Austria Salzburg Hallstatt Innsbruck Salzkammergut Tyrol Complete Guide 2026

Austria Salzburg Hallstatt Innsbruck Salzkammergut Tyrol Complete Guide 2026

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Austria Complete Guide 2026: Salzburg, Hallstatt, Innsbruck, Salzkammergut and the Tyrolean Alps

TL;DR

I planned three weeks across Austria around four anchors: Salzburg's UNESCO 1996 Old Town with Mozart's birthplace at Getreidegasse 9 (born January 27, 1756), Hallstatt's 7,000-year salt mountain and 8.55 km² lake, Innsbruck's Goldenes Dachl from 1500 with 2,657 gilded copper tiles, and the Salzkammergut's 76 lakes. I added Vienna's Schönbrunn (Maria Theresa, 1740 to 1780, 1,441 rooms), the Wachau UNESCO 2000 corridor with Melk Abbey (1089, rebuilt 1700 to 1736), Graz Old Town UNESCO 1999, Eisriesenwelt at Werfen (42 km, world's longest ice cave), and Krimml Falls (380 m, highest in Austria). I traveled late spring, mixing ÖBB Railjet trains with one rental car loop. Salzburg deserves two full days. Hallstatt works as a 1.5-hour day trip by Postbus, but an overnight is better. Innsbruck rewards three days if you include Nordkette (574 m to 2,256 m in 20 minutes) and Bergisel Ski Jump (Zaha Hadid, 2002 redesign).

Why I went in 2026

Three calendar reasons pulled me toward this trip. January 27, 2026 marked 270 years since Mozart's birth, with Salzburg's concert calendar leaning into anniversary programming. The Salzburg Festival turned 106 years old (founded 1920 by Max Reinhardt, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, and Richard Strauss), and Jedermann on Domplatz remained the signature open-air event. The Sound of Music film passed its 60th anniversary (released March 1965).

Practical reasons too. Austria has been in Schengen for years, the euro has been the currency since 1999, and ETIAS, the European travel authorization for visa-exempt nationals, came into operational status in mid-2026. For Indian passport holders like me, the Schengen short-stay visa is still the standard route, and ETIAS does not replace it. Spring weather in Salzburg ran 14 to 22 degrees Celsius; the Nordkette upper station still had snow in late May.

Background: from Roman Noricum to the Second Republic

The Celts ran the salt economy around Hallstatt long before Rome arrived. The Hallstatt Culture (about 800 to 450 BCE) gave the European Early Iron Age its name. Rome absorbed the area into Noricum, then Bavarian dukes took over after the empire faded. The Babenberg dynasty ruled from 976 to 1246, and the House of Habsburg picked up the thread in 1273 and held power until 1918, one of the longest reigning dynasties in European history.

Maximilian I (Holy Roman Emperor 1493 to 1519) commissioned the Goldenes Dachl in Innsbruck around 1500 and is honored with a monument of 28 oversized bronze statues in the Hofkirche from 1553. Maria Theresa (1740 to 1780) gave Schönbrunn its baroque form and founded Tiergarten Schönbrunn in 1752, the oldest continuously operating zoo in the world. Franz Joseph I reigned from 1848 to 1916; his summer residence at Bad Ischl, the Kaiservilla from 1854, was where he signed the declaration of war in July 1914.

The Habsburg Empire dissolved in 1918. The First Austrian Republic ran from 1918 to 1938. The Anschluss, the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany, took place on March 12, 1938. Maria von Trapp and her family left within months. Allied occupation lasted from 1945 to 1955. The Austrian State Treaty was signed at Belvedere in Vienna on May 15, 1955, restoring full sovereignty and followed by a constitutional declaration of permanent neutrality. Austria joined the European Union on January 1, 1995, and adopted the euro in 1999.

Tier 1: the places I would not skip

Salzburg: Mozart, fortress, festival

Salzburg's Historic Centre covers about 240,000 sqm and earned UNESCO status in 1996. The first morning I crossed the Salzach river onto Getreidegasse. Mozart's Birthplace at Getreidegasse 9 spreads across four floors of the yellow building where Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born on January 27, 1756. The museum holds a child-sized violin, the clavichord on which he reportedly composed parts of the Magic Flute, and original letters. Admission was EUR 13.

