Austria’s crowdfunding industry has rapidly expanded, covering equity, debt, real-estate, reward and donation models. Investors will learn about market size, growth trends, key sectors, the regulatory landscape, and major Austrian platforms. With some 61 platforms active across sectors like real estate, startups/SMEs, sustainability, green energy, health, art and more, Austrian retail investors can access opportunities once reserved for professionals.
Crowdfunding bridges fintech and traditional finance in Austria, allowing small investors to fund everything from local property and tech startups to social and green projects. This report highlights why Austria crowdfunding is important and how platforms like Conda, Rendity, Rockets and others are fueling growth. Readers will see how equity crowdfunding Austria, crowdlending Austria and other models work, and why Austrian alternative finance is attracting more retail capital.
Austria’s alternative finance market is well-developed and growing. Major platforms have funded hundreds of millions of euros to date. For example, real-estate platforms Rendity and DagobertInvest have mobilized over €150M and €160M respectively (with Rendity’s 35,000 investors having lent more than €150M, of which €60M has been repaid). Conda – Austria’s first crowdinvesting platform – has financed 380+ projects since 2013 and raised nearly €72M in 2024 alone. Rockets (Vienna) – the country’s largest crowdlending provider – has supported 338 projects with about €177.4M funded by over 40,900 investors. Green Rocket (Vienna), focusing on sustainable and energy projects, has 36,600 investors and has funded about €135.7M to daten. These examples show strong investor demand: Austrian crowdfunding volumes easily exceed hundreds of millions per year, with growth driven by tech startups, real estate, and sustainable-energy projects.
Key sectors include real estate, high-growth startups/SMEs, and sustainable/green investments. Platforms are clustered by sector: real-estate crowdfunding is very popular (e.g. Rendity, DagobertInvest), tech and digital startups get equity funding (Conda, Danube Angels), and green/energy projects attract debt funding (Green Rocket, Klimja). Emerging areas include creative industries and social causes. According to industry data, Austria has 61 platforms spanning equity, debt (loans), P2P lending, reward and donation models, covering sectors such as real estate, startups, SMEs, sustainability, green energy, health & science, art, social causes, and more. The minimum investment varies by platform (often €100–€1,000), making these markets accessible to everyday Austrians. Overall, crowdfunding has democratized finance in Austria: retail investors can directly fund projects in property, tech, or green energy that previously required much larger capital.
Recent years saw strong momentum. In 2024 Austria implemented the EU crowdfunding regulation, enabling cross-border deals and growth. Platforms like Conda obtained an EU-wide ECSP license (as of Sep 2023) to offer securities across Europe. Notably, two Austrian firms have already secured this EU license under Austrian supervision. New platform launches continue: for example, innovative debt and tokenized schemes appeared in 2023–2025. Platforms often collaborate with banks or accelerators (e.g. Conda partners with Erste Bank’s FundNow). There is no single industry body for crowdfunding, but Austrian platforms typically follow EU standards (via ESCP regulation) and engage with European networks. In short, the Austrian market blends local innovation with EU-wide growth: retail investors now have a rich ecosystem of Austrian crowdfunding platforms to choose from, across all major models.
Crowdfunding in Austria is governed by both national law and EU rules. Locally, the Altfinanzierungsgesetz (AltFG, 2015) sets basic rules (e.g. maximum offering sizes). Traditionally, the AltFG allowed companies to raise up to €2M per year via participations or loans without a full prospectus. Austria has adapted its law to the EU’s 2020 crowdfunding regulation (ECSPR). In 2022–2023 Austria enacted the Swarm Funding Enforcement Act, aligning local rules with the EU Crowdfunding Service Providers (ECSP) Regulation. The Austrian Financial Market Authority (FMA) is the sole regulator: it grants licenses to EU providers and monitors compliance. Notably, as of late 2023 just two Austrian platforms hold an EU-wide ECSP licensef.
Austrian law also mandates investor protections. Under the AltFG, crowdfunding issuers must provide clear information and limit retail investment: a private investor cannot contribute more than €5,000 per project per year. Platforms must conduct due diligence and enforce KYC/AML rules; issuers must prepare key investor documents with risk warnings. Licensed ECSP platforms are exempt from full banking regulations (no deposit-taking allowed) but must still meet financial advice licensing under the Gewerbeordnung. In practice, most Austrian platforms operate under the AltFG or as licensed investment advisers. In sum, Austria has a precise regulatory framework: it follows EU crowdfunding standards (ECSPR) under FMA oversight, supplemented by domestic rules (AltFG) to protect investors.
