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Imprisonment

Transfer to Another Prison in Austria: Grounds, Application and Remedies

Transfer to another prison in Austria: change of the place of imprisonment under section 10 StVG, grounds, application and procedure, and a complaint after refusal.

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Mag. Christopher Angerer, Rechtsanwalt

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4 June 2026 · Mag. Christopher Angerer, Rechtsanwalt

The prison (Justizanstalt) in which a sentence is served is determined at the start during classification, guided by the region of conviction, the length of the sentence and available places. This assignment is not final. A transfer to another prison is possible under section 10 StVG and is used regularly in practice to adapt the sentence to personal, family or therapeutic needs.

The choice of institution is not a matter of comfort. It decides the available therapy and education provision, the practice of relaxations and thereby indirectly the prospect of conditional release. This article explains from a legal perspective which grounds for transfer carry, how the application is structured, who decides and what is possible after a refusal.

Which ground for transfer?

Which route fits your transfer?

A transfer must be justified, and the carrying ground determines which evidence is needed. Proximity to home is evidenced differently from a therapy need or an intended prospect of relaxations. Choose the situation that fits yours, you will receive an assessment with concrete first steps.

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01 Question 1

For what reason are you seeking a transfer?

The prison (Justizanstalt) is first determined during classification. A later transfer is governed by section 10 StVG and must be justified. Which route carries depends on the reason: proximity to home and family ties, a particular therapy, a better prospect of relaxations, or a response to an application already refused. Choose the situation that fits yours.

All paths at a glance

Overview of all answers.

01

Proximity to home: justify the transfer as a reintegration ground under section 10 StVG with family evidence.

Proximity to home is the most common and most plausible ground for transfer. A transfer closer to the family home supports keeping up outside contact and thereby reintegration. Section 10 StVG permits a change of the place of imprisonment where it promotes reintegration and no grounds of expediency or security stand against it. The more concretely the family burden is documented, the more the application carries.

What to do now: First, document the family situation: proof of the family residence, school confirmations for the children, an account of how often visits have been possible so far and which obstacles exist. Second, obtain statements from relatives, ideally submitted through the lawyer correspondence so that they are on the file. Third, work out the link to reintegration and to later conditional release under section 46 StGB, because stable family contact supports the social forecast.

In depth: transfer application →
02

Access to therapy: justify the transfer with a medically documented treatment need.

Certain therapies, for example specialised addiction, sexual offence or aggression therapies, are available only in individual institutions. Anyone who demonstrably needs such treatment can apply for a transfer to the institution where it is offered. The transfer then directly serves reintegration within the meaning of section 10 StVG. Where it concerns an acute illness whose treatment is not possible in the current institution, transfer on medical grounds (Ueberstellung) under section 71 StVG also comes into consideration.

What to do now: First, document the treatment need with a specialist statement, a mere self-report does not carry. Second, check whether the target institution grants an admission commitment, which is often decisive precisely for therapy institutions. Third, bring the treatment wish into the enforcement plan (Vollzugsplan) under section 135 StVG so that therapy and place of imprisonment become visible as a connected goal.

In depth: treatment and rights during imprisonment →
03

Prospect of relaxations: transfer to an open institution after conduct free of complaints.

Semi-open and open institutions open up relaxations and work release in a structurally different setting from closed large institutions. Anyone facing a multi-year sentence and aiming for conditional release with a run-up of relaxations can seek a transfer to an open institution. This is usual after several years of serving without complaints and on a favourable forecast, because the transfer then serves the expediency of the sentence and reintegration.

What to do now: First, document conduct so far, conduct free of complaints, work, therapy progress. Second, anchor the intended build-up of relaxations in the enforcement plan so that the transfer appears as the logical next step. Third, choose the timing strategically, a transfer shortly before a reachable step of relaxation is more persuasive than a premature application.

In depth: relaxations of imprisonment →
04

Refusal: complaint under section 120 StVG within two weeks, or a better-supported renewed application.

If the transfer application is refused, that is not the end. A complaint (Beschwerde) under section 120 StVG lies against decisions affecting the rights of the prisoner, within two weeks of learning of it. Where no remedy is granted, the enforcement court (Vollzugsgericht) decides on complaints against decisions of the prison governor (section 121, section 16 StVG). A further complaint to the Higher Regional Court Vienna (Oberlandesgericht Wien) is admissible only where a question of law of fundamental importance arises (section 16a StVG).

What to do now: First, examine the reasoning of the refusal, because blanket arguments such as a lack of capacity without a concrete link are open to challenge. Second, consider whether a new, better-supported application is the faster route, because in practice transfers often succeed only on the second or third attempt. Third, note that for a transfer based on reintegration, no further application of the same kind is admissible while a complaint about it is pending.

In depth: complaint rights during imprisonment →

What the transfer governs legally

The starting point is classification under section 134 StVG: after admission the Federal Ministry of Justice determines in which institution, in which form and according to which principles the sentence is served. This first determination of the place of imprisonment is the basis from which a later transfer departs.

The transfer itself is governed by section 10 StVG, the change of the place of imprisonment. Such a change comes into consideration from two directions: on grounds of expediency or security, for example for the better use of the institutions, and on grounds of reintegration, where the transfer promotes reintegration and no grounds of expediency or security stand against it. For a transfer based on reintegration there is a bar: while a complaint directed at it is pending, no further application of the same kind is admissible.

To be distinguished from this is the transfer on medical grounds (Ueberstellung) under section 71 StVG. It applies where a sick or injured person cannot be treated adequately in the current institution; the person is then to be transferred to the nearest suitable institution or, if that too is insufficient, admitted under guard to a public hospital (Krankenanstalt). This medically prompted transfer follows its own rules and is not a transfer application in the narrower sense.

