Jobs & Career in Austria: How to Find Work, Apply Smart, and Grow
A practical guide for newcomers and expats: where to search, how Austrian CVs work, what to expect in interviews, and the simple steps that help you get hired faster.
Finding a job in Austria can feel confusing in the beginning—especially if you’re not sure where to search, what documents employers expect, or how “Austrian-style” applications look. The good news: the process is very structured, and once you follow the right steps, things become much easier.
Step 1: Know what you’re targeting
Before applying everywhere, choose a clear direction. Austria has strong demand in certain sectors, and it helps a lot if your CV and applications match one role family.
- Pick 1–2 job titles you will apply for (example: “Customer Support Specialist” + “Office Assistant”).
- Pick 1–2 locations (example: Vienna + nearby cities). If you apply nationwide, mention relocation flexibility.
- Decide your language plan: English-only roles exist, but German increases your options massively.
Tip: Open 10 job ads you like and write down repeated keywords (tools, skills, tasks). Those words should appear in your CV.
Step 2: Where to find jobs (the best places)
Use a mix of job platforms + company websites + networking. Don’t rely on only one site.
1) Job platforms
- LinkedIn – good for international companies and networking.
- Karriere.at – one of the biggest Austrian job boards.
- StepStone – strong for corporate roles.
- AMS Jobroom – the public employment service listings (very useful).
2) Company career pages
Many companies publish the newest roles on their own websites first. If you find a company you like, apply directly on their career page.
3) Networking (the hidden job market)
In Austria, many hires happen via referrals. You don’t need to be “pushy”—just be consistent.
- Update LinkedIn headline: “Looking for: [role] in Austria”
- Message politely: “Hi, I’m new in Austria. Could I ask 2 questions about your company?”
- Join local groups (meetups, industry events, expat groups)
Step 3: Austrian CV (Lebenslauf) rules
Austrian CVs are usually clean, simple, and easy to scan. Your goal is clarity, not “too much design.”
CV structure
- 1–2 pages (most people use 1 page; 2 pages is OK if you have real experience).
- Reverse chronological (latest experience first).
- Bullet points for responsibilities + results.
What to include
- Contact: name, phone, email, city (and work permit if relevant).
- Short profile: 2–3 lines. Example: “Customer support specialist with 3 years experience…”
- Experience: 3–6 bullets per role (focus on achievements).
- Education + important certifications.
- Skills: tools (Excel, Zendesk, SAP), languages, strengths.
Step 4: Cover letter (Motivationsschreiben)
Some Austrian employers still like a short cover letter. Keep it simple: 3 short paragraphs.
- Why this company (1–2 lines).
- Why you fit (2–4 lines, match job keywords).
- Call to action: “I’m available for an interview…”
If the job post says “Cover letter optional,” you can still attach one to stand out—especially for office jobs.
Step 5: Interviews in Austria (what to expect)
Interviews are usually structured, calm, and practical. Most employers care about reliability and communication.
Common topics
- “Tell me about yourself” (keep it 60–90 seconds)
- Experience and examples (“How did you handle a difficult customer?”)
- Motivation: why Austria, why this job, why this company
- Availability: notice period and start date
Typical interview rounds
- Round 1: HR / recruiter (basic fit, salary expectations)
- Round 2: Manager (skills, real examples)
- Sometimes: small task test (Excel, writing, technical)
Tip: Prepare 5 short “stories” from your experience (problem → action → result). You can reuse them for many questions.
Step 6: Salary, contracts, and “Kollektivvertrag” (KV)
In Austria, many jobs follow a collective agreement called Kollektivvertrag (KV). It often defines a minimum salary based on your role and experience level. Your offer can be above the minimum.
- Ask: “Which KV applies to this role?”
- Check if the salary is gross (brutto) or net (netto).
- Many jobs pay 14 salaries/year (13th and 14th salary are common).
Want a free “Job Application Checklist”?
Get a simple printable checklist: CV, cover letter, interview prep, and document list for Austria.
Get it freeStep 7: Documents you may need
Different jobs require different documents, but these are common:
- Passport / ID
- Residence/work permit (if applicable)
- Meldezettel (address registration)
- SV number (social insurance number) – often after you start working
- Certificates (education, training)
Step 8: If you don’t speak German yet
You can still find work, especially in international companies, tech, some customer support roles, logistics, kitchens, or startups. But—realistically—German gives you more stability long-term.
- Start with A1/A2 basics quickly (daily routine).
- Learn job phrases: emails, meetings, phone calls.
- Put language plan on your CV: “German: A2 (currently studying)”
Step 9: 14-day action plan (simple and realistic)
Here’s a plan you can follow without stress:
Days 1–2
- Choose your target job titles + location.
- Update CV (1–2 pages).
- Create a simple cover letter template.
Days 3–7
- Apply to 2–5 jobs/day (quality > quantity).
- Track applications in a note/Excel: company, role, date, status.
- Message 3 people on LinkedIn (friendly and respectful).
Days 8–14
- Practice interview answers out loud (record yourself).
- Improve your CV based on job ads (add missing keywords).
- Follow up after 5–7 business days: short email message.
Common mistakes (and how to avoid them)
- Too generic CV: tailor the top 1/3 of your CV per job family.
- No local signals: add your city in Austria, availability, and language plan.
- Not tracking applications: track everything so you can follow up.
- Ignoring German: even 20 minutes/day helps long-term.
Final note
Austria rewards consistency. If you build a simple system (CV → apply daily → track → improve → repeat), you’ll feel much more confident—and you’ll get better results.
If you want, tell me your job title + city (Vienna, Graz, Linz, etc.) and I can suggest a smart job-search plan and keywords.