I walked uphill to Hohensalzburg Fortress. Construction began in 1077 under Archbishop Gebhard. The fortress sits 250 m above the Mönchsberg ridge and is the largest fully preserved fortress in Central Europe, drawing about 1.2 million visitors a year. The funicular plus admission combined ticket cost EUR 17.30. The Princes' Chambers, the Salzburg Bull pipe organ, and the Fortress Museum were the highlights.

Mirabell Palace from 1606 (built by Prince Archbishop Wolf Dietrich for Salome Alt) gave me the Pegasus Fountain and the gardens used in the Do Re Mi sequence of the Sound of Music. The Marble Hall is open and free.

The Salzburg Festival runs late July to the end of August. It has run every summer since 1920 except during wartime suspension. Jedermann, the morality play by Hugo von Hofmannsthal, has opened the festival on Domplatz nearly every year since the founding. Opera tickets inside the Festspielhaus (the great house dates to 1956) ranged from EUR 30 to EUR 450. The Felsenreitschule, carved into the cliff face, is my favorite of the festival venues.

The Sound of Music Tour, a 4-hour coach circuit covering Schloss Leopoldskron, Hellbrunn's gazebo, St Peter's Cemetery, Nonnberg abbey gates, Mirabell Gardens, and Untersberg, cost about EUR 50. Half the bus on my run was from East and Southeast Asia.

Mozartkugel, pistachio-marzipan-nougat balls coated in dark chocolate, was first made by Paul Fürst in 1890. The original Café Fürst on Brodgasse still sells them. Salzburg is about 200 km from Vienna airport but has its own airport (SZG).

Hallstatt and the Salzkammergut

Hallstatt is a village of about 800 people on the west shore of Hallstättersee, an alpine lake of 8.55 km². The Hallstatt-Dachstein/Salzkammergut cultural landscape earned UNESCO inscription in 1997 for 7,000 years of continuous salt mining on the Hallstätter Salzberg above the village, the oldest salt mine in the world.

The Salzwelten salt mine tour runs about 90 minutes through wooden miner's slides, an underground salt lake with light show, and a small railway out. Admission with the funicular and Skywalk Welterbeblick was EUR 38. The Skywalk hangs 350 m over the village.

The Beinhaus (Bone House) in the small cemetery beside the parish church holds about 1,200 painted skulls. The practice ran from the 12th century into the 20th because the cemetery is too small for ground burial. Names, dates, and floral motifs are inked onto each.

I took the cable car up to Krippenstein at 2,109 m for the Five Fingers viewing platform, a steel structure hanging over a vertical drop with the Dachstein massif in view. The same complex hosts the Dachstein Eishöhle ice cave, separate from Eisriesenwelt and easier to reach.

The wider Salzkammergut covers 76 lakes across Upper Austria, Salzburg state, and Styria. I built two days around Wolfgangsee (Schafberg cog railway), Attersee (Gustav Klimt summered here from 1900), Mondsee (the abbey church is the wedding scene in the Sound of Music), and Traunsee. Lake Hallstatt itself stretches about 38 km of shore combined.

Bad Ischl was the summer capital of the Habsburg court from 1849. Franz Joseph I (1848 to 1916) spent more than 60 summers at the Kaiservilla, completed in 1854 as a wedding gift from his mother. The villa is still owned by the Habsburg family and open for guided tours.

Innsbruck and the Tyrolean Alps

Innsbruck sits in the Inn Valley at 574 m, ringed by the Nordkette to the north and the Patscherkofel to the south. The Goldenes Dachl on Herzog-Friedrich-Strasse was completed around 1500 for Emperor Maximilian I. The bay window roof carries 2,657 fire-gilded copper tiles. The small museum behind it explains how Maximilian used the balcony to watch tournaments in the square below.

The Hofburg was rebuilt in the late 1500s and expanded under Maria Theresa from the late 1740s into the 1770s (the principal rooms reflect a 1500 to 1773 sequence). The Giant's Hall (Riesensaal) runs 31 m long with ceiling frescoes by Franz Anton Maulbertsch. The Empress's Apartments preserve furniture from the Maria Theresa era.

The Hofkirche from 1553 holds the cenotaph of Maximilian I surrounded by 28 oversized bronze statues of his real and mythological ancestors, ordered by his grandson Ferdinand I. The emperor's actual remains are at Wiener Neustadt; the monument here is the artistic memorial.

