Austria slashes fuel tax but drops oil firm profit caps
Austria’s government has extended its fuel price brake (*Spritpreisbremse*) until the end of August—but stripped it of key consumer protections. Starting in June, the measure will only cut the mineral oil tax (*Mineralölsteuer*, MÖSt) by 1.7 cents per liter, abandoning the previous cap on oil companies’ profit margins, officials confirmed on Saturday . Petrol stations must now pass on any reductions in global oil prices to consumers, though enforcement details remain unclear.
The decision follows last-minute negotiations between the ruling coalition—ÖVP, SPÖ, and NEOS—after the SPÖ’s push for continued margin controls failed. The tax cut alone will cost the state an estimated €100 million in lost revenue, according to earlier government projections .
Separately, Finance Minister Markus Marterbauer announced the conclusion of talks on Austria’s 2027/28 *Doppelbudget* (dual-year budget), calling it a *Sparbudget* (austerity budget) designed to meet fiscal targets. The finalized deal, struck hours before the announcement at an SPÖ regional party conference in Vösendorf, includes unspecified spending cuts but no details on how the fuel tax reduction will be offset .
The fuel price brake, introduced in 2022 to cushion energy costs, has been repeatedly extended amid inflation concerns. Its latest iteration reflects a compromise between fiscal restraint and political pressure to ease living costs—though critics argue the removal of margin controls weakens its impact. With the budget now locked, attention turns to how the government will reconcile the tax cut with its austerity goals.
Austria slashes fuel tax but drops oil firm profit caps
- der standard
- orf.at
- die presse

