What to do after a death Austria? A step-by-step guide

A death in Austria confronts relatives, within hours, with a long list of decisions. This guide summarises what needs to be done in the first 24 hours, the first week and the months that follow – authorities, deadlines and inheritance law. The <a href="/app" class="text-primary underline">Wegbegleiter App</a> lets you tick off each step digitally and generates the most important letters automatically.

The first 24 hours

When someone dies in Austria, a doctor must first confirm the death and issue the medical death certificate. In an emergency call 144 or the family doctor. In a hospital, nursing home or hospice the staff take care of this step.

Take time to say goodbye – home viewings are usually possible for several hours. Inform the closest relatives, and only then contact a funeral director to arrange transport. In Austria every estate is settled by a court-appointed notary (Gerichtskommissär), even for small estates.

Gathering important documents

For the days ahead you will need several documents of the deceased:

  • ID card and passport
  • Birth and marriage certificate
  • Divorce decree or spouse's death certificate
  • Pension statement
  • Health-insurance card
  • Insurance policies (life, accident, funeral benefit)
  • Will or inheritance contract
  • Rental contract, bank statements, powers of attorney
  • Memberships, subscriptions, contracts

The Wegbegleiter App helps you record and store all documents securely.

Organising the funeral

Funerals in Austria typically take place usually within 5 days. You can choose between burial, cremation, sea or woodland burial – follow the deceased's wishes (funeral directive, advance care plan). If possible obtain two or three quotes; costs are usually €4,500 to €10,000.

The funeral director generally handles the report to the registry office (Standesamt), the transport, the coffin, the ceremony and the burial. Decide early which type of ceremony and what religious support you would like.

Authorities and insurance

In the first two weeks you should inform the following bodies:

  • registry office (Standesamt) – report the death within 1 working day; order several death certificates
  • Pensionsversicherungsanstalt (PVA) – stop pension payments, apply for survivor's pension
  • Health insurance – terminate the membership
  • Banks – accounts are frozen until heirs are confirmed; check powers of attorney
  • Life and funeral insurance – claim the payout
  • Employer, landlord, utilities, telecom, subscriptions – cancel or transfer in writing
  • Tax authority – final tax return and any inheritance tax

Inheritance and estate

Inheritance law in Austria allows you to renounce the estate – deadline: estate proceedings via a notary. If there is a will, it must be opened at the competent authority. If the estate may be over-indebted, opt for a public inventory or acceptance with benefit of inventory.

To close accounts, transfer real estate and claim insurance benefits, you need a certificate of inheritance (Erbschein, certificat d'hérédité, certificato successorio or similar) issued by a notary or estate authority.

Key deadlines at a glance

The overview below summarises the key deadlines after a death in Austria. Print it out or save it on your phone – even during grieving you will keep a clear plan of what to do, by when, and which office handles the next step.

  • Immediately: call the doctor, emergency number 144, obtain the death certificate
  • within 1 working day: report to the registry office (Standesamt)
  • usually within 5 days: funeral
  • 14 days: notify Pensionsversicherungsanstalt (PVA), health insurer, banks and insurance companies
  • estate proceedings via a notary: accept or renounce the inheritance
  • 12 months: tax return and any inheritance-tax filing

Grief, support and next steps

Grief is a long road. Accept professional support – your GP, pastoral care, bereavement groups or psychotherapy all help to process the loss. Practical help matters too: one relative handles the paperwork, another the home.

The Wegbegleiter App brings every task after a death in Austria into a single, clear interface: country-specific checklists, letter templates for the bank, Pensionsversicherungsanstalt (PVA) and insurance providers, deadline reminders and an encrypted emergency folder. That leaves time for what really matters – saying goodbye, mourning, remembering.

Costs and financial support

The overall cost of a funeral in Austria is usually €4,500 to €10,000. It is made up of several items: coffin or urn (around 800 to 3,000), transport, viewing and ceremony (1,500 to 4,000), cemetery or crematorium fees (500 to 4,000), gravestone and grave care, plus death notices and refreshments for mourners.

Several sources can offset part of these costs: funeral insurance, a life-insurance death benefit, survivor benefits from Pensionsversicherungsanstalt (PVA), and social-welfare aid in cases of financial hardship. Always obtain two or three quotes and check the funeral director's written estimate before signing the contract.

Frequently asked questions

Who has to report the death in Austria?
The death must be reported to the registry office (Standesamt) within 1 working day. Usually the funeral director handles this on behalf of the family.
How many death certificates should I order?
Order 6 to 10 copies – bank, Pensionsversicherungsanstalt (PVA), insurers, estate authority, landlord and employer each require one original.
What is the deadline to renounce an inheritance?
estate proceedings via a notary. If you do nothing, you are deemed an heir – including any debts.
How much does a funeral cost in Austria?
Realistic range: €4,500 to €10,000. Social benefits or funeral allowances may help in case of financial hardship.
When are bank accounts unfrozen?
Only after a valid certificate of inheritance is presented. Until then only current obligations such as funeral costs can be paid.

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