InfectRisk
Now · Week 14 / 2026

RSV activity in Austria

Current respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) activity in Austria — based on ECDC ERVISS weekly data from AGES (Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit).

Influenza
LowActivity level · Week 14
COVID-19
LowActivity level · Week 14
RSV
HighActivity level · Week 14

Current situation: RSV

In week 14 of 2026, activity of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) in Austria is high. The trend — derived from clinical surveillance — is falling. Over a four-week comparison, a clear decline is visible.

The classification is based on the ECDC ERVISS weekly reports, drawing on RSV surveillance data from AGES (Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit) via its sentinel GP network and the Nationale Referenzzentrale für Influenza. Seasonally, infection waves in Austria typically peak between December and February; activity is usually markedly lower in spring and summer. How severe a given season becomes depends on the circulating virus variant and the population's immune status, among other factors.

12-week trend
RSV · Relative development · ECDC ERVISS
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Data sources and methodology

The current picture for Austria is built on the European Respiratory Virus Surveillance Summary (ERVISS), published weekly by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). AGES (Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit) via its sentinel GP network and the Nationale Referenzzentrale für Influenza is the national public-health authority that feeds ERVISS with sentinel primary care and virology data.

ECDC ERVISS

ERVISS is ECDC's weekly pan-European surveillance summary for influenza, SARS-CoV-2 and RSV. National authorities — in Austria's case AGES (Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit) via its sentinel GP network and the Nationale Referenzzentrale für Influenza — submit harmonised indicators every week, which ECDC publishes in a standardised dataset on Thursdays. Using ERVISS rather than each country's native portal ensures cross-country comparability.

ILI / ARI consultation rates and positivity

AGES (Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit) via its sentinel GP network and the Nationale Referenzzentrale für Influenza operates a sentinel network of general practices that report weekly rates of patients consulting for influenza-like illness (ILI) or acute respiratory infection (ARI). A subset of patients is swabbed and tested by reference laboratories, producing pathogen-specific positivity rates for flu, SARS-CoV-2 and RSV.

Why this source

Combining consultation incidence with virological positivity yields a pathogen-specific weekly incidence signal (ILI × positivity / 100). This is the standard European methodology and provides a more robust view than either indicator alone — consultation rates capture illness burden, positivity confirms which pathogen is driving it.

Qualitative classification

The “low”, “moderate” and “high” categories follow seasonal reference values and epidemiological thresholds calibrated to match our classifications for other countries. The ILI × positivity / 100 product is scaled to comparable thresholds using a divisor of 3, which aligns European sentinel peaks with the consultation-equivalent scale used elsewhere. Data refreshes weekly when ECDC publishes the latest ERVISS update, typically on Thursdays.

Frequently asked questions

When is RSV season in Austria?

RSV activity in Austria typically begins rising in late autumn, peaks between December and February, and fades into spring. Post-pandemic seasons have been less predictable than pre-2020 patterns, with earlier or delayed peaks in some years. AGES publishes RSV indicators within its weekly respiratory-virus surveillance alongside flu and SARS-CoV-2.

Who is most at risk from RSV in Austria?

The groups at highest risk of severe RSV are infants — especially those under six months, preterm babies, and infants with underlying heart or lung disease — and older adults, particularly those aged 75 and above or with chronic respiratory or cardiac conditions. In otherwise healthy children and adults, RSV usually resembles a common cold and resolves without complications.

Are RSV vaccines available in Austria?

Since 2023, RSV vaccines have been authorised in the EU for older adults and for passive protection of infants. Austria has progressively adopted both the long-acting monoclonal antibody nirsevimab for infants entering their first RSV season and adult RSV vaccines for defined risk groups, in line with recommendations from the Nationales Impfgremium. Uptake and clinical impact are monitored by AGES.

How is RSV tracked in Austria?

RSV surveillance in Austria combines sentinel GP data, virological testing coordinated by AGES, and hospital-admission signals for severe paediatric and adult respiratory infection. Weekly results are published by AGES and also reported to ECDC ERVISS, which lets Austria's RSV curve be compared directly with neighbours such as Germany and the Czech Republic.

How does RSV differ from flu in Austrian data?

In AGES surveillance, flu and RSV appear as separate positivity streams within the same respiratory panel. RSV disproportionately affects infants and the very elderly, while flu burden spreads across age bands and is especially severe in older adults. Symptom overlap between the two viruses is wide, so the distinction relies on laboratory testing rather than clinical impression.

Numbers · Personal risk · 36 countries

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Updated: 18/04/2026, 10:15