NIS2 Compliance in Vienna

Vienna is Austria's financial center and a gateway to Central and Eastern European markets, home to Erste Group (serving 16 million clients across CEE), Raiffeisen Bank International (operating in 13 CEE markets), Vienna Insurance Group (the leading insurer in CEE), and BAWAG Group. The Austrian Financial Market Authority (FMA) and the Oesterreichische Nationalbank (OeNB) oversee a financial sector with EUR 120 billion in banking assets and deep roots in cross-border CEE operations.

Request a demo
700+
Financial firms
€120B
Banking assets
35,000+
Finance employees
13+
CEE markets served

Why NIS2 matters in Vienna

The NIS2 Directive (EU 2022/2555) is the EU's updated cybersecurity legislation covering essential and important entities across 18 sectors. With penalties up to €10M or 2% of global turnover for essential entities, and personal liability for management bodies, NIS2 represents a significant escalation in EU cybersecurity enforcement. Germany's national transposition (NIS2UmsuCG) adds sector-specific requirements.

Vienna's banks operate across multiple EU and non-EU jurisdictions in CEE, creating complex multi-regulatory compliance requirements under DORA, NIS2, and GDPR simultaneously. Erste Group and Raiffeisen must implement harmonized ICT risk frameworks across subsidiaries in countries with varying levels of regulatory maturity. The FMA has been proactive in DORA implementation, publishing detailed guidance ahead of the January 2025 deadline. Vienna's role as a CEE hub means its financial institutions face compliance obligations in up to 13 different national regulatory regimes — making automated, centralized compliance management essential.

Supervisory Bodies

FMA (Finanzmarktaufsicht), OeNB

Key Industries

  • Banking & CEE Operations
  • Insurance
  • Asset Management
  • Capital Markets

Notable financial institutions in Vienna

Erste GroupRaiffeisen Bank InternationalVienna Insurance GroupBAWAGWiener BörseUniqaAddiko Bankcard complete

NIS2 Key Requirements

Cybersecurity risk management measures (Art. 21)
24-hour early warning + 72-hour full incident notification
Supply chain and third-party security assessment
Vulnerability disclosure and coordinated handling
Management body training and personal accountability
Business continuity and crisis management plans