Best Charge & Premium Travel Cards in Austria (2026)
Jules de Bruin
Expat in Vienna
Updated: June 6 2026 | Found helpful by 5 others
Updated June 2026. Charge cards settle in full monthly with no revolving credit line. The American Express Gold costs EUR 16/month and requires Austrian main residence plus EUR 1,651 net monthly income. The Diners Club Vintage costs EUR 16.59/month from year two and needs EUR 2,000 net monthly income with 8 lounge visits included. Amex acceptance is narrower than Visa/Mastercard. These are travel-and-insurance cards, not borrowing tools.
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What Is the Best Charge or Premium Travel Card in Austria?
The American Express Gold Card is the best overall charge card for most Austrian residents at EUR 16/month. For dedicated lounge access, the Diners Club Vintage includes 8 visits per year. For the broadest travel benefits, the Amex Platinum is the premium option. The card complete World Traveller Gold offers Mastercard acceptance with premium travel insurance.
American Express Gold Card
The American Express Gold Card is Austria's most popular premium charge card. At EUR 16 per month, it includes Vienna airport lounge access, Membership Rewards points, 2 free Gold supplementary cards, and travel insurance. Requires Austrian main residence and EUR 1,651 net monthly income.
Why we recommend it: Best overall premium charge card in Austria: lounge access, Membership Rewards, and supplementary cards at EUR 16 per month.
Best for: Frequent travelers in Austria who want Membership Rewards points and Vienna airport lounge access
Pros
- +Vienna airport lounge access included
- +2 free Gold supplementary cards
- +Membership Rewards points on every purchase
- +Comprehensive travel insurance
Cons
- −Narrower acceptance than Visa or Mastercard
- −Requires Austrian main residence
- −Full balance debited monthly, no revolving credit
- EUR 16 per month (EUR 192 per year)
- Vienna airport lounge access included
- 2 free Gold supplementary cards
- Membership Rewards points on all purchases
- Travel cancellation and medical insurance
- Requires Austrian main residence + EUR 1,651 net/month
Diners Club Vintage
The Diners Club Vintage costs EUR 8.25 per month in year one, then EUR 16.59 per month. It includes 8 lounge visits per year via the Diners Club global lounge network, Miles & More conversion, and premium travel insurance with doubled benefit sums. Requires EUR 2,000 net monthly income.
Why we recommend it: Best for lounge access with 8 included visits per year and premium travel insurance with doubled benefit sums.
Best for: Travelers who want structured lounge access and premium insurance as a secondary card
Pros
- +8 airport lounge visits per year included
- +Miles & More mileage conversion
- +Premium insurance with doubled benefit sums
- +Discounted intro fee in year one
Cons
- −Narrower acceptance than Visa or Mastercard
- −Best used as a secondary card alongside Visa/MC
- −Requires EUR 2,000 net monthly income
- EUR 8.25/month year one, EUR 16.59/month thereafter
- 8 lounge visits per year (1,000+ lounges worldwide)
- Miles & More mileage conversion
- Premium travel insurance with doubled benefit sums
- Requires EUR 2,000 net monthly income
American Express Platinum Card
The American Express Platinum Card is the top-tier travel charge card from Amex in Austria. It includes access to the broadest lounge collection, concierge service, and comprehensive travel benefits. Best for frequent travelers who spend heavily on travel and dining.
Why we recommend it: Premium tier for frequent travelers who need the broadest lounge network and concierge access.
Best for: High-frequency travelers who want the most comprehensive lounge network and premium concierge service
Pros
- +Broadest lounge network via Amex Global Lounge Collection
- +Concierge service included
- +Comprehensive travel benefits and protections
- +Hotel and travel partner status benefits
Cons
- −Higher annual fee than the Gold Card
- −Narrower acceptance than Visa or Mastercard
- −Full balance debited monthly, no revolving credit
- Access to Amex Global Lounge Collection
- Personal concierge service
- Comprehensive travel and purchase insurance
- Hotel partner status and benefits
- Membership Rewards points on all purchases
card complete Mastercard World Traveller Gold
The card complete Mastercard World Traveller Gold offers premium travel insurance and purchase protection with Mastercard's near-universal acceptance in Austria. Available through Austrian banks including Erste, Raiffeisen, and BAWAG. A practical choice for travelers who find Amex acceptance a limitation.
Why we recommend it: Best for Mastercard acceptance with premium travel insurance and protections included.
Best for: Travelers who want premium insurance and near-universal Mastercard acceptance in Austria and abroad
Pros
- +Near-universal Mastercard acceptance in Austria
- +Premium travel insurance included
- +Purchase protection and extended warranty
- +Issued via Austrian banks (Erste, Raiffeisen, BAWAG)
Cons
- −No lounge access at Gold tier
- −Foreign transaction fees apply
- −Application requires existing bank relationship
- Near-universal Mastercard acceptance
- Premium travel cancellation and medical insurance
- Purchase protection and extended warranty
- Available through major Austrian banks
- Contactless and mobile wallet support
Charge and Premium Travel Card Comparison
| Card | Issuer | Monthly Fee | Income Req. | Lounge Access |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amex Gold | American Express | EUR 16 | EUR 1,651 net/mo | Vienna (VIE) |
| Diners Club Vintage | Diners Club | EUR 8.25 (yr 1), EUR 16.59 | EUR 2,000 net/mo | 8 visits/year |
| Amex Platinum | American Express | Contact Amex | Higher threshold | Global Lounge Collection |
| card complete World Traveller Gold | card complete | Contact your bank | Varies by bank | No |
| Diners Club Gold | Diners Club | Contact Diners | EUR 2,000 net/mo | Standard lounge access |
| card complete World Traveller Black | card complete | Contact your bank | Higher threshold | Lounge access included |
Sources: American Express Austria, Diners Club Austria, card complete. Fees as of June 2026.