Bergisel Ski Jump on the southern hill was redesigned by Zaha Hadid Architects in 2002. It hosts the third stage of the Four Hills Tournament every January, with jumpers exceeding 250 km/h and crowds of about 50,000 at the base. The cafe and terrace at the top of the tower open most of the year for about EUR 10.50.

The Nordkette Cable Car, also designed in part by Zaha Hadid in 2002 for the lower funicular stations, runs from Innsbruck at 574 m up to Hafelekar at 2,256 m in about 20 minutes across four stations. The last 5-minute cable car leg from Seegrube opens 24 km of marked hiking in summer.

The Tyrolean Alps reach beyond Innsbruck. The Stubai Glacier offers year-round skiing on the higher pistes. The Wilder Kaiser massif east of Innsbruck holds some of the cleanest limestone in the Alps. I drove a loop through wood-frame villages near Söll and Going, then back through Telfes.

Wachau Valley, Melk Abbey, and Dürnstein

The Wachau Cultural Landscape, a 33 km Danube corridor between Krems and Melk, earned UNESCO status in 2000. Melk Abbey was founded in 1089 on a rock above the Danube and rebuilt in baroque between 1700 and 1736 by Jakob Prandtauer. The Stiftsbibliothek library holds about 100,000 volumes, with frescoes by Paul Troger. The abbey church's marble columns are wood painted to look like stone, a baroque trick that worked on me until the guide pointed it out.

Downstream, Spitz an der Donau sits among Riesling and Grüner Veltliner terraces of the Wachau DAC. Dürnstein, with the ruin of Kuenringerburg castle above the river, is where Duke Leopold V of Austria imprisoned King Richard the Lionheart from December 1192 to March 1193 after the Third Crusade.

Graz Old Town

Graz Old Town earned UNESCO status in 1999, extended in 2010 to include Schloss Eggenberg. The Old Town covers about 1.2 km² along the Mur river. The Schlossberg is a wooded hill rising 473 m within the city, with the freestanding Clock Tower (Uhrturm) from 1561 surviving from the original fortress demolished under Napoleon's 1809 terms. The Murinsel floating island in the river dates from 2003 and works as a sunset spot.

Krimml Falls and Hohe Tauern

Krimmler Wasserfälle in Salzburg state are the highest waterfall in Austria at 380 m total, in three cascades. They sit inside Hohe Tauern National Park, 1,856 km², the largest national park in the Alps. I walked the lower path in about an hour to the second platform.

Eisriesenwelt at Werfen

Eisriesenwelt, the World of the Ice Giants, runs 42 km inside the Hochkogel massif near Werfen, making it the world's longest ice cave. The tourist tour covers the first 1 km, lit by carbide lamps held by guides. The cave stays below freezing year-round. Wear layers even in August.

Tier 2: Vienna Schönbrunn

I treat Vienna as Tier 2 here because Block 33 covers the full city and Block 40 the Habsburg deep dive. Schönbrunn Palace, the Habsburg summer residence, was built mostly under Maria Theresa from 1740 to 1780 in rococo on baroque foundations. It holds 1,441 rooms (40 open to the public), with the Great Gallery, the Hall of Mirrors where six-year-old Mozart played for the Empress in 1762, and the Vieux-Laque Room. The Gloriette on the hill behind was completed in 1775. Tiergarten Schönbrunn, founded in 1752, is the world's oldest continuously operating zoo.

Cost table

Conversion used: EUR 1 equals about USD 1.07 and INR 96 (May 2026 rates).

