Visas & Residency · Austria

Permanent residency at 5 years. Citizenship at 10 — if you'll trade your passport for it.

Last verified: 8 July 2026

Austria's long game has two distinct prizes. Permanent residency ("Daueraufenthalt – EU") arrives at year five and gives you nearly everything: unlimited stay, labour-market access, no more annual renewals. Citizenship generally takes ten years — and for most Americans and Canadians it carries a price the brochures bury: renouncing your existing citizenship.

The key numbers · 2026
  • 5 years of continuous settlement → permanent residency, with B1 German (Integration Agreement Module 2)
  • 10 years of continuous legal residence for citizenship — at least 5 on a settlement permit
  • 6 years in privileged cases, e.g. B2 German plus proof of personal integration, or 5+ years married to an Austrian
  • B1 German + citizenship test + secured income at the ASVG reference-rate level, averaged over 3 of the last 6 years
  • Renunciation of your US or Canadian citizenship is generally required — dual citizenship is the rare exception
  • Pending reform: the 2025–29 government programme would raise German to B2 and add a values course — not yet law as of July 3, 2026

Stage one: permanent residency at year five

After five years of continuous, lawful settlement in Austria you can apply for the EU long-term residence permit, "Daueraufenthalt – EU". The headline requirements:

The card is issued for five years and renews without new substantive tests. In practical terms this is the finish line most of our readers actually want: you live in Austria indefinitely, the annual renewal treadmill stops, and — unlike the retiree permit — the permanent permit no longer excludes employment.

Continuity matters. Long absences from Austria can break the five-year clock and, later, can end permanent residency itself. If you plan to winter in Arizona for months at a time, get advice on the absence limits before you build the plan around them.

Stage two: citizenship — generally at year ten

Austrian naturalisation (Verleihung der Staatsbürgerschaft) generally requires ten years of continuous legal residence, of which at least five with a settlement permit. Alongside the decade, you need:

A shorter six-year track exists for privileged cases: applicants proving sustained personal integration with B2 German (or B1 plus documented volunteering/integration engagement), spouses of Austrian citizens after five years of marriage and cohabitation, EEA citizens, and refugees. For a typical American or Canadian retiree, plan on ten.

The renunciation rule — read this twice

Austria is one of Europe's strictest countries on dual citizenship. To naturalise, you must generally give up your US or Canadian citizenship; keeping it is possible only in narrow exception cases (for instance where renunciation is impossible or unreasonable — decided case by case, not on request). Naturalising elsewhere as an Austrian likewise costs Austrians their citizenship by default.

For Americans especially, this is a bigger decision than it looks. Renouncing US citizenship is a formal, irreversible consular process with its own costs and potential exit-tax consequences for higher-net-worth individuals — a decision that needs a US tax lawyer, not a blog post. For Canadians, renunciation is also formal and permanent, though the tax side is simpler. If keeping your passport matters, treat Austria as a permanent-residence destination, not a second-passport project. Permanent residency at year five gives you almost everything citizenship does, except the EU passport and the vote.

What the pending reform would change

The 2025–29 government programme announced a tightening of naturalisation: German at B2 instead of B1, and a compulsory values course with exam. As of July 3, 2026, this is being drafted but is not law — today's rules are the ones above. If you're on a ten-year plan, assume the requirements at your year ten may be tougher than today's, and keep your German ambitions ahead of the legal minimum. We track the bill's progress in the newsletter.

The timeline, assembled

YearMilestoneGerman level
0First settlement permit (quota place, from abroad)A1 before applying
0–2Annual renewals; Integration Agreement Module 1A2 within 2 years
5Permanent residency: "Daueraufenthalt – EU" (5-year card)B1 (Module 2)
6Citizenship only in privileged casesB2 + integration proof
10Citizenship eligibility — with renunciationB1 today; B2 under the pending reform

Sources

  1. Daueraufenthalt – EU, requirements incl. Module 2 (B1): oesterreich.gv.at; migration.gv.at
  2. Integration Agreement Modules 1 and 2: migration.gv.at
  3. Citizenship requirements — 10 years, 6-year privileged cases, income, B1 + test, renunciation: oesterreich.gv.at (Staatsbürgerschaft); migration.gv.at
  4. 2026 ASVG reference rates (income benchmark): oesterreich.gv.at, 2026 values, checked July 2026
  5. Pending naturalisation reform (B2, values course): 2025–29 Austrian government programme; legal-practice summaries, status checked July 3, 2026 — not yet enacted
  6. Renouncing US citizenship (process and consequences): travel.state.gov
This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Naturalisation is discretionary and province-administered; requirements are assessed case by case and a reform is pending. Speak to an Austrian immigration lawyer — and, before any renunciation, a US or Canadian cross-border tax adviser.