Legally, crowdfunding in Austria is well-structured: foreign platforms can offer to Austrian investors only if they hold an EU license or partner with locals. There are no known Austrian crowdfunding associations, but platforms often engage with European networks like European Crowdfunding Network (EuroCrowd). In effect, both investors and fundraisers face clear rules on licensing, disclosures, and limits – making Austrian crowdfunding a stable, regulated market.
Equity crowdfunding lets investors buy shares or profit-participation loans in private companies. In Austria this model is especially popular for tech startups and innovative SMEs. Key platforms include Conda, Danube Angels, Zmartup, and others. For example, Conda (founded 2013 in Vienna) pioneered Austrian crowdinvesting. It has financed over 380 projects (startups, SMEs and some real estate), raising ~€72M in 2024 alone. Conda offers both subordinated profit-participation loans and equity shares, targeting ventures in DACH and beyond (often in tech, consumer goods, energy). It requires only €100 minimum investment, making it very retail-friendly. Importantly, Conda now holds an EU crowdfunding license (as of Sep 2023) under FMA supervision, allowing cross-border security offerings.
Danube Angels (Vienna, est. 2017) is another equity platform targeting Central European growth companies. It allows individuals to co-invest in early-stage ventures with as little as €1,000. To date it has funded ~22 projects totaling ~€2.52M. Its dealflow spans tech, real estate ventures, consumer products and more. Danube Angels does not have a secondary market; investments are typically share issues in unlisted companies.
Zmartup is a newer Austrian platform that combines equity and lending. It enables investments (from €100) in diverse projects: startups, renewable energy ventures, even established businesses and real estate. Zmartup emphasizes sustainability and innovation, offering digitalized contracts and fixed-income bonds as well as equity.
Other equity crowdfunding venues include Gateway Ventures (Vienna) – a VC-style platform curating portfolios of handpicked startups – and international platforms active in Austria (e.g. German Invesdor, UK’s Seedrs). In summary, equity crowdfunding in Austria is mature, with multiple home-grown sites. These platforms give retail investors entry to startup equity deals that were previously available only to angels or VCs.
Real estate crowdfunding lets investors pool money to finance property projects. Austria has a vibrant real-estate segment, with major platforms such as Rendity and DagobertInvest. Rendity (Vienna) focuses on Austrian residential and commercial developments. It has over 35,000 registered investors and has provided €150M+ in loans to real estate projects (≈€60M repaid so far). Typical investments allow returns in the 5–8% range. DagobertInvest (Vienna) is another leader: it has attracted nearly €160M in funding for property projects, offering expected returns up to ~10–12%. These platforms usually fund deals by issuing bonds or profit-sharing loans secured by property.
Austrians can invest in real estate with very modest capital. Projects are often apartment buildings, hotels or office developments. For example, one Rendity project might finance an eco-friendly apartment block, splitting costs into many bonds so each investor might put in just €500. DagobertInvest similarly crowdsources money for apartments, hotels or mixed-use buildings. In recent years these platforms have expanded beyond Austria into neighboring markets, leveraging the EU crowdfunding passport.
Other players include Rockets.Home (a branch of Rockets) which handles direct real estate loans, and smaller niche platforms. Overall, real-estate crowdfunding is one of the fastest-growing niches in Austria. It appeals to risk-aware investors: property-backed deals with mid-term horizons, offering better yields than standard bank products.
Crowdlending (debt crowdfunding) involves lending money to businesses (often SMEs) in exchange for interest. In Austria, this is commonly offered by platforms for small business loans and corporate financing. The largest player is Rockets (Vienna), which we saw above: it provides €177M in loans across dozens of Austrian enterprises. Rockets specializes in sustainable businesses and real-estate developers, offering loans with fixed interest (often in the 4–9% range). Its sister platform Green Rocket (2013) focused exclusively on energy and environment ventures – it has 36,600 investors and ~€135.7M fundedn.
Another example is Klimja (Austria/Germany), a crowdlending site for climate and energy-efficiency projects. Klimja lets Austrian and German investors fund renewable energy, energy-saving buildings, and similar projects. It accepts very small minimum investments, enabling “green” loans that repay with interest and a carbon impact.
Some Austrian SMEs also use international platforms. For instance, Invesdor (Germany) extended into Austria to provide debt capital to local companies. Swiss and Baltic platforms like 8Lends and Nectaro allow Austrians to lend to European SMEs (8Lends also tokenizes SME loans on blockchain). Hive5 (Croatia) and Monefit (Estonia) offer personal and business loans P2P across Europe.