Item EUR USD INR
Schengen visa (Indian passport, single entry) 90 96 8,640
ETIAS authorization (visa-exempt nationals, mid-2026) 7 7.50 670
Hostel dorm bed, Salzburg/Vienna 30 to 50 32 to 54 2,880 to 4,800
Mid-range hotel double, Salzburg 100 to 200 107 to 214 9,600 to 19,200
Mid-range hotel double, Vienna 90 to 180 96 to 193 8,640 to 17,280
Hohensalzburg Fortress and funicular combined 17.30 18.50 1,660
Hallstatt Salt Mine, Skywalk, and funicular 38 41 3,650
Mozart Birthplace, Getreidegasse 9 13 14 1,250
Salzburg Festival opera ticket 30 to 450 32 to 482 2,880 to 43,200
Bergisel Ski Jump tower 10.50 11.20 1,008
Sound of Music Tour (4 hours, coach) 50 53.50 4,800
Eisriesenwelt ice cave (entry, cable car, and tour) 36 38.50 3,456
Schönbrunn Grand Tour 31 33 2,976
Wiener Schnitzel main, sit-down 18 to 28 19 to 30 1,728 to 2,688
Tafelspitz with sides 22 to 30 23.50 to 32 2,112 to 2,880
Apfelstrudel slice with cream 5 to 8 5.30 to 8.60 480 to 770
Sachertorte slice (Café Sacher, Vienna) 8 to 10 8.60 to 10.70 770 to 960
Stiegl beer, 0.5 L 4 to 7 4.30 to 7.50 384 to 670
Rental car, compact, per day 30 to 55 32 to 59 2,880 to 5,280
ÖBB Railjet Salzburg to Vienna, 2.5h, advance 35 to 60 37 to 64 3,360 to 5,760
ÖBB Railjet Innsbruck to Vienna, 4h, advance 50 to 80 53.50 to 86 4,800 to 7,680
Salzburg Card, 24 hours 27 29 2,592
Innsbruck Card, 24 hours 65 70 6,240

Planning notes

Visa and entry. Austria is in the Schengen Area, so Indian passport holders need a Schengen short-stay visa, applied through the consulate of the country where you spend the most time. ETIAS is the new authorization for visa-exempt nationals (it does not apply to Indians) and moved into operational status in mid-2026. Carry proof of return flight, hotel bookings, and travel insurance for at least EUR 30,000 medical cover.

Best season. May through September is the comfort window for lakes, valleys, and hiking. July and August deliver the Salzburg Festival but also the heaviest visitor flow. December through February gives Christmas markets (Salzburg's runs since 1491 at Domplatz and Residenzplatz) and full ski conditions on Stubai Glacier, Nordkette, and Kitzbühel. Late September and early October pair golden larch color with calmer trains.

Airports. Vienna International (VIE) is the main gateway. Salzburg W. A. Mozart (SZG) handles regional and budget flights. Innsbruck (INN) sits in the Inn Valley with one of the more dramatic landing approaches in Europe.

Trains. ÖBB Railjet is the workhorse. Salzburg to Vienna runs 2.5 hours for EUR 35 to 60 if booked in advance. Innsbruck to Vienna takes 4 hours for EUR 50 to 80. Salzburg to Hallstatt takes 2.5 hours including a small ferry across the lake. Postbus 150 toward Hallstatt runs 1.5 hours by road.

City passes. The Salzburg Card 24 hours at EUR 27 covers Hohensalzburg funicular, Mozart Birthplace, Mirabell, public transport, and most Old Town attractions. The Innsbruck Card 24 hours at EUR 65 covers Nordkette, Bergisel, Hofburg, Hofkirche, Goldenes Dachl, and city buses. Both pay for themselves in one sightseeing day.

Food I ate often. Wiener Schnitzel is veal, breaded, fried in clarified butter. Tafelspitz is boiled beef with apple-horseradish and chive sauces, Franz Joseph's preferred dish. Sachertorte was invented by Franz Sacher in 1832 for Prince Metternich. Apfelstrudel is the Habsburg pastry standard. Mozartkugel was created in 1890 by Paul Fürst. Stiegl, the Salzburg brewery, has been brewing since 1492.

FAQs

1. Do I need a Schengen visa or ETIAS as an Indian traveler?
Indian passport holders need a Schengen short-stay visa, not ETIAS. ETIAS is for visa-exempt nationals (USA, UK, Japan, and similar) and came into operational status in mid-2026. Apply through the consulate of the country you spend the most time in, with proof of bookings, return flight, and EUR 30,000 medical insurance.

2. Is Salzburg better as a 2-day or 3-day stop?
Two full days handle the Old Town, Hohensalzburg, Mozart Birthplace, Mirabell, and one evening concert. A third day fits the Sound of Music tour or a half-day to the Eagle's Nest at Berchtesgaden across the German border. I would pick three days if your calendar permits.

3. Can I day-trip to Hallstatt from Salzburg?
Yes. By Postbus or rental car the door-to-village time runs about 1.5 hours via the south route, or 2 hours by train via Attnang-Puchheim with a small ferry transfer. An overnight is better if you want sunrise after the bus tour wave clears.

