Our
set up fee to open a personal current account is
only 499 Euro
The privacy advantage. Austrian bank
secrecy laws protect your assets from unauthorized
snoops, private investigators, contingency-fee
seeking lawyers, even government officials—from
prying into your financial affairs. Indeed, the
confidentiality of Austrian bank accounts is
protected by a law with the same legal status as the
Austrian Constitution! Absent evidence that you
have committed a serious crime, Austrian bank
secrecy is virtually impenetrable. Compare this to
the United States where even marketing agencies
regularly share your private financial information.
In Austria, such conduct would be deemed criminal
and could result in stiff fines or even imprisonment
Financial privacy. The United States has some of the
world's laxest privacy laws. For a few dollars, you
can perform a search on the Internet to locate your
target's home address, work history, telephone
records and even balances in U.S. securities and
bank accounts. You can slow down this trade in your
data, but you can't stop it, especially if it's the
government doing the snooping under laws like the
USA PATRIOT Act. And financial accounts are
notoriously insecure, contributing to an explosion
in identity theft. In contrast, by taking advantage
of bank secrecy laws in a country like Austria, you
can avoid needless scrutiny of your private
financial affairs.
Bank secrecy. Your financial secrets are safe in an
Austrian bank. You can't use your Austrian bank
account for criminal purposes, but in all other
situations, strict Austrian secrecy laws insure that
no information about your account is released
without your authorization. Contrast this to the
U.S., where banks may legally release account data
to insurance or direct marketing affiliates, and
you have no right to stop them from doing so. In
Austria, such conduct would be a criminal
offense.The tradition of bank secrecy in Austria is
thus very different from that in the United States,
where information about your bank account can be
bought or sold without your knowledge, consent, or
compensation. The practical consequence for foreign
depositors is that once you've opened an Austrian
bank account, your assets are, for practical
purposes, "off the radar screen."
The Austrian bank secrecy law applies to banks,
their shareholders, members of executive bodies,
employees, and other persons acting for them. None
of these persons may disclose or make use of any
information of which they become aware or to which
they have access solely because of the bank's
business relationship with the customer. Any staff
member of the bank (or anyone who is otherwise
entrusted by the bank, e.g., lawyers, auditors,
etc.) who discloses or otherwise makes use of facts
subject to banking secrecy commits a criminal
offense if it can be shown that the violation was
committed to gain a profit or to harm anyone. The
obligation to secrecy continues to exist after
termination of the contractual relationship, and
even after the death of the client. The penalty
provided in Section 101(1) of the Banking Act for
malicious violations of bank secrecy is imprisonment
of up to one year, or a monetary fine. The affected
depositor may also sue the offending bank and bank
employees involved, up to the amount of actual
damages caused by the violation. Anyone else harmed
by a violation of bank secrecy may bring a lawsuit
to recover damages. Violations of banking secrecy
obligations constitute grounds for dismissal of bank
employees involved in the breach. An even more
severe possible consequence is the withdrawal of
the bank's banking license. Bank secrecy may never
be lifted directly by a foreign investigative agency
or a private individual. However, it is waived in
official criminal proceedings, insider trading
investigations and "intentional fiscal violations,
with the exception of fiscal petty offenses."
Another exception to bank secrecy is if a bank
notifies authorities, as required under Austrian
law, of its suspicions that a client is engaging in
"suspicious transactions." Nor does the prohibition
apply "if the customer expressly and in writing
consents to the disclosure of the secret." Secrecy
also doesn't apply in litigation between the bank
and one of its clients.
Austrian bank secrecy is comparable in strength to
bank secrecy laws in other banking centers such as
Switzerland, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, and Panama.
It is stronger than secrecy laws in Caribbean
banking centers such as the Cayman Islands or the
British Virgin Islands, which have been forced to
sign "Tax Exchange Information Agreements" with the
United States. Still, because of the increasing
exceptions to secrecy, the best way to view a bank
account in Austria or any other country with bank
secrecy laws is that information will be held "in
confidence," but will not necessarily remain secret
in the event of a criminal investigation.
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