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Verified · 2026-05-14 Ownership disclosure
Donation crowdfunding · Austria

Best donation crowdfunding platforms in Austria

The platforms Austrian charities should use — how donations reach the tax office automatically, and why no single payment rail dominates here.

Top pick for Austria

On €100 via EPS, 4fund.com delivers €100.00 to the recipient.

What wins here: eps + SEPA pass-through · automatic donation reporting · EEA data residency

“For an Austrian charity, the strongest pick pairs eps and SEPA support at cost with the donor data it needs for automatic deduction reporting — and EEA-only data residency, which Austrian organisers value over raw brand reach.”

Recipient keeps · per €100
€100.00
Read 4fund.com review →
01

Giving in Austria

Dominant payment methods, the local currency, regulators, and the tax regime — the context that decides which platform actually serves a campaign here.

Austria has no single dominant payment rail the way the Netherlands has iDEAL. Online giving spreads across eps-Überweisung (the bank-to-bank standard built jointly by Austria's banks, accepted by the large majority of merchants), credit and debit cards, and PayPal, which most Austrians use somewhere. Because eps and SEPA settle bank-to-bank at low cost, platforms that support them deliver more of each euro to the cause than those routing everything over card rails.

What makes Austria distinctive is the donation-deductibility machinery. Gifts to an organisation on the Finance Ministry's list of beneficiary recipients (or named in §4a of the Einkommensteuergesetz) are deductible up to 10% of the donor's income — and since 2017 the charity reports the gift to the tax office itself, so the deduction appears automatically. The donor and recipient sides of the tax question are quite different, which is why this guide splits them below.

On the payments side the regulator is the FMA (Finanzmarktaufsicht); donor data is governed by the DSGVO, Austria's GDPR implementation. EEA data residency is effectively expected by Austrian nonprofits handling supporter data, so platforms storing donor PII outside the EEA carry a heavier compliance burden.

02

Top platforms for Austria

Ranked by how much of every 100 donated reaches the recipient under the local method (switch it to see the ranking move). We exclude platforms without Trustpilot reviews; the full catalogue is on the index.

Recipient-gets is shown for EPS — the dominant method in Austria.

Method
# Platform · best for Recipient gets · per 100 Trustpilot Countries Residency
1
4fund.com ★ Winner
Individuals, charities, and small organisations across the EEA who want a multilingual, no-commission fundraiser backed by an established Polish crowdfunding operator with EU payment-institution licensing.
€100.00 card rate*
3.9/5
30 ctry
2
WhyDonate
EU nonprofits — 0% fee, eps + SEPA, DSGVO-native
€97.85 1.9% + €0.25
4.9/5
115 ctry EEA
3
Betterplace
German and Austrian nonprofits and social-cause project owners that want a trusted, charitable, German-run donation platform with low pass-through costs and local data handling.
€97.20 card rate*
4.8/5
2 ctry
4
Leetchi
Group collections across the DACH region
€96.85 card rate*
4.2/5
36 ctry EEA
5
GoFundMe
Personal causes — broad brand reach
€96.80 card rate*
3.3/5
20 ctry US
6
Donorbox
Embeddable forms with recurring giving
€94.55 card rate*
4.0/5
23 ctry
7
GoGetFunding
Individual fundraisers running personal, medical, or emergency campaigns who prefer a fundraiser-paid platform fee over donor tipping, with broad international country availability.
€92.80 card rate*
4.0/5
56 ctry
8
Chuffed
Nonprofits, social enterprises, and community-cause organisers in 29 supported countries who want a 100%-free, tip-funded platform and are willing to complete identity verification before launching.
€92.20 card rate*
4.8/5
29 ctry
9
Steady
European creators, independent journalists, podcasters, and publishers who want recurring income from paying members rather than one-off donation campaigns.
€87.10 card rate*
2.6/5
32 ctry
* platform doesn’t support this method — figure falls back to card rate See all 11 platforms in Austria →
03

Donation & taxes

The two questions readers most want answered — laid out as separate tracks so a donor and a fundraiser each find their own.

Tax is the reason many people land here. We split it cleanly: what a donor can deduct, and what a fundraiser might owe.

Researched · verified · 2026-06-02
If you are donating

Is my gift tax-deductible?

Gifts to an organisation on the Finance Ministry's list of beneficiary recipients (or named in §4a EStG) are deductible as special expenses up to 10% of your total annual income.