4. Is the Sound of Music tour worth booking ahead?
Book at least 48 hours ahead in summer. About half the seats on busier days come from East and Southeast Asian travelers. The 4-hour route covers the gazebo, Mirabell Gardens, abbey gates, St Peter's Cemetery, Schloss Leopoldskron, and the Untersberg viewpoint.

5. Do I need to dress up for Mozart concerts in Salzburg?
For the Salzburg Festival inside the Felsenreitschule or Großes Festspielhaus, expect smart attire in the evenings. For the Mozart Dinner at St Peter Stiftskeller, chamber concerts at Mirabell Marble Hall, or Mozart Residence recitals, smart casual is fine.

6. What plug type does Austria use?
Type C and Type F sockets, 230V, 50Hz. European two-round-pin plugs work across the country.

7. How does tipping work?
Round up by 5 to 10 percent in cafes and restaurants. Hand the rounded total to the server when paying. Taxis: round up to the next euro. Hotel housekeeping: EUR 1 to 2 per night.

8. How far ahead should I book the Salzburg Festival?
Six to twelve months for premium opera nights and Jedermann. The general sale opens in early November for the following summer. Side concerts can be booked closer in.

German and Austrian phrases I used

Phrase Pronunciation Meaning
Grüß Gott groos-got Hello (formal, used widely in Austria)
Servus ser-voos Hi / bye (informal, friendly)
Auf Wiedersehen owf VEE-der-zayn Goodbye (formal)
Bitte BIT-tuh Please / you're welcome
Danke DAHN-kuh Thank you
Danke schön DAHN-kuh shoen Thank you very much
Entschuldigung ent-SHOOL-dee-goong Excuse me / sorry
Ja / Nein yah / nine Yes / no
Wie viel kostet das? vee feel KOS-tet dass How much does it cost?
Die Rechnung, bitte dee REKH-noong BIT-tuh The bill, please
Sprechen Sie Englisch? SHPREKH-en zee ENG-lish Do you speak English?
Wo ist...? voh ist Where is...?
Mahlzeit MAHL-tsait Enjoy your meal
Prost prohst Cheers
Eine Karte, bitte EYE-nuh KAR-tuh BIT-tuh One ticket, please
Hauptbahnhof HOWPT-bahn-hohf Main train station
Schloss shloss Castle / palace

Cultural notes

The Salzburg Festival has run since 1920, making the 2026 edition its 106th year. Hugo von Hofmannsthal wrote Jedermann in 1911, and Max Reinhardt staged it on Domplatz at the festival's opening in 1920. The play has opened nearly every edition since. Premium opera tickets ran EUR 30 in upper tiers to EUR 450 for first parquet.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born January 27, 1756, at Getreidegasse 9 in Salzburg. He produced 626 cataloged works in the Köchel listing before his death in Vienna on December 5, 1791, at age 35. Eine kleine Nachtmusik (1787), The Magic Flute (1791), the Marriage of Figaro (1786), and the unfinished Requiem (1791) are most often programmed in Salzburg's year-round chamber series.

The Sound of Music opened in March 1965 and turned 60 in 2026. The film is loosely based on Maria von Trapp's memoir; the real family left Austria in 1938, weeks after the Anschluss, by train to Italy with their tour manager, not over the Alps to Switzerland as the film implies. The film remains a strong draw for travelers from East and Southeast Asia.

Wiener Schnitzel's roots are Italian (Milanese cotoletta) and migrated north during the Habsburg connection to Lombardy. Austrian law requires genuine Wiener Schnitzel to be veal; pork is sold as Schweinsschnitzel or Schnitzel Wiener Art. Tafelspitz, boiled beef from a specific rump cut, was Franz Joseph's preferred dish at the Hofburg and Schönbrunn.

Hallstatt has a 21st-century footnote. A property developer in Guangdong, China, completed a near-replica of the village called Hallstatt See in 2012. The original responded with mixed feelings, then accepted the global attention. The 800-person village now asks visitors to refrain from photographing private property and to stay on marked paths.

Sachertorte was created in 1832 by Franz Sacher, a 16-year-old apprentice in the kitchen of Prince Klemens von Metternich. His son Eduard refined the recipe at the Hotel Sacher in Vienna, and the legal battle over who could call their cake the original ran between Hotel Sacher and Demel for years. Both versions are available today.

