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    Home » Austria set to spend 3.34% of GDP on research in 2026
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    Austria set to spend 3.34% of GDP on research in 2026

    April 24, 2026
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    EuroWire, VIENNA: Austria is estimated to spend about 17.6 billion euros on research and development in 2026, equivalent to 3.34% of gross domestic product, according to official data released on April 23. The figure would keep Austria among the European Union’s top research investors and place it third in the bloc by research intensity, even as the ratio edges below last year’s record. In cash terms, spending is still set to rise, underscoring the scale of research activity across the Austrian economy.

    Austria set to spend 3.34% of GDP on research in 2026
    Official data place Austria’s research intensity at 3.34% of GDP for 2026.

    The 2026 estimate is slightly below the 3.39% recorded for 2025 and matches the 3.34% level reported for 2024. Officials said the change reflects stagnant public funding and corporate research financing that is increasing more slowly than nominal economic output. That means research spending is still growing in absolute terms, but not fast enough to lift its share of GDP beyond last year’s peak. The latest estimate puts total domestic research expenditure at 17.628 billion euros, up from 17.389 billion euros in 2025.

    The longer-term trend remains firmly upward. Austria’s research intensity stood at 2.38% in 2006 and had climbed to 3.13% by 2016, extending a rise that has kept the country above the EU’s 3% benchmark for more than a decade. The new estimate suggests that momentum has cooled after recent gains, but it also shows that research spending remains embedded at a historically high level. Statistics Austria said the 2026 ratio leaves Austria in a leading position within the bloc despite the modest year-on-year dip.

    Austria funding mix underscores business role

    Domestic companies are expected to provide about half of all research financing this year, or roughly 8.9 billion euros. That share includes support delivered through Austria’s research premium, which is classified as business funding under statistical methodology. Government funding is projected at nearly 5.8 billion euros, equal to about one-third of the total, with around 4.8 billion euros coming from the federal level and about 770 million euros from regional authorities. Another 2.9 billion euros, or 16%, is expected to come from abroad, largely through multinational groups.

    The latest EU-wide comparison cited in the Austrian release is for 2024, when Sweden and Belgium posted higher research intensity than Austria. Eurostat said overall research and development expenditure in the European Union stood at 2.24% of GDP in 2024, leaving Austria well above the regional average. The comparison also underscores how far Austria remains ahead of several larger member states, including France and Italy, on research spending relative to economic output. That gap has helped keep Austria near the top tier of European research investment even as annual growth has slowed.

    Estimate points to steadier pace

    The headline figure is an estimate rather than a finalized annual result. The calculation draws on Austrian research and development surveys as well as budget and final account data from the federal government and states, preliminary innovation survey trends and current economic indicators. That methodology makes the annual release an early guide to research spending patterns before full results are compiled. It also means the 2026 figure is best read as the official near-term benchmark for Austria’s research effort, rather than the last word on the final outturn.

    Taken together, the data show an economy that continues to devote a large share of national output to research, while losing some momentum after reaching a peak in 2025. Absolute spending is still rising, business remains the largest funding source and public financing is holding near last year’s level. With research intensity estimated at 3.34%, Austria is set to remain comfortably above the EU’s long-standing 3% goal for a 13th consecutive year, preserving one of the strongest research and development profiles in the bloc.

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