Austria Flag National Debt

Austria Debt Clock: 83.6% Debt-to-GDP Ratio Explained



367,303,179,363


Last Updated: April 16, 2026

Data as of: December 2024 | Source: IMF World Economic Outlook (April 2025), GGXWDG_NGDP indicator (2024 data). General government gross debt. | How we calculate this

The counter above extrapolates from the annual rate of interest accrual. It is not a live government data feed.

Interest Payments Per Year
$7,793,398,211
Interest Payments Per Second
$247
ticking while you read this
National Debt Per Citizen
$47,250
Debt as % of GDP
81.1%
Moderate
GDP of Austria
$534,790,720,467
Austria Population
9,177,982

In this guide to Austria’s National Debt, we discuss who manages its debt, how it raises loans, the country’s credit rating, and who holds the debt.

The National Debt Of Austria

The national debt of Austria can be calculated in many ways. Most economic institutions regard “national debt” as the “general government debt.”

Private sector debts are never included in the calculations of national debt. Economists are much more interested in a country’s ability to repay its debts and so national debt figures are usually expressed as a proportion of the country’s annual income (GDP). This is called the “debt-to-GDP ratio.”

Composition of Austria’s National Debt

The factors that go into the composition of national debt vary by accounting standards. These different standards can make a big difference in the stated size of a country’s national debt and this is particularly true in the case of Austria.

Eurostat’s Maastricht Guidelines

Eurostat follows the same rules that national governments in Europe use to calculate national debt. These guidelines are laid down in the Maastricht Treaty to ensure that the economies of all EU members are measured by the same methods.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) Rules

The IMF uses almost exactly the same rules as Maastricht, except that it records debt values at market prices rather than nominal value, which is the amount that the debt instruments were issued for.

The IMF doesn’t include government loan guarantees, but Eurostat records a country’s obligations and guarantees to European institutions.

Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Factors

The OECD includes factors that neither the IMF nor Eurostat include. These are mainly the guarantees given by a national government to other institutions within the country. This includes both private and public sector bodies, such as the country’s banks (private) and the national railways system (public).

Comparing the Three Debt Values

In recent years, market values create larger national debt figures than nominal values. So, if you ask “what is the national debt of Austria?” you get three different answers:

  • IMF: 78.8% (2017)
  • Eurostat: 83.6% (2016), 78.4% (2017)
  • OECD: 102% (2016)

The OECD figures are around 25% higher than the calculations given by the IMF and Eurostat. OECD national debt calculations are usually higher than those given by the IMF and Eurostat.

However, the difference in the case of Austria is one of the largest and signifies that the Austrian government has backed a lot of loans to other organizations within the country.

Gross vs Net Debt

The IMF also routinely publishes net debt figures. The gross national debt of a country is all all of the debts represented by formal agreements, which means loans plus bonds.

Net debt is the gross debt minus all of the financial assets held by the country’s government. The IMF calculated that the net debt-to-GDP ratio of Austria was 54.3% at the end of 2017.

When compared to a gross debt-to-GDP ratio of 78.8%, you can see that the Austria government could easily pay off about a third of the country’s national debt if it sold off its assets.

Austria’s Debt Too High for Maastrict

The national debt of Austria is too high because under the Maastricht Treaty, all EU nations are obliged to bring their national debt-to-GDP ratios under 60%. In 2017, the government broke out of its five percent range to get the debt falling to the 60% level.

Economic Growth

The Austrian economy has grown constantly this century, except for a slight fall in 2009.

This growth means that a debt-to-GDP ratio that stays within a 5% range, is actually constantly rising, because the GDP against which that ratio is calculated represents more money each year.

What Is Austria’s Credit Rating?

The Austrian government pays attention to the ratings awarded by four of the world’s leading credit rating agencies. Of these, the Dominion Bond Rating Service gives Austria a “triple-A.” The  “AAA” credit rating is the highest score possible.

AgencyLong TermShort TermOutlook
Moody'sAa1P-1Stable
Standard & Poor'sAA+A-1+Stable
FitchAA+F1+Positive
DBRSAAAR-1 (high)Stable

Data last reviewed: Warning: data published 7 years ago. Verify before relying on it.

The other three ratings agencies do not rate the country’s creditworthiness as highly. However, all of them give Austria an A-grade rating.

Raising Austria’s Credit Rating

It is doubtful whether Austria will be able to get a full complement of triple-A ratings without bringing its national debt down to the Maastricht target of 60%. To achieve that goal, the government will need to pay down the debt  in absolute terms and not just rely on rising GDP eroding the debt-to-GDP ratio.

Who Manages Austria’s National Debt?

The parliament of the Republic of Austria has the ultimate responsibility for the debts of the country. All accounts and plans of the ruling administration have to be passed by the parliament before they can be implemented.

The government’s Ministry of Finance sets the annual budget, and so takes the decision each year on whether to increase or reduce the national debt.

Ongoing Debt Increases

As the graphs in the previous sections show, the Austrian government usually chooses to increase the national debt. Thus, funds must be raised.

The task of issuing government securities is the responsibility of the  Österreichische Bundesfinanzierungsagentur, the Austrian Federal Financing Agency.

How Does the Austrian Government Raise Loans?

The Austrian Federal Financing Agency has four methods of raising money for the government:

  1. Treasury bills
  2. Government bonds
  3. Medium-term Notes
  4. National savings bonds

Treasury Bills and Government Bonds

Treasury bills and government bonds are only sold directly by the Agency to an approved list of dealers. This creates the “primary market” and the approved buyers are called “primary dealers.”

The primary dealers then resell those assets on the Vienna Stock Exchange, which is the secondary market for Austrian government securities. Anyone can buy Treasury bills and bonds on the stock market.

Treasury bills provide short-term financing for the Austrian government. They have maturity dates of up to one year minus one day and are tradable on the Vienna Stock Exchange.

Austrian Treasury bills do not pay interest, but they are sold at a discount and redeemed at full face value.

Medium-Term Notes

Medium-term notes are sold directly into the market through the mediation of a commercial bank. Euro Medium-term Notes (EMTNs) are listed on the stock exchanges of Vienna and Luxembourg.

These notes may be denominated in any currency and have maturities between 7 days and 70 years. They are governed by English law.

The Australian Dollar Medium-term Notes are registered on the Sydney Stock Exchange and are governed by Australian law.

Bond Types

Austrian government bonds can be structured to pay either a fixed rate of interest or a floating rate. Maturities can be up to 100 years.

However, bonds usually have maturities of 5, 7, 11, or 15 years. Interest is paid annually in arrears. In 2017, the Austrian government issued a zero-interest five-year bond.

More Facts About Austria’s Debt

1,688×
You could wrap $1 bills around the Earth 1,688 times with the total debt amount.
47,360 km
Stacked flat, $1 bills would form a pile 47,360 km (29,428 miles) high.
0.1
That stack would reach the Moon and back 0.1 times.

Further Reading

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What is national debt?

National debt is the total amount a government owes to lenders - including domestic bondholders, foreign governments, central banks, and the public. It accumulates when annual spending exceeds tax revenue (a deficit). The debt-to-GDP ratio is the standard international measure: it shows what a country owes relative to the size of its economy. Most economists consider ratios below 60% sustainable; above 90%, research by the IMF suggests growth effects become measurable. See our full methodology.