as a tax adviser).
Common pitfall: the notification is filed late, documents are not accessible during inspection, or the engagement is misclassified (service contract vs. labour leasing).
1.2 Third-country nationals: AMS permits can become the principal’s problem
When third-country nationals are involved, risks rise sharply. In certain scenarios (especially when the employer is established outside Austria), Austria requires permits via the Labour Market Service (AMS), such as a posting permit for short assignments.
Common pitfall: principals rely on subcontractor assurances (“all permits are handled”) and discover—during an audit—that the principal is exposed too.
1.3 Trade law: do you have the right Austrian trade authorisation?
Many activities (particularly in construction and related trades) are regulated under Austria’s Trade Act (GewO). Performing a trade without the necessary authorisation is an administrative offence and can trigger fines (commonly up to EUR 3,600 for core offences).
Common pitfall: “We’re licensed at home, so Austria is fine.” Austria’s trade system is independent and highly structured.
2. What can actually happen: fines, payment freezes, and project disruption
Foreign Employment Act (AuslBG): fines “per worker”
Illegal employment (or using labour without the necessary AMS permits) can lead to fines that are calculated per unpermitted worker—for example EUR 1,000 to 10,000 per worker, higher for repeat offences and higher headcounts.
LSD-BG: notification/document duties, obstruction, and underpayment
- Breaches of notification and document-availability duties can be punished with fines up to EUR 20,000.
- Obstructing an inspection can mean up to EUR 40,000.
- Underpayment can reach very significant maximums depending on scale and intent—up to EUR 400,000 in certain constellations.
Social security: registration before work starts
Austria generally requires employees to be registered before the first day of work (where Austrian social insurance applies). Missing registration discovered in an inspection can trigger mandatory reporting and fines per unregistered person (e.g., EUR 730–2,180, higher for repeat offences).
The “hidden cost”: payment stop
Austria’s framework also allows a payment stop in certain LSD-BG scenarios—meaning the principal may be prohibited from paying outstanding amounts to the contractor for the time being. This can immediately disrupt cash flow and schedules.
3. Why principals are not “neutral” in Austria: control duties and liability
Control and notification duty under § 26(6) AuslBG
If you pass on work to another company, you must request proof of required foreign-employment permissions before work starts, within a short deadline, and notify the ZKO if proof is not provided.
Construction-sector principal liability for social security
In construction, principals can be liable for the contractor’s Austrian social-security contributions—typically up to 20% of the paid contract price (higher for labour leasing).
Practical takeaway: If you are a foreign investor or international general contractor, Austria requires a compliance setup—otherwise a subcontractor’s mistake becomes your financial and operational risk.
4. A practical checklist for doing business safely in Austria
For foreign contractors:
- Classify the engagement correctly (service vs. labour leasing)
- File ZKO notifications (ZKO3/ZKO4) in time and appoint an Austrian contact
- Secure A1/PD A1 where applicable; keep documents accessible in Austria
- Comply with Austrian minimum pay rules/working time/leave requirements
- Verify trade-licence requirements under the GewO
- Ensure timely social-security registration whenever Austrian coverage applies
For principals (including foreign principals):
- Document subcontractor due diligence (permits, worker lists, status checks)
- Implement a § 26(6) AuslBG process (request proof, track deadlines, notify)
- Build enforceable compliance clauses into contracts and payment flows
- In construction: actively manage social-security liability risks
This is exactly where Heinz Kobleder – Tax Advisors can add value beyond tax filings: we help foreign businesses structure projects correctly, coordinate payroll/social-security workflows, and reduce audit risk—like a proactive Tax Adviser in Austria should. If you need a reliable Tax Adviser in Austria for cross-border projects, talk to Heinz Kobleder – Tax Advisors.