Pre-trip preparation

  • Visa and ETIAS. Confirm Schengen visa for Indian passport holders; for visa-exempt nationals, complete ETIAS online once required in mid-2026.
  • Plug and power. Type C and Type F sockets, 230V, 50Hz.
  • Layers. Even in July the Nordkette upper station sits at 8 degrees Celsius. Pack a fleece, windproof shell, and warm hat for Eisriesenwelt and any glacier.
  • Walking shoes. Salzburg, Hallstatt, and Wachau villages are cobblestone heavy. Take broken-in shoes with grip.
  • Modest layers for churches. Cover shoulders and knees for Salzburg Cathedral, Melk Abbey, and St Peter's.
  • Reservations. Salzburg Festival 6 to 12 months ahead. Mozart Dinner at St Peter Stiftskeller 1 to 2 weeks ahead. Hallstatt salt mine and Eisriesenwelt morning slots, 1 week ahead in summer.
  • Cash and cards. Most places take cards. Carry EUR 100 to 150 cash for small cafes, mountain huts, and tipping.
  • Travel insurance. EUR 30,000 medical minimum for Schengen visa; I would carry EUR 50,000 for alpine activity.

Itineraries

5-day route: Salzburg, Hallstatt, Innsbruck

  • Day 1. Salzburg Old Town, Getreidegasse, Mozart Birthplace, evening Mirabell Gardens.
  • Day 2. Hohensalzburg Fortress morning, St Peter's Archabbey afternoon, evening Mozart concert at Mirabell Marble Hall.
  • Day 3. Hallstatt by Postbus or train via Attnang-Puchheim. Salt Mine, Skywalk, Beinhaus, lakeside walk. Overnight recommended.
  • Day 4. Railjet to Innsbruck. Goldenes Dachl, Hofkirche, Hofburg, Maria-Theresien-Strasse.
  • Day 5. Morning Nordkette to Hafelekar (2,256 m), afternoon Bergisel Ski Jump.

8-day route: add Salzkammergut and Vienna

Start with the 5-day route, then:

  • Day 6. Salzkammergut loop by rental car: Wolfgangsee, Bad Ischl Kaiservilla, Mondsee abbey church.
  • Day 7. Salzburg to Vienna via Melk Abbey. Arrive Vienna evening.
  • Day 8. Schönbrunn Grand Tour, Gloriette, Tiergarten, evening Belvedere or Naschmarkt.

12-day grand tour: Wachau, Graz, Krimml, Eisriesenwelt

Add to the 8-day route:

  • Day 9. Wachau: Krems to Melk by Danube boat, Dürnstein castle ruin, Spitz Riesling.
  • Day 10. Eisriesenwelt ice cave at Werfen (4 hours including approach), back to Salzburg.
  • Day 11. Krimml Falls and Hohe Tauern, overnight Zell am See.
  • Day 12. Graz: Schlossberg Clock Tower, Schloss Eggenberg, Murinsel sunset.

Related guides on this site

  • Block 33: Vienna Complete Guide 2026, Schönbrunn, Hofburg, Ringstrasse, Coffee Houses
  • Block 40: Habsburg Heritage Deep Dive, Maria Theresa to Franz Joseph
  • Bavaria and Berchtesgaden Complete Guide, Munich, Königssee, Neuschwanstein
  • Switzerland Alps Guide, Zermatt, Interlaken, Lucerne
  • Czech Republic Complete Guide, Prague, Český Krumlov, Karlovy Vary
  • Northern Italy and Dolomites, Bolzano, Cortina d'Ampezzo, Lake Garda

External references

  • UNESCO World Heritage Centre (whc.unesco.org): Salzburg (1996), Hallstatt-Dachstein/Salzkammergut (1997), Graz Historic Centre (1999) and Schloss Eggenberg (2010), Wachau (2000), Schönbrunn (1996), Vienna (2001), Semmering Railway (1998)
  • Austrian National Tourist Office: austria.info
  • Austrian Federal Railways: oebb.at
  • Wikipedia: Salzburg Festival, Hallstatt, Mozart, House of Habsburg, Anschluss, Austrian State Treaty
  • Wikivoyage: Austria, Salzburg, Hallstatt, Innsbruck, Salzkammergut, Wachau

Last updated: 2026-05-18

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