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Cross-border estates involving Austrian assets or Austrian nationals with property abroad are increasingly common, and knowing how to obtain a European Certificate of Succession is now an essential step for heirs, executors and estate administrators managing these cases. The European Certificate of Succession (ECS) was introduced under Regulation (EU) No 650/2012 to create a single, standardised document that proves a person’s rights in a cross-border inheritance, replacing the need to obtain separate national certificates in each EU Member State where assets are located. In Austria, the application process involves either a civil-law notary (Notar) or the district court (Bezirksgericht), depending on the complexity of the estate and whether heirship is contested.
This guide walks through every stage of the Austrian ECS procedure, from identifying the competent authority and assembling the correct documents to understanding realistic timelines, fees and common reasons applications are rejected.
If you need a European Certificate of Succession issued in Austria, here is the short version before we go into detail:
The sections below cover each of these points in full, with document checklists, comparison tables and practical tips drawn from Austrian procedural practice.
The European Certificate of Succession is a standardised EU-wide document designed to prove one or more of the following: a person’s status as heir or legatee, their share of the estate, specific bequests allocated to them, or their powers as executor or estate administrator. It was created specifically for cross-border situations, for instance, an Austrian heir needing to access the deceased’s bank account in Germany, or a foreign national inheriting real property in Austria.
Unlike a national grant of probate or an Austrian Einantwortungsurkunde (decree of delivery), the ECS produces effects in all participating EU Member States without any additional recognition procedure. This makes it particularly valuable for estates that span multiple jurisdictions, because the heir or administrator can present a single document to banks, land registries and other authorities across the EU.
The ECS is governed by Articles 62 to 73 of Regulation (EU) No 650/2012, commonly known as the EU Succession Regulation. This Regulation applies to the succession of persons who died on or after 17 August 2015 and establishes uniform rules on jurisdiction, applicable law and the recognition and enforcement of decisions in matters of succession. The European Commission provides an accessible summary of these provisions, confirming that the certificate is intended for use by heirs, legatees, executors and administrators who need to invoke their status or exercise their rights in another Member State.
Denmark and Ireland are not bound by the Regulation, and it does not apply to tax matters, practical points that applicants with assets in those countries should bear in mind.
Under Articles 63 and 65 of Regulation 650/2012, the following categories of persons may apply for a European Certificate of Succession in Austria:
Austria’s implementation of the EU Succession Regulation means that the competent authority for issuing a European Certificate of Succession is typically the Bezirksgericht (district court) with jurisdiction over the deceased’s last habitual residence, or, where habitual residence was abroad, the court with jurisdiction under the Regulation’s subsidiary rules. In practice, however, Austria assigns succession-related procedural work to civil-law notaries acting as court commissioners (Gerichtskommissäre). This means most applicants will interact primarily with a notary, even though the Bezirksgericht retains formal authority.
The distinction matters because the route you take, notary-led or direct court filing, affects speed, formality and cost. Understanding this structure is critical for anyone learning how to obtain a European Certificate of Succession efficiently within the Austrian system.
| Route | When it typically applies | Key characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Notary as Gerichtskommissär | Uncontested estates; heirship is clear from documents and no parties dispute entitlement | Faster processing; notary handles evidence-gathering and drafts the certificate for court approval |
| Bezirksgericht (direct court application) | Contested estates; disputes over the will’s validity, identity of heirs, or complex multi-jurisdictional inventories | Formal judicial proceedings; may involve hearings; higher costs; slower but authoritative resolution |
Begin by determining which Austrian court has jurisdiction. Under the EU Succession Regulation, jurisdiction generally lies with the courts of the Member State in which the deceased had their habitual residence at the time of death. If the deceased lived in Austria, the locally competent Bezirksgericht, and the notary appointed as Gerichtskommissär for that district, will handle the application. If the deceased lived abroad but had assets in Austria, the Regulation’s subsidiary rules may still give Austrian courts jurisdiction, particularly where no other Member State has assumed it or where the deceased was an Austrian national who made a choice-of-law election in favour of Austrian law.
