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Luxury homes for sale in Austria

luxury guide

Austria's housing market runs deeper than most buyers expect. 367 houses for sale across the country span a range that goes well beyond the Alpine chalet image: detached family homes in the Wachau wine valleys, solid residential houses in the suburbs of Vienna, timber-framed farmhouses in Carinthia, and high-end properties near the ski resorts of Tyrol and Salzburgerland. Buyers come from Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and increasingly from the UK and the US, drawn by construction quality that is genuinely high, generous plot sizes, and a legal framework that is straightforward for foreign purchasers. Kitzbühel, Salzburg, the Salzkammergut lake district and the Vorarlberg consistently top the search lists.

How much does a house cost in Austria

Prices for houses in Austria start at €410,000 for properties in the rural east and south, and reach €15,500,000 in the most sought-after Alpine locations and the greater Vienna area. The average sits at €1,644,840. Floor areas range from 72 to 1000 sqm, with a typical size of 194 sqm and between 1 and 22 bedrooms. Three factors move prices more than anything else: proximity to ski lifts or Alpine lakes, distance from Vienna or a regional centre, and the quality of outdoor space, which in Austria means a private garden, garage, cellar and often a separate utility building. Ma there is something that makes Austrian houses stand out from comparable German or Swiss properties. Many historic village homes retain original load-bearing timber structures, vaulted cellars and south-facing terraces that would cost a fortune to replicate from scratch.

Where to buy a house in Austria

Tyrol attracts the highest international demand. Around Kitzbühel and the Ski Welt resorts, detached houses with mountain views and private gardens change hands rarely. The reason is simple: supply is capped by strict building regulations and the local topography. Salzburg's residential districts, particularly those on the southern and western outskirts, offer houses within easy reach of the UNESCO-listed old town, good schools and fast road connections to Munich. Carinthia is the right answer for buyers who want a house near water. Wörthersee and Millstätter See have some of the warmest Alpine lakes in Europe, and the houses here often come with private jetties or direct lake access. Vorarlberg, bordering Switzerland and Germany, is the most expensive region for houses outside Vienna, but also one with the most resilient demand. For something less obvious, the Wachau valley in Lower Austria combines terraced vineyards, Danube views and beautifully restored farmhouses at prices that still look reasonable compared to the western provinces.