What Is a Charge Card and How Does It Differ from a Credit Card?
A charge card requires the full balance to be repaid each billing cycle. There is no revolving credit line and no option to pay only a minimum amount. The OeNB (Austrian National Bank) distinguishes charge cards from revolving credit cards: charge cards function as a payment convenience tool, not a borrowing instrument. See the OeNB payment statistics for the regulatory distinction.
In practice, the full outstanding balance is debited from your linked Austrian bank account at the end of each billing period, typically the first of the following month. If your account lacks sufficient funds, the debit fails and a late payment fee applies. There is no option to carry a balance forward at interest. This makes American Express and Diners Club cards fundamentally different from revolving credit products.
For everyday spending that requires a credit line or revolving facility, see our credit cards guide for cards from free.at, N26, and Austrian banks.
Is American Express Accepted in Austria?
American Express states that the card is accepted at many thousands of locations across Austria, including major supermarkets, hotels, airlines, and larger restaurants. However, acceptance is narrower than Visa or Mastercard, which are accepted at near-universal point-of-sale terminals across the country.
In practice, smaller businesses, bakeries, traditional restaurants, and local service providers in Austria often only accept Bankomatkarte (the domestic debit card) or cash. When traveling outside Vienna, Amex acceptance drops further. The practical recommendation is to carry a Visa or Mastercard alongside your Amex for situations where Amex is not taken.
Diners Club faces a similar acceptance constraint. Both American Express and Diners Club cards are best treated as travel-and-rewards cards rather than primary everyday spending instruments in Austria. The card complete World Traveller Gold provides premium insurance with Mastercard acceptance for those who find Amex limiting.
What Income Do You Need for an Amex or Diners Card?
The American Express Gold Card requires Austrian main residence (registered Meldezettel) and a minimum net monthly income of EUR 1,651. This threshold ensures the applicant can service the full monthly debit of the charge card. American Express checks income documentation as part of the application, typically via payslips or tax assessments.
The Diners Club Vintage requires a minimum net monthly income of EUR 2,000. As with American Express, the income check is not a credit score in the revolving-credit sense but a repayment capacity check: because the full balance is debited monthly, the issuer needs confidence the applicant earns enough to cover their monthly spend.
Insurance benefits on both Amex and Diners Club cards typically require that the trip was charged to the card, or at least part of it. Check the full terms on the respective issuer sites before relying on coverage.
Which Cards Include Airport Lounge Access?
The American Express Gold Card includes access to the Vienna International Airport (VIE) lounge. The American Express Platinum Card includes access to the full Amex Global Lounge Collection, which covers over 1,400 lounges worldwide including Priority Pass, Delta Sky Club, Centurion Lounges, and others.
The Diners Club Vintage includes 8 lounge visits per year via the Diners Club lounge network, which covers over 1,000 lounges worldwide. Additional visits beyond the 8 included are charged at the standard access rate. The Diners Club Gold card provides standard lounge access at a lower price point.
The card complete World Traveller Black includes lounge access, while the card complete World Traveller Gold does not. If lounge access is the primary requirement and you fly fewer than 8 times per year, the Diners Club Vintage at EUR 16.59/month from year two offers the best structured lounge benefit among Austrian charge cards.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use American Express everywhere in Austria?
American Express is accepted at many thousands of locations in Austria, including major supermarkets, hotels, airlines, and larger restaurants. However, acceptance is narrower than Visa or Mastercard. Smaller shops, bakeries, and local restaurants often only take Bankomatkarte or cash. Always carry a Visa or Mastercard as a backup when using Amex in Austria.
What is the difference between a charge card and a credit card?
A charge card requires full repayment of the outstanding balance each billing cycle. There is no revolving credit line and no option to carry a balance with interest. A credit card allows you to pay a minimum amount and carry the rest forward, accruing interest. Most Austrian premium cards from American Express and Diners Club operate as charge cards, not revolving credit cards.
What income do you need for an American Express card in Austria?
The American Express Gold Card in Austria requires Austrian main residence and a minimum net monthly income of EUR 1,651. The Platinum Card has a higher threshold. Amex checks income to confirm repayment capacity, as the charge card balance is debited in full each month.
Does the Diners Club card include lounge access?
Yes. The Diners Club Vintage card includes 8 airport lounge visits per year via the Diners Club lounge network, which covers over 1,000 lounges worldwide. Additional visits cost extra. The card also includes premium travel insurance with doubled benefit sums compared to standard Gold cards, and Miles & More mileage conversion.
Is the American Express Gold Card worth it in Austria?
The American Express Gold Card costs EUR 16 per month and includes Membership Rewards points, Vienna airport lounge access, 2 free Gold supplementary cards, and travel insurance. It is worth it for frequent travelers who value lounge access and rewards. For pure travel insurance without rewards, the card complete World Traveller Gold at a similar price offers broader Mastercard acceptance.
Sources: American Express Austria, Diners Club Austria, card complete, OeNB. Updated: June 2026.
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