Assembling complete and properly authenticated documents is the single most important factor in avoiding delays. The table below sets out the core ECS documents Austria’s authorities require:
| Document | Why It Is Needed | Notes on Translation and Apostille |
|---|---|---|
| Death certificate | Official proof of the deceased’s death, date and place | Must be an official civil-registry copy; apostille required if issued abroad; certified German translation if not in German |
| Applicant’s identification (passport, Austrian ID card) | Confirms the applicant’s identity and status | Certified copies; translations required for non-German identity documents |
| Family-register certificates (birth, marriage, civil partnership) | Proves family relationships and entitlement to inherit | Apostille or consular legalisation if issued outside Austria; certified German translation |
| Last will, testament or succession agreement (if any) | Establishes the deceased’s dispositions and any executor appointment | If a foreign will, include certified German translation and, where applicable, a foreign court’s grant of probate |
| Proof of estate assets (land-registry extract / Grundbuchauszug, bank statements) | Demonstrates which assets are subject to the succession | Austrian Grundbuchauszug obtainable from the relevant Bezirksgericht; foreign asset evidence needs translation |
| Existing grant of probate or letters of administration | Evidences a prior national succession proceeding | Useful but not mandatory, the ECS can serve independently where no national grant has been issued |
| Sworn statement / affidavit from the applicant (eidesstattliche Erklärung) | Confirms facts declared in the application under oath | Must be signed before the competent notary or court; standard Austrian form typically used |
| Power of attorney (if applying through a representative) | Authorises the lawyer or notary to act on the applicant’s behalf | Must be notarised; if executed abroad, apostille and certified German translation required |
If the estate is proceeding through probate in Austria, the assigned Gerichtskommissär (notary) will typically handle the ECS application as part of the broader succession proceeding. The applicant, or their Austrian legal representative, submits the application along with all supporting documents. During the appointment, the notary may require the applicant to make a sworn declaration confirming their identity, their relationship to the deceased, the absence of other known heirs (or their identification), and any relevant facts about the estate.
Where no Austrian probate proceeding is ongoing, for example, because the deceased lived in Germany but owned Austrian real estate, the applicant may need to file directly with the competent Bezirksgericht. In this scenario, the court may appoint a notary to investigate the application, or it may handle the matter through its own judicial process.
Foreign-language documents must be accompanied by certified German translations prepared by a sworn translator (gerichtlich beeideter Übersetzer). Public documents issued in non-Hague-Convention countries require consular legalisation rather than an apostille. Industry observers note that translation and apostille delays are among the most frequent causes of extended processing times, so applicants are strongly advised to obtain these well before filing.
For documents from EU Member States, the multilingual standard forms introduced by Regulation (EU) 2016/1191 (the Public Documents Regulation) may reduce or eliminate the need for separate translations of certain civil-status certificates, depending on the issuing country.
Austrian notarial fees for succession proceedings are governed by the Notariatstarifgesetz (Notarial Tariff Act) and are generally calculated as a percentage of the estate’s gross value, subject to statutory minimums and maximums. Court fees (Gerichtsgebühren) for Bezirksgericht proceedings are set by the Gerichtsgebührengesetz and similarly depend on the estate’s value. In practice, the combined notarial and court fees for a routine ECS application within an ongoing Austrian probate may range from several hundred to several thousand euros, depending on estate size. Applicants should request a fee estimate from their notary or legal representative before filing.
Payment is typically made directly to the notary’s office or through the court’s fee collection process. Certified copies of the issued ECS may attract additional copying charges.
