IELTS Testing Centres in Austria
In total, there are 6 test locations in Austria that offer IELTS exams. You can select the one which is closer to you.
List of cities in Austria where you can take the IELTS tests
- Graz
- Innsbruck
- Klagenfurt
- Salzburg
- Vienna
There are two types of test format available for IELTS exams: paper-based or computer-delivered. For both formats, the Speaking Section is done with a real IELTS examiner on a face-to-face basis.
1. Graz, Austria – British Council test location – Graz
Street Address: Siebensterngasse 21
Telephone Number: +431533261677
Contact Email: ielts@britishcouncil.at
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.at/en/exam/ielts
2. Innsbruck, Austria – WIFI Tirol Innsbruck
Street Address: Egger-Lienz-Straße 116, Innsbruck
Telephone Number: +431533261677
Contact Email: ielts@britishcouncil.at
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.at/en/exam/ielts
3. Innsbruck, Austria – ISI Sprachenzentrum Innsbruck
Street Address: Innsbruck
Contact Email: ielts@britishcouncil.at
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.at/en/exam/ielts
4. Klagenfurt, Austria – British Council test location – Klagenfurt
Street Address: Klagenfurt, Alpen-Adria-Universität, Klagenfurt
Telephone Number: +431533261677
Contact Email: ielts@britishcouncil.at
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.at/en/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (EUR) |
2020/10/31 | Klagenfurt | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 239 |
5. Salzburg, Austria – WIFI Salzburg
Street Address: Salzburg
Telephone Number: +431533261677
Contact Email: ielts@britishcouncil.at
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.at/en/exam/ielts
6. Vienna, Austria – British Council test location – Vienna
Street Address: Wien, Wien, Vienna, Austria
Telephone Number: +431533261677
Contact Email: ielts@britishcouncil.at
Website URL: http://www.britishcouncil.at/en/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (EUR) |
2020/07/25 | Vienna | IELTS General Training | 239 |
2020/08/8 | Vienna | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 239 |
2020/08/22 | Vienna | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 239 |
2020/09/5 | Vienna | IELTS Academic | 239 |
2020/09/26 | Vienna | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 239 |
2020/10/10 | Vienna | IELTS Academic | 239 |
IELTS Exam Fee in Austria
According to the test maker – British Council, the current cost to take IELTS test in Austria is 239 EUR.
More about Austria
Politics and law
Austria: Cabinets of the Republic of Austria
Cabinets of the Republic of Austria | |||
Cabinets | constituted on | composition | Chancellor |
1st cabinet | April 27, 1945 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP, KPÖ | K. Renner, SPÖ |
2nd cabinet | December 20, 1945 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ, KPÖ | L. Figl, ÖVP |
3rd cabinet | November 8, 1949 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | L. Figl, ÖVP |
4. Cabinet | October 28, 1952 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | L. Figl, ÖVP |
5. Cabinet | April 2, 1953 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | J. Raab, ÖVP |
6. Cabinet | June 29, 1956 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | J. Raab, ÖVP |
7. Cabinet | July 16, 1959 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | J. Raab, ÖVP |
8. Cabinet | November 3, 1960 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | J. Raab, ÖVP |
9. Cabinet | April 11, 1961 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | A. Gorbach, ÖVP |
10. Cabinet | March 27, 1963 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | A. Gorbach, ÖVP |
11. Cabinet | April 2, 1964 | Coalition ÖVP, SPÖ | J. Klaus, ÖVP |
12. Cabinet | April 19, 1966 | Sole government ÖVP | J. Klaus, ÖVP |
13. Cabinet | April 21, 1970 | Sole government SPÖ | B. Kreisky, SPÖ |
14. Cabinet | 5th November 1971 | Sole government SPÖ | B. Kreisky, SPÖ |
15. Cabinet | October 29, 1975 | Sole government SPÖ | B. Kreisky, SPÖ |
16. Cabinet | June 5, 1979 | Sole government SPÖ | B. Kreisky, SPÖ |
17. Cabinet | May 24, 1983 | Coalition SPÖ, FPÖ | F. Sinowatz, SPÖ |
18. Cabinet | June 16, 1986 | Coalition SPÖ, FPÖ | F. Vranitzky, SPÖ |