  • Up to 10% of income. Donations are deductible as Sonderausgaben, capped at 10% of your total income (Gesamtbetrag der Einkünfte) for the year.
  • The charity reports it for you. Since 2017 you no longer enter donations on your return. You give the organisation your full name and date of birth and it transmits the total to the tax office by the end of February, so the deduction appears automatically.
  • The cause must be listed. Only organisations on the BMF's list of begünstigte Einrichtungen — or named in §4a EStG (universities, museums, voluntary fire brigades, and many charities) — qualify. Gifts to individuals are not deductible.
  • Check your details match. A name or date of birth that doesn't match your residence registration (Meldezettel) is the most common reason an eligible gift fails to show up automatically.
What's deductible
RecipientDeductibleAnnual cap
Listed / §4a charityYes10% of income
Unlisted organisationNo
Gift to an individualNo
How the deduction works Operator-verified
Annual cap
10% of total income
How it's claimed
Automatic, via the charity
You provide
Full name + date of birth
If you are raising money

Do I owe tax on what I collect?

Austria abolished gift and inheritance tax in 2008, so a genuine gift isn't taxed — but large gifts carry a reporting duty, and money earned for goods or services is still income.

  • No gift tax since 2008. Austria has had no Schenkungssteuer since 1 August 2008, so a genuine donation is not taxed as a gift in the recipient's hands.
  • But large gifts must be reported. Cash and movable assets must be notified to the tax office (Schenkungsmeldepflicht) if gifts from one non-relative exceed €15,000 over five years, or €50,000 from a relative within a year. Failing to report risks a fine of up to 10% of the value.
  • Donations to nonprofits are exempt. Gifts to charitable organisations, and ordinary occasional gifts up to €1,000, don't trigger the notification duty.
  • If it's really income, it's taxable. Payment for goods, services, rewards or a business activity is income — and may trigger VAT — not a gift.
Likely treatment
Your situationLikely treatment
Genuine public donationsNot taxed (no gift tax)
Single large gift over thresholdNo tax, but must be reported
Donations to a registered charityExempt + no reporting
Rewards or goods given in returnMay be income / VAT
Reporting thresholds (Schenkungsmeldepflicht) Operator-verified
From a non-relative (5 yrs)
€15,000
From a relative (1 yr)
€50,000
Occasional gifts exempt up to
€1,000

This isn't tax advice. If your campaign involves rewards, services, or large single gifts, confirm your position with the Finanzamt before you file.

04

Local payment methods

How donors in Austria actually pay — and why the method matters as much as the platform.

eps-Überweisung30% Credit / debit card35% PayPal28% SEPA Direct Debit14% Klarna / Sofort9% Apple / Google Pay15%
eps-Überweisung Primary 30% adoption

The Austrian online bank-transfer standard, built by the banks and accepted by most merchants. Bank-to-bank, low cost — strong for any Austrian campaign.

Credit / debit card 35% adoption

Widely used, with debit (Mastercard Debit) more common than credit. Percentage fees, so larger gifts cost more in absolute terms.

PayPal 28% adoption

Very popular in Austria for one-off online gifts; fee structure typically sits above eps and SEPA.

SEPA Direct Debit 14% adoption

Recurring gifts and pledges — low cost, ideal for sustained giving.

Klarna / Sofort 9% adoption

Bank-redirect and pay-later method familiar to Austrian shoppers at checkout.

Apple / Google Pay 15% adoption

Growing on mobile checkout — wraps a card, so card fees apply.

With no single dominant rail, the recipient-gets figure depends heavily on whether a platform supports eps and SEPA at cost — card-only routing is materially more expensive per euro.

05

Frequently asked

Platform and tax questions, together — because most people arrive with one of each.

Which platforms work in Austria?

The platforms in the table above operate in Austria. The Austrian ranking rewards eps and SEPA support and the donor data needed for automatic deduction reporting, alongside transparent fees — since payment-rail support drives how much of each gift reaches the cause.

Are donations tax-deductible in Austria?

Yes, if the recipient is on the Finance Ministry's list of beneficiary organisations or named in §4a EStG. Donations are deductible up to 10% of your total income, and since 2017 the charity reports the gift to the tax office for you — you just provide your full name and date of birth. Gifts to individuals or unlisted bodies are not deductible.

Will I be taxed on money I raise?

Austria has had no gift tax since 2008, so genuine donations aren't taxed as gifts. But large gifts must be reported (Schenkungsmeldepflicht): over €15,000 from one non-relative across five years, or €50,000 from a relative in a year. Donations to charities are exempt from reporting. Giving goods or services in return can make it income or VAT instead.

What's the cheapest way to receive donations here?

A platform that supports eps-Überweisung and SEPA at cost. With no single dominant rail, card-only routing is the most expensive per euro, so platforms that pass through the bank-to-bank methods deliver more of each gift to the cause.

06

Other countries

Same methodology, different jurisdiction.

How we rank

Rankings are produced by a public editorial methodology — open to peer review. We disclose ownership, scoring weights, and every change.

Read methodology →