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Quick answer (Austria)

A €350,000 wohnbaukredit at 3.85% over a 25-year fixed term works out to a monthly payment of about € 1.819, with total interest of € 195.569 over the full term.

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Mortgage Calculator

EUR
LTV 80% · No PMI ✓
%
Total Monthly
2.402 €
PITI
Principal + Interest
1.819 €
36% goes to interest
Total Interest
195.569 €
over 25 years
Monthly Breakdown
Principal & Interest1.819 €
Property Tax (1.1%/yr)401 €
Homeowner's Insurance (0.5%/yr)182 €
Total Monthly2.402 €
Principal vs Interest Split
64% principal
36% interest
✨ Live recalculation·Includes P&I, property tax, insurance. Estimates only — consult a licensed lender for exact rates.
AR
Reviewed by

CFP® with 12+ years in mortgage & retirement planning.

Austria flag Local context

Wohnbaukredits in Austria

Typical loan
€ 350.000
in Austria
Typical rate
3.85% p.a.
prime borrower, 2026
Typical term
25 years
most common

Market overview

Austrian mortgages are dominated by Bank Austria (UniCredit), Erste Bank, Raiffeisenbank, BAWAG P.S.K., and Volksbank. Most loans are mixed-rate (fixed teaser blending to variable Euribor-linked) but pure fixed-rate products (10-25 year) gained significant share post-2022 as Austrian buyers sought protection against ECB rate hikes. FMA (Austria's financial regulator) enforces strict KIM-V macroprudential rules: max 90% LTV for primary residences, max 40% DSR (debt service ratio), max 35-year term.

Why 3.85% is the typical rate

3.85% reflects a typical 10-year fixed mortgage rate for a salaried Austrian borrower at 80% LTV in early 2026, after the ECB rate-cut cycle. Variable Euribor-linked rates price ~50 bps below the fixed teaser. Bauspar mortgages (subsidized via building society contracts) offer additional state-supported affordability for first-time buyers.

Tax & regulatory notes

Mortgage interest is partially deductible from Austrian personal income tax via the Sonderausgaben category up to €2,920/year (declining toward elimination per recent reforms). Property transfer tax (Grunderwerbsteuer) is 3.5% of purchase price (1.5-2% within family transfers). Real estate fee (Eintragungsgebühr) is 1.1% of value. Foreign EU/EEA buyers face standard rules; non-EU buyers may need provincial approval for certain property types.

🧮 Worked example

A €350,000 wohnbaukredit at 3.85% over a 25-year fixed term

Loan amount
€ 350.000
Annual interest rate
3.85%
Term
25 years (300 months)
Monthly payment
€ 1.819
Total interest paid
€ 195.569
Total paid (principal + interest)
€ 545.569
❓ FAQ (Austria)

Common questions in Austria.

Austria KIM-V macroprudential rules — how do they constrain me?
FMA's KIM-V (Kreditinstitute-Immobilienfinanzierungsmaßnahmen-Verordnung) caps Austrian mortgage lending at: (1) max 90% LTV for primary residences, (2) max 40% debt service ratio (total monthly debt / net income), (3) max 35-year term, (4) banks must hold 1% capital buffer for non-compliant new originations. The rules apply from August 2022 and are stricter than ECB requirements. For most Vienna buyers, the binding constraint is the DSR cap given high property prices vs Austrian wages.
What is a Bauspar mortgage in Austria?
Bauspar (building society savings) is a unique Austrian/German product combining savings and lending. You commit to monthly savings deposits at a fixed rate for 5-10 years; once the contract matures, you gain access to a low-fixed-rate mortgage at a pre-agreed rate. State subsidies (Bausparprämie) add ~1.5-2% bonus to the saver's contributions annually. Bausparmortgages typically price 50-150 bps below market for the secured "tranche 1" portion. Major providers: Raiffeisen Bausparkasse, Wüstenrot, sBausparkasse, Bausparkasse der Sparkassen.
Foreign buyers in Vienna — restrictions?
EU/EEA citizens face no restrictions buying Austrian property. Non-EU/EEA citizens face Bundesländer (province)-level approval requirements that vary: Vorarlberg, Tirol, and Salzburg have stricter rules to limit foreign demand on tourist-heavy real estate; Vienna and Lower Austria are more permissive. Most non-EU buyers acquire urban property in Vienna without significant friction; rural and alpine property faces more scrutiny. Documentation typically requires Austrian bank account and tax registration.