In short, crowdlending in Austria is well-established. It is dominated by a few key domestic brands (Rockets, Green Rocket, Klimja) but also includes multi-country platforms. Retail lenders can fund Austrian SMEs directly or through funds, typically earning double-digit returns. Platform risk varies, so Austrian investors must do due diligence; still, many find attractive yields vs. bank deposits.
Peer-to-peer lending connects individual borrowers and lenders without a traditional bank. In Austria, pure P2P lending to consumers is limited by regulation: Austrian law treats consumer credit like deposit-taking, requiring a banking license. As a result, no major domestic P2P consumer credit marketplace has emerged under EU rules. Instead, Austrian lenders usually turn to international P2P platforms. For example, Austrian savers can invest via European P2P sites (Bondora, Mintos, etc.) which allow funding personal or business loans from across Europe.
Some platforms outside Austria operate in its market. For instance, Nectaro (Latvia) and 8Lends (Switzerland) accept Austrian lenders who want exposure to SME or consumer loans in other countries. Hive5 (Croatia) also onboards Austrian users. These offer personal loans or small business loans with fixed returns. In practice, Austrian retail P2P lending remains modest; investors often prefer business or real-estate deals. Nevertheless, it’s a growing niche: new fintech firms are exploring ways to bring consumer loans to peers under ECSPR compliance.
To summarize, P2P lending in Austria is nascent and mostly served by cross-border players. Regulators have effectively curbed pure consumer P2P, so Austrian investors seeking such exposure usually go through EU-wide or global platforms. Those who do lend directly to businesses or projects (i.e. crowdlending) use the sites mentioned above (Rockets, etc.), not consumer P2P.
Donation-based crowdfunding supports charities, social causes or creative projects without financial returns to backers. In Austria this model is popular among NGOs and community groups. Leading platforms include EcoCrowd and ES GEHT!. EcoCrowd (Vienna) specializes in environmental and sustainability projects; only ‘green’ causes that meet its strict criteria can be funded. For example, citizens have crowdfunded energy-saving public lighting and reforestation via EcoCrowd. ES GEHT! (based in Linz and Vienna) facilitates donations to social causes, especially children’s welfare; it provides tools for crowdfunding charitable campaigns.
Large NGOs also run their own crowdfunding campaigns. The Austrian Red Cross uses its platform to raise donations for relief and community projects. The Genossenschaft für Gemeinwohl is a finance cooperative offering crowdfunding for social economy and grassroots initiatives. Unlike investment crowdfunding, these platforms reward contributors with “good vibes” or community updates rather than interest.
Overall, donation crowdfunding in Austria is smaller in scale but high in social impact. Tens of thousands of Austrians participate, typically giving small amounts to causes they care about. Platforms emphasize transparency and community. While returns are non-financial, experts note that donation crowdfunding builds the ecosystem by engaging new participants and raising awareness of the medium.
Reward-based crowdfunding lets backers contribute money in exchange for non-monetary rewards (products, vouchers, acknowledgments). In Austria, this model is used mainly for creative projects, local entrepreneurship and community initiatives. Notable Austrian platforms include Tausend Mal Tausend and I believe in you.
Tausend Mal Tausend (Salzburg) focuses on tourism and regional projects. Contributors might fund a new hotel or cultural event and receive rewards like discounted stays, gift vouchers or sponsored outings. For example, backers of a mountain lodge project received cable car passes or hotel stays as thank-you gifts.
I believe in you (Vienna) is a reward platform aimed at sports and individual talents. It allows fans to support athletes or artists in exchange for personal rewards: a video message, fan experiences, training sessions, etc..
In general, reward-crowdfunding in Austria is boutique: there are about 10–15 such platforms. They are often community-oriented (local clubs, filmmakers, musicians) and use simple online tools. Since this model is more akin to presales or patronage, funding volumes are modest (tens to hundreds of thousands per project). Nevertheless, reward platforms expand the ecosystem by drawing in backers who may later try investment models. They demonstrate crowdfunding’s versatility: from financial returns on Conda to heartfelt thanks from an artist or social worker.
In conclusion, Austria’s crowdfunding scene offers a broad menu of options. From mainstream equity loans to quirky reward campaigns, retailers have many ways to invest or fundraise. The market potential is strong: it taps into investor appetite for higher returns and social impact. With evolving regulations and tech, Austrian crowdfunding is poised for more growth in coming years — making it an exciting time for beginner and experienced investors alike.