The most common grounds for transfer

Proximity to home and family ties are the practically most important ground. Anyone imprisoned far from the family can barely keep up regular visits. A transfer closer to home secures the contact that is central to reintegration. To be attached are proof of residence, school confirmations for the children and statements that show the importance of the contact.

Access to therapy is the second major ground. Specialised treatments are offered only in individual institutions. Anyone who demonstrably needs a particular therapy can apply for a transfer to the corresponding institution, ideally with a specialist statement and an admission commitment from the target institution. In addition, a better prospect of relaxations in an open institution, a serious conflict situation as a protective concern, and special personal circumstances such as language barriers or a needed accessibility all carry.

Common to all grounds is that a mere wish does not carry. What is decisive is a concrete, substantiated justification that establishes the link to reintegration or to an objective interest of the sentence. The more clearly the occasion, justification and goal are named, the more likely the application succeeds.

Grounds and evidence

Which ground for transfer needs which evidence

Each ground for transfer stands or falls with the evidence. The overview sorts the typical grounds, their legal anchor and the documents that carry the application.

Grounds for transfer under section 10 StVG and the carrying evidence for each
Legal anchor Carrying evidence
Proximity to home Reintegration through family contact Proof of residence, school confirmations, statements from relatives
Therapy Reintegration through treatment Specialist statement, admission commitment from the target institution
Prospect of relaxations Expediency and reintegration Proof of conduct free of complaints, enforcement plan with a relaxation goal
Protection in conflict Security of the prisoner Concrete description of the threat, where applicable records of the institution
Personal circumstances Expediency of the sentence Proof of the language situation, disability or training to be continued

The transfer on medical grounds under section 71 StVG follows its own rules and is not included in this overview. What remains decisive is the case-by-case assessment by the prison administration.

In practice transfers often succeed only on the second or third attempt, because first applications are too thinly justified. What is decisive is clean preparation: occasion, substantiated justification, a clearly named goal. A lawyer can bundle the evidence, bring the statements from relatives onto the file and also send a copy of the application to the prison administration directorate (Vollzugsdirektion) so that the prison governor does not pre-empt the decision with a brief statement.

Application and procedure

The prisoner submits the application to the current prison governor (Anstaltsleitung). The governor forwards it together with its own statement to the prison administration directorate (Vollzugsdirektion), which decides on the change of the place of imprisonment. In practice it is advisable to make the application in writing, structured and well supported, and to send a copy to the directorate.

To be attached are a concrete justification with evidence, depending on the ground therefore family records, specialist statements or therapy confirmations, and where possible an admission commitment from the target institution. A clear structure into occasion, justification and desired goal noticeably raises the prospect of success, because the deciding body recognises the value of the transfer for the sentence directly.

Statements from relatives carry the application, but should be submitted through the lawyer correspondence so that they are secured as part of the file. Persuasive in content are concrete details: how often a visit was recently possible, which obstacles exist, what consequences the distance has for family stability.

If the application is refused

A complaint (Beschwerde) under section 120 StVG lies against a refusing decision. It must be brought within two weeks of learning of it. Where no remedy is granted, the enforcement court (Vollzugsgericht) decides on complaints against decisions of the prison governor (section 121, section 16 StVG). A further complaint to the Higher Regional Court Vienna is admissible only where a question of law of fundamental importance arises (section 16a StVG).

In the complaint new facts can be added, missing evidence supplied or the reasoning challenged in law. Open to challenge in particular is a refusal that relies on blanket organisational arguments, for example a lack of capacity, without establishing a concrete link to the transfer applied for.

Often the better-supported renewed application is the more effective route. If the circumstances of life change, for example through the birth of a child, a new therapy diagnosis or an intensified conflict situation, a new application can be made at any time. The only thing to note is the bar under section 10 StVG: as long as a complaint based on reintegration is pending, no further application of the same kind is admissible.

Frequently asked

What people often ask about transfer.

On what basis is a transfer possible? +

A transfer to another prison is governed by section 10 StVG, the change of the place of imprisonment. It comes into consideration on grounds of expediency or security and on grounds of reintegration, where no opposing interests stand in the way. The first determination of the institution is made beforehand during classification under section 134 StVG.

What is the most common ground for transfer? +

Proximity to home and family ties are the practically most common ground. A transfer closer to the family home secures regular visits and promotes reintegration. Substantiated details carry: proof of the family residence, school confirmations for the children and concrete statements on the importance of the contact.

Who decides on the transfer application? +

The prisoner submits the application to the prison governor (Anstaltsleitung), who forwards it with its statement to the prison administration directorate (Vollzugsdirektion). The directorate decides on the change of the place of imprisonment. It is advisable to make the application in writing and well supported and to send a copy to the directorate.

What distinguishes the transfer from the transfer on medical grounds? +

The transfer on application is governed by section 10 StVG and serves personal, family or therapeutic goals. The transfer (Ueberstellung) under section 71 StVG is by contrast medically prompted: it applies where a sick or injured person cannot be treated adequately in the current institution, and leads to the nearest suitable institution or, under guard, to a public hospital.

What can I do if the application is refused? +

A complaint (Beschwerde) under section 120 StVG lies against the refusal, within two weeks of learning of it. Where no remedy is granted, the enforcement court (Vollzugsgericht) decides (section 121, section 16 StVG); a further complaint to the Higher Regional Court Vienna is admissible only on questions of law of fundamental importance (section 16a StVG). Often a better-supported renewed application is the more effective route.

Can I apply again after a refusal? +

Yes. If the circumstances of life change, for example through the birth of a child or a new therapy diagnosis, a new application is possible at any time. The only thing to note is the bar under section 10 StVG: as long as a complaint based on reintegration is pending, no further application of the same kind is admissible.

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