Parking Scams in Austria: New Law Puts a Stop to the Scheme Involving Trespass Claims

Published on: March 31, 2026Categories: LegalReading time: 3 min.
Avatar photo
Nora Wölflick writes about interesting, current topics for the Love & Law Blog at Recht 24/7.

Image: T.Vyc / Shutterstock.com

A brief stop, a wrong turn, or parking in a private lot for just a few minutes—and in Austria, this has often resulted in costly fines. Many drivers have received letters demanding payments of up to 600 euros. These were accompanied by short deadlines and a clear threat: pay up, or face a lawsuit for trespassing. This very scam is now being made significantly more difficult to pull off.

According to the Austrian Chamber of Labor, a new law has been in effect in Austria since January 2026 that significantly reduces the costs of such proceedings. This undermines the business model behind many of these threatening letters. After all, the pressure relied primarily on the fact that those affected feared even higher court and legal fees.

Here's how the model worked

For many of those affected, the situation unfolded in a similar way. A vehicle would stop briefly on private property or turn around in a parking lot. Shortly afterward, a letter would arrive in the mail. The charge: trespassing. The demand: several hundred euros. Those who did not pay promptly faced further consequences.

That was precisely the problem. Many people likely paid not because they considered the claim fair, but because they wanted to avoid trouble. So it was often less about the actual damage and more about deterrence. The Chamber of Labor has been reporting for years on an increasing number of inquiries regarding such cases. The issue was therefore no longer an isolated incident.

What the new law changes

The most important point: Legal costs have been significantly reduced. If a lawsuit is actually filed over an alleged trespass involving a vehicle and the claim is not contested, the costs now amount to only about 200 euros. According to the new regulations, this amount includes both the court fee of 70 euros and the opposing attorney’s fees.

This removes the key leverage used in many letters. Anyone seeking to intimidate others needs to create a sense of impending doom. As this sense diminishes, even excessive demands lose their impact.

Courts had already set limits in the past. For example, it was made clear that warning letter firms and collection agencies are not permitted to take action against alleged trespassers on their own. Furthermore, those affected are not automatically required to pay any additional fees charged, such as for surveillance, administration, or internal processing.

More clarity for drivers

Another new development is that the Supreme Court will now be able to hear such cases. This is important because it will help establish a more consistent approach throughout Austria. For consumers, this means, above all, greater security.

This change is so significant because it tackles the problem at its root. Not every brief stop should be turned into a lucrative means of intimidation. A legal system is not meant to pressure ordinary drivers with threatening letters.

The key issue remains, however: the fact that serious measures are only now being taken also shows just how long this practice was allowed to continue. The new law is an important blow against parking rip-offs. It’s just coming rather late—and is thus also a tacit admission that some people have made a fortune over the years by preying on the fears of ordinary drivers.

 

Sources: pnp.de, arbeiterkammer.at

Don't let yourself get ripped off any longer—find out about your rights in parking disputes. Book a consultation now and be on the safe side!

At a fixed price of 169 EURO (gross)