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TAXES

Austrian tax season: What deductions and claims can help you get your money back?

Austria's high taxes and compulsory contributions help pay for its renowned public services and healthcare - but that doesn't mean you can't use legal deductions and claims to get some money back come tax season.

taxes
Tax season can be complicated. Photo: Elisa Ventur / Unsplash

If you are employed in Austria, expect a chunk of your gross salary to be deducted immediately from your payslip. 

The most considerable deduction is almost certainly Sozialversicherungsbeiträge or social insurance contributions. It can be broken down into Pensionsversicherung (pension insurance — you pay 10.25 percent of your salary for this), Krankenversicherung (sickness insurance — 3.87 percent of your salary), Arbeitslosenversicherung (unemployment insurance — 3 percent of your salary). 

After that, you’ll have to pay income tax on anything that surpasses € 11,693 in a year. It can add up to a substantial amount of your gross income, and contributions are taken automatically from your paycheck if you are a salaried worker.

You can read more about how to file your taxes in Austria HERE.  

However, you can add many tax deductions to your tax return filing to help you get some of your overpaid taxes back.

Tax-reducing expenses

Certain expenses can reduce your taxable income as long as they are directly connected to the revenue, also known as business expenses. This could include training costs, office supplies, and others. 

There are particular circumstances and regulations for some items, especially working from home, training and transportation costs, so it is worth checking your specific case with a tax advisor. 

Every employee can also use a lump sum of €132 per year or calculate each item individually.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: The main Austrian ‘tax traps’ foreigners should be aware of

Tax deductions

There are also several tax deductions that you can claim (some, like the pensioner or transportation deduction, will come automatically with your payments and wage). Here are the tax deductions for 2023:

  • Family Bonus Plus up to 18 years: €166.68/month and Family Bonus Plus from 18 years: €54.18/month

Parents whose child is entitled to family allowance are entitled to the Family Bonus Plus.

  • Transportation deduction: €421/year

All employees are entitled to the transportation deduction, which is automatically considered by the employer and settled by a lump sum. 

  • Pensioner deduction: up to €868/year

The agency paying out your pension settles the pensioner deduction automatically.

  • Increased pensioner deduction: up to €1,278/year

This applies if the current pension income does not exceed €19,930 during the calendar year, the person lives in a marriage or registered partnership with someone who earns no more than €2,200 per year and has no entitlement to the single-earner tax credit.

  • Cost of living tax credit: up to €500/year

This year, low-income employees will receive a cost of living tax credit which is automatically taken into account in the employee tax assessment if the requirements are met.

  • Single-earner tax credit: €520/year (in case of one child, more if there are more children)

The single-earner tax credit is due if a taxpayer with at least one child is, for more than six months in the calendar year, married or a registered partner to a spouse subject to unlimited tax liability, or the spouse receives income in 2022 of no more than €6,000 in the calendar year.

  • Support money deduction: up to €62 per month and per child

This tax deduction is for parents who pay child support for a child not living in the household.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: What is Austria’s church tax and how do I avoid paying it?

(Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA / AFP)

Other deductions

  • Special expenses

Certain private expenses can be claimed in your tax return, including church tax payments (up to €400), tax-consultancy costs to an unlimited amount, insurance coverage, donations to recognised organisations (deductible only to the extent that they do not exceed 10 percent of the total amount of income of the relevant year of assessment).

  • Environmental expenses

Certain expenses to improve the energy and heat efficiency of a building (such as insulation of external walls, roofs or replacement of windows) are also tax-deductible.

  • Extraordinary burdens

Certain expenses may be considered extraordinary if they are inevitable and if they considerably affect your economic performance capacity. This is often the case with medical expenses, which can be deducted up to a certain amount, depending on income. Prescribed medication is fully deductible; you can also deduct expenses for therapeutic aids, childbirth costs, disabilities and more.

Certain diseases with dietary requirements prescribed by a physician have separate lump sums. For example, people diagnosed with diabetes have a monthly tax allowance of €70.

Extraordinary expenses for dependants can also be deducted in the same way.

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MONEY

Austrian heiress’s €25 million giveaway finalised

The group charged with giving away the bulk of Austrian-German heiress Marlene Engelhorn's multi-million-euro inheritance on Tuesday announced the dozens of organisations, projects and initiatives due to benefit.

Austrian heiress's €25 million giveaway finalised

The 32-year-old activist who advocates for higher taxes on the rich made headlines in January when she announced that she would be giving away €25 million ($26.8 million)—the bulk of her inheritance.

She entrusted a team to set up a citizens’ council of 50 Austrians to generate ideas on how to give away her wealth.

Members of the citizens group on Tuesday said that Engelhorn’s millions would be distributed among a total of 77 organisations that seek to improve environmental protection, education, integration, health and social issues, as well as poverty and affordable housing in Austria.

Engelhorn, who co-founded the Taxmenow initiative, is among an exclusive group of millionaires pushing for governments to tax them more to bridge the growing wealth gap amid a persistent cost-of-living crisis.

A scion of Friedrich Engelhorn, the founder of the BASF chemical giant, she inherited millions when her grandmother died in 2022.

Individual organisations will receive, over a couple of years, amounts ranging from €40,000 to the €1.6 million allotted to the Austrian society for nature conservation.

“The result is as diverse as the council itself. But what all the decisions have in common is that they want a fairer society… to support those who are discriminated against,” project manager Alexandra Wang told a news conference on Tuesday.

From March to June, 50 Austrians were paid to gather on six weekends in the city of Salzburg to develop solutions “in the interests of society as a whole”.

Four members of the council shared their experiences on Tuesday. They said they enjoyed the “democratic project” and hailed it as an “exciting challenge” to find solutions to pressing issues “as equals” and based on consensus.

The youngest participant, 17-year-old student Kyrillos Gadalla, said he had “learnt a lot” from every conversation he had with different council members, the oldest of whom was 85.

Engelhorn did not participate in Tuesday’s press conference after withdrawing from the process once the council was launched.

“A large part of my inherited wealth, which through my birth has elevated me to a position of power… has now been redistributed in accordance with democratic values,” Engelhorn said in a statement.

In January, 10,000 randomly selected Austrians aged over 16 were invited to join the citizens council designed to reflect the Alpine country’s demographic mix.

The charity Oxfam said in a report in January that the world’s billionaires are $3.3 trillion richer than they were in 2020, while nearly five billion people worldwide have grown poorer, slamming “levels of obscene inequality”.

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