19. Cabinet | January 20, 1987 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | F. Vranitzky, SPÖ |
20. Cabinet | December 17, 1990 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | F. Vranitzky, SPÖ |
21. Cabinet | 11/25/1994 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | F. Vranitzky, SPÖ |
22. Cabinet | 3/13/1996 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | F. Vranitzky, SPÖ |
23. Cabinet | January 28, 1997 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | V. Climate, SPÖ |
24. Cabinet | 4.2.2000 | Coalition FPÖ, ÖVP | W. Schüssel, ÖVP |
25. Cabinet | 28.2.2003 | Coalition ÖVP, FPÖ (from 2005 FPÖ / BZÖ) | W. Schüssel, ÖVP |
26. Cabinet | January 11, 2007 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | A. Gusenbauer, SPÖ |
27. Cabinet | December 2nd, 2008 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | W. Faymann, SPÖ |
28. Cabinet | December 16, 2013 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | W. Faymann, SPÖ (resignation on May 9, 2016) |
29. Cabinet | May 17, 2016 | Coalition SPÖ, ÖVP | C. Kern, SPÖ |
30. Cabinet | December 18, 2017 | Coalition ÖVP, FPÖ | S. Kurz, ÖVP |
31. Cabinet | 3.6.2019 | Expert government | B. Bierlein |
32nd Cabinet | 7.1.2020 | Coalition ÖVP, Greens | S. Kurz, ÖVP |
National symbols
The national flag is derived from the shield in the coat of arms, the 1230 on a seal of the Babenberger Friedrich II in. first appeared. The flag is divided horizontally into three equal stripes red-white-red. With the coat of arms in the middle of the white stripe, it serves as the state flag and presidential standard. – The coat of arms, first introduced in 1919, has its origin in the double-headed eagle of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. The monarchical symbols of the imperial orb, sword, scepter and the double head were removed in 1919. After the double-headed eagle was briefly used as a coat of arms again in 1934, Austria reverted to a slightly modified form of the coat of arms from 1919 in 1945. In 1981 an amendment clearly defined the colors and the shape. The coat of arms consists of a free-floating, one-headed, heraldic right-looking, black, gold-armored and red-tongued eagle, whose chest is decorated with a red, is covered by a silver crossbar (red-white-red shield). On his head he wears a golden wall crown with three visible battlements, in the heraldic right muzzle a sickle with an inwardly turned edge, in the left muzzle a hammer. To commemorate the regaining of independence, the coat of arms was supplemented in 1945 by a broken iron chain enclosing the eagle’s fangs.
October 26th commemorates the 1955 decision of the National Council on the “perpetual neutrality of Austria”.
Law
The main source of civil law is the General Civil Code (ABGB) of 1811. Changes to the civil law enshrined here are made through special laws, such as the Tenancy Law of 1981 and the regulation of home ownership by the law of 1975. Liability law is also partially regulated in special laws (Public Liability Act 1949, Employee Liability Act 1965, Railway and Motor Vehicle Liability Act 1959, Product Liability Act 1988). Special laws in the area of labor law largely restrict the employment contract anchored in the ABGB. The Consumer Protection Act of 1979, with which provisions were made to protect consumers, brought radical innovations. Labor law, commercial law, private commercial law and civil procedural laws are assigned to civil law.
The criminal law was newly regulated in the 1974 StGB. The law of criminal procedure is contained in the StPO of 1975 and in the Prison Act of 1969. The Youth Courts Act of 1988 contains special provisions on the administration of justice in the case of juvenile offenses.
Administrative law includes a large number of special laws regulating the individual matters. The procedure is regulated in the Administrative Procedure Acts (General Administrative Procedure Act 1991, Federal Tax Code 1961), the administrative penal procedure in the Administrative Penal Act of 1991.
As in the other EU states, large parts of the legal system are meanwhile also in Austria, v. a. of business law, influenced by European law.
To the court building court.