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Austria
The complete guide

Austria

Everything you need to plan a great trip — from Vienna's palaces to the Salzkammergut lakes — without the guesswork.

Flight time 8–12h depending on originFrom $550–1,100 round-tripVisa Visa-free up to 90 days in 180 for most Western nationalities*Time zone GMT+1

Austria rewards 7-10 days minimum: Vienna (3-4 days), Salzburg (2 days), and Hallstatt (1 day or overnight) form the classic first-time route, all connected by Austria's excellent trains. Best months are May-June and September (mild weather, fewer crowds than July-August) or late November-December for the Christmas markets. Most Western nationalities travel visa-free up to 90 days in any 180-day period, with a new ETIAS travel authorization launching Q4 2026. Budget from €70/day backpacking, €150-250/day mid-range.

Austria has a habit of exceeding the postcard: the palaces really are that grand, the mountains really do drop straight into turquoise lakes, and yes, the coffeehouses really will let you sit for two hours over a single Melange without so much as a raised eyebrow. It's compact, too — small enough that Vienna, Salzburg, and the lake district all connect by fast, genuinely pleasant trains, so almost none of your trip gets wasted in transit.

This guide covers everything: where to go, how many days, when to fly, what it actually costs in EUR and USD, and the entry rule for your specific passport — including the new ETIAS system rolling out in late 2026 — not a generic one-size-fits-all answer. Written to be genuinely useful, and updated through the season.

Questions people actually ask

How many days do I need in Austria?
A week is a solid minimum for the classic Vienna-Salzburg-Hallstatt route (3-4 days, 2 days, 1 day or overnight, respectively). Ten to fourteen days lets you add the Tyrol Alps, Graz, or a slower pace without feeling rushed.
When is the best time to visit Austria?
May-June and September offer mild weather (60-75°F / 15-24°C) with noticeably fewer crowds than the July-August peak. Late November through December is a genuinely worthwhile alternative season for the Christmas markets, despite the cold. Winter (December-March) is prime time for skiing in the Alps if that's the goal.
How much does a trip to Austria cost?
Backpacker budget: from about €70/day (hostels, casual meals, public transit). Mid-range comfort: €150-250/day (a 3-4 star hotel, restaurant meals, some paid attractions). A two-week trip for two people, flights included, typically runs $4,500-7,500 mid-range, more at the luxury end. Austria isn't a budget destination compared to Southeast Asia, but it's broadly in line with the rest of Western Europe.
Do I need a visa for Austria?
It depends on your passport — see our full visa & ETIAS guide. Most Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand) currently travel visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day period across the whole Schengen area. Starting in Q4 2026, these same travelers will also need a €20 ETIAS travel authorization (not a visa) before flying.
Is Austria safe to visit?
Yes, very much so — Austria ranked 6th on the 2026 Global Peace Index, one of the most peaceful countries on Earth. Violent crime against tourists is rare; the realistic risks are pickpocketing in crowded tourist spots and winter road/ski conditions, not crime.
Vienna first, or Salzburg first?
Most travelers fly into Vienna regardless of routing, since it has by far the larger international airport. Doing Vienna first works well as a grand, energetic start; doing Salzburg last (on the way out, or paired with a Munich onward trip) also works well. See our full Vienna vs. Salzburg comparison for a direct breakdown.
What should I see besides Vienna and Salzburg?
Hallstatt for the lake district, Melk Abbey and the Wachau Valley for Baroque architecture and Danube scenery, and the Tyrol Alps (Innsbruck and beyond) if skiing or serious hiking is part of your trip.
Does eSIM work well in Austria?
Very well — Airalo and Holafly offer European data plans from about $6-20 for 7-15 days with strong coverage nationwide, including rural Alpine areas. A physical local SIM (A1, Magenta, or Drei) is just as easy and similarly priced.