Austria has been represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 57 times since its debut in 1957. The country has won three times, in 1966, 2014 and 2025. The Austrian participating broadcaster in the contest is Österreichischer Rundfunk (ORF). Vienna was the host city on both occasions the contest has been held in Austria, in 1967 and 2015, and the capital will host the event for a third time in 2026.

Austria has finished last in the contest final seven times (1957, 1961, 1962, 1979, 1984, 1988, and 1991) and finished last in the semi-final in 2012. "Nobody but You" by Cesár Sampson achieved Austria's eighth top five result and third-best result of the 21st century at the 2018 contest, finishing third.

Having finished sixth at the 1964 contest and fourth in 1965, Udo Jürgens, one of few Eurovision performers to have competed in three consecutive contests, won at his third attempt in 1966 with the song "Merci, Chérie". This was Austria's only top three result of the 20th century, as well as its first win. Austria won for a second time in 2014, with "Rise Like a Phoenix" by Conchita Wurst, setting a then-record for longest gap between winning entries at 48 years. The country would go on to win most recently in 2025, with "Wasted Love" by JJ.

History

Österreichischer Rundfunk (ORF) is a full member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), thus eligible to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest representing Austria.

ORF finished last at its debut in the contest in 1957, before Liane Augustin gave the country the first of its eight top five results in 1958, with fifth. Having finished sixth in 1964 and fourth in 1965, Udo Jürgens won the contest at his third attempt in 1966. This would be Austria's only top three result of 20th century. The country's best result over the next 46 years (1967–2013) would be fifth place, which it achieved with The Milestones in 1972, Waterloo and Robinson in 1976 and Thomas Forstner in 1989. Austria has finished last in the final a total of seven times, in 1957, 1961, 1962, 1979, 1984, 1988, 1991. The country also finished last in the semi-final in 2012. Austria's best result of the 1990s was four tenth-place finishes, in 1990, 1992, 1996 and 1999. Austria's best result of the 2000s was Alf Poier's sixth-place in 2003, which was Austria's best placement since 1989.

After a three-year absence, ORF announced on 28 July 2010 that Austria would return to the contest in 2011, where the country reached the final for the first time since 2004, finishing 18th.[citation needed]

Austria achieved its second victory in the contest at the 2014 contest, with Conchita Wurst winning with 290 points. In a complete reversal of fortunes in 2015, following a tie-break rule Austria was placed 26th and scored nul points along with Germany (27th), they became the first country since the United Kingdom in 2003 to score nul points at the final. Because of this, Austria became the first host country to receive nul points. Austria qualified for the final for the next three years, finishing 13th in 2016, 16th in 2017 and in 2018, when "Nobody but You" by Cesár Sampson finished third. Three more non-qualifications followed with Paenda (2019), Vincent Bueno (2021) and Lumix feat. Pia Maria (2022). Teya and Salena returned Austria to the final in 2023, finishing 15th, followed by Kaleen finishing 24th in 2024, and JJ achieving Austria's third contest win in 2025.

Absences

Austria has opted out of participation in several contests. The first of these was the 1969 contest, which was staged in Madrid. As Spain was ruled at that time by Francisco Franco, Austria chose to boycott the contest. Contest historian John Kennedy O'Connor points out, however, that Austria had given Spain two points in the previous event and since Spain only won by one point, the political protest was seen as disingenuous.

The following year, Austria was again absent. This was due to the unprecedented result in 1969 in which four songs tied for first place, a result which prompted several other countries to opt out as well.

From 1973 to 1975, Austria stayed away as well. The exact reason for this is unclear, however the scoring system in use at one of these contests, which allowed all entrants a guaranteed number of points, may have been a factor.

The country was ineligible to compete in 1998 and 2001, as it had not achieved sufficiently high placings in the five previous years.

Prior to the 2006 contest, Austria announced that it would not enter a performer in protest at their poor results in previous years, arguing that the musical talent of the performers was no longer the determining factor in success at the event. The country returned for the 2007 contest in Helsinki, but came second to last in the semi-final. National broadcaster ORF cited the 2007 result, as well as declining interest in the contest among Austrian viewers, as the reason Austria would not return to the contest in 2008. ORF programme director Wolfgang Lorenz also hinted that Austria may withdraw from the contest indefinitely, stating "ORF has no desire to send more talent out of Austria to a competition where they have no chances...Should the situation change, we'll be happy to take part again". Despite withdrawing, the final of the 2008 contest was shown on ORF.

In 2008, the EBU introduced two semi-finals to the contest, hoping that spreading countries out by random draw would prevent the kind of bloc voting that had warded Austria off. Additionally, juries were reintroduced to determine 50% of each country's result in 2009 (albeit not in the semi-finals, in which all but one of the qualifiers were decided entirely by televote). However, Edgar Böhm, director of entertainment for ORF, said that the semi-final format "still incorporates a mix of countries who will be politically favoured in the voting process" and "that, unless a clear guideline as to how the semifinals are organised is made by the EBU, Austria will not be taking part in Moscow 2009". ORF decided not to participate in the 2009 contest, but did broadcast the final as in 2008. The EBU announced that they would work harder to bring Austria back to the contest in 2010, along with former participants Monaco and Italy. It was, however, confirmed that Austria would not participate in the 2010 contest in Oslo. In July 2010, the chairman of ORF, Alexander Wrabetz, stated that Austria would return for the 2011 contest, due to it being held in its neighbour Germany. In 2011, Austria reached the final for the first time since 2004.