Understanding realistic timelines is essential for anyone planning cross-border estate administration. The table below summarises typical processing periods for key stages of the ECS procedure in Austria, alongside the factors that most commonly cause delays.
| Action | Typical Timeline (Routine Case) | When It Takes Longer |
|---|---|---|
| Notary review and ECS issuance | 2–6 weeks | Missing documents; requests for additional evidence; foreign documents requiring apostille or translation |
| Bezirksgericht court application | 6–16 weeks | Disputed heirs; need for oral hearings; complex estate inventory spanning multiple countries |
| Document apostille or consular legalisation | 1–4 weeks | Country-of-origin processing backlogs; need for consular rather than apostille route |
| Using the ECS abroad (registration with foreign authority) | 1–8 weeks (varies by country) | Local national rules for property registration, translation requirements or bank compliance checks |
The most common cause of delay in Austrian ECS applications is incomplete documentation, particularly missing apostilles, untranslated foreign documents and incomplete family-tree evidence. Contested heirship or disputes over the validity of a will can extend the process significantly, as the Bezirksgericht may need to conduct hearings and gather expert opinions before the certificate can be issued.
One of the central advantages of the European Certificate of Succession is that it produces its effects in all participating Member States without requiring any special recognition procedure. Under Article 69 of the Regulation, any person who presents an ECS is presumed to have the status and rights stated in the certificate. A bank in Germany, a land registry in Spain or a tax authority in France must accept the ECS as proof of the holder’s inheritance rights, no exequatur, no separate national validation.
The certificate is valid for six months from the date of issue for the purpose of being presented to third parties, though the underlying rights it certifies do not expire. Applicants who need to use the certificate beyond this window should request either an extension or a fresh certified copy from the issuing authority.
While automatic recognition is the legal rule, practical formalities still apply in the receiving country. For cross-border inheritance in Austria and Germany, one of the most common corridors, heirs typically need to take the following steps:
Early indications suggest that practical acceptance of the ECS has improved steadily since 2015, though individual banks and registries in some Member States may still be unfamiliar with the document. Carrying a cover letter from your Austrian lawyer explaining the ECS’s legal basis can help smooth the process.
Choosing between the notary and court pathway, or understanding why one has been selected for your case, is important for managing expectations around timelines, costs and procedural formality. The comparison table below summarises the key differences in how to obtain a European Certificate of Succession through each Austrian channel.
| Issuing Authority | When Used in Austria | Pros and Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Civil-law notary (Notar) acting as Gerichtskommissär | Where heirship facts are clear, no parties contest entitlement, and the estate is proceeding through standard probate | Pros: Faster processing; single point of contact; integrated with probate proceedings. Cons: May not be available where disputes exist; still requires court approval for final issuance |
| Bezirksgericht (district court) | When heirship is contested, the will’s validity is disputed, or the estate involves complex multi-jurisdictional assets | Pros: Full judicial authority to resolve disputes; binding determination of heirship. Cons: Longer processing times; higher costs; more formal procedural requirements |
| Gerichtskommissär (court-delegated commissioner) | Where the court delegates specific investigative or procedural steps to a notary while retaining overall control | Pros: Combines judicial oversight with notarial efficiency. Cons: Procedural formality; the notary acts under court instruction rather than independently |
For a more detailed exploration of how Austrian probate proceedings compare to the ECS route, including when each is required and when they overlap, readers may wish to consult a dedicated comparison of probate vs ECS in Austria.
Based on common issues that arise in Austrian ECS applications, the following practical tips can help streamline the process and reduce the risk of rejection or delay:
The most frequent grounds for rejection or requests for further information include: incomplete proof of family relationships, failure to provide apostilled or legalised foreign documents, inconsistencies between the application and the supporting documentation, missing sworn statements, and applications filed with the wrong court or in the wrong jurisdiction.
Knowing how to obtain a European Certificate of Succession in Austria, from identifying the competent notary or Bezirksgericht through to assembling the correct documents, managing translations and apostilles, and ultimately using the certificate across EU borders, can save heirs and estate administrators significant time and cost. The process is well-established under Regulation (EU) No 650/2012, but Austrian procedural specifics, particularly the role of the Gerichtskommissär, make local expertise invaluable. If you are managing a cross-border estate involving Austrian assets, find an Austrian inheritance lawyer through our directory to ensure your application is handled efficiently from the start.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Senad Albani M.A. at Rechtsanwaltskanzlei Albani GmbH, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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