Participation overview

Table key
1First place
2Second place
3Third place
Last place
XEntry selected but did not compete
Upcoming event
YearArtistSongLanguageFinalPointsSemiPoints
1957Bob Martin"Wohin, kleines Pony?"German10 ◁3No semi-finals
1958Liane Augustin"Die ganze Welt braucht Liebe"German58
1959Ferry Graf"Der K. und K. Kalypso aus Wien"German94
1960Harry Winter"Du hast mich so fasziniert"German76
1961Jimmy Makulis"Sehnsucht"German15 ◁1
1962Eleonore Schwarz"Nur in der Wiener Luft"German13 ◁0
1963Carmela Corren"Vielleicht geschieht ein Wunder"German, English716
1964Udo Jürgens"Warum nur, warum?"German611
1965Udo Jürgens"Sag ihr, ich lass sie grüßen"German416
1966Udo Jürgens"Merci, Chérie"German131
1967Peter Horten"Warum es hunderttausend Sterne gibt"German142
1968Karel Gott"Tausend Fenster"German132
1971Marianne Mendt"Musik"German1666
1972The Milestones"Falter im Wind"German5100
1976Waterloo and Robinson"My Little World"English580
1977Schmetterlinge"Boom Boom Boomerang"German, English1711
1978Springtime"Mrs. Caroline Robinson"German1514
1979Christina Simon"Heute in Jerusalem"German18 ◁5
1980Blue Danube"Du bist Musik"German864
1981Marty Brem"Wenn du da bist"German1720
1982Mess"Sonntag"German957
1983Westend"Hurricane"German953
1984Anita"Einfach weg"German19 ◁5
1985Gary Lux"Kinder dieser Welt"German860
1986Timna Brauer"Die Zeit ist einsam"German1812
1987Gary Lux"Nur noch Gefühl"German208
1988Wilfried"Lisa Mona Lisa"German21 ◁0
1989Thomas Forstner"Nur ein Lied"German597
1990Simone"Keine Mauern mehr"German1058
1991Thomas Forstner"Venedig im Regen"German22 ◁0
1992Tony Wegas"Zusammen geh'n"German1063
1993Tony Wegas"Maria Magdalena"German1432Kvalifikacija za Millstreet
1994Petra Frey"Für den Frieden der Welt"German1719No semi-finals
1995Stella Jones"Die Welt dreht sich verkehrt"German1367
1996George Nussbaumer"Weil's dr guat got"German1068680
1997Bettina Soriat"One Step"German2112No semi-finals
1999Bobbie Singer"Reflection"English1065
2000The Rounder Girls"All to You"English1434
2002Manuel Ortega"Say a Word"English1826
2003Alf Poier"Weil der Mensch zählt"German6101
2004Tie Break"Du bist"German219Top 11 in 2003 contest
2005Global.Kryner"Y así"English, SpanishFailed to qualify2130
2007Eric Papilaya"Get a Life – Get Alive"English274
2011Nadine Beiler"The Secret Is Love"English1864769
2012Trackshittaz"Woki mit deim Popo"GermanFailed to qualify18 ◁8
2013Natália Kelly"Shine"English1427
2014Conchita Wurst"Rise Like a Phoenix"English12901169
2015The Makemakes"I Am Yours"English260Host country
2016Zoë"Loin d'ici"French131517170
2017Nathan Trent"Running on Air"English16937147
2018Cesár Sampson"Nobody but You"English33424231
2019Paenda"Limits"EnglishFailed to qualify1721
2020Vincent Bueno"Alive"EnglishContest cancelled X
2021Vincent Bueno"Amen"EnglishFailed to qualify1266
2022Lumix feat. Pia Maria"Halo"English1542
2023Teya and Salena"Who the Hell Is Edgar?"English151202137
2024Kaleen"We Will Rave"English2424946
2025JJ"Wasted Love"English14365104
2026Cosmó"Tanzschein"GermanUpcoming Host country

Hostings

YearLocationVenuePresenter
1967ViennaGroßer Festsaal der Wiener HofburgErica Vaal
2015Wiener StadthalleArabella Kiesbauer, Alice Tumler, Mirjam Weichselbraun and Conchita Wurst
2026Victoria Swarovski and Michael Ostrowski

Awards

Marcel Bezençon Awards

YearCategorySongPerformer(s)Composer(s)Host cityRef.
2014Press Award"Rise Like a Phoenix"Conchita WurstCharley Mason, Joey Patulka, Ali Zuckowski, Julian MaasDenmark Copenhagen

Related involvement

Conductors

YearConductorMusical DirectorNotesRef.
1957Carl de GroofN/A
1958Willy Fantel
1959France Franck Pourcel
1960Robert Stolz
1961France Franck Pourcel
1962Bruno Uher
1963Erwin Halletz
1964Johannes Fehring
1965Italy Gianni Ferrio
1966Hans Hammerschmid
1967Johannes Fehring
1968Robert OpratkoN/A
1971
1972Erich Kleinschuster
1976
1977Christian Kolonovits
1978Richard Oesterreicher
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988Harald Neuwirth
1989No conductor
1990Richard Oesterreicher
1991
1992Leon Ives
1993Christian Kolonovits
1994Germany Hermann Weindorf
1995Michael F. Kienzl
1996Mischa W. Krausz
1997No conductor

Heads of delegation

YearHead of delegationRefs.
20192024Stefan Zechner

Commentators and spokespersons

Between the 1970 and 1998 contests, every contest was commentated by Austrian radio journalist and actor Ernst Grissemann, with the exception of the 1979 and 1990 contests. Grissemann admitted to future German commentator Peter Urban in 1995 that he only stayed for the dress rehearsal and then provided the Austrian commentary live from the ORF studios. After 1998 Grissemann stepped down from the commentary and was replaced by Andi Knoll. Austria has also broadcast the contests which it did not compete in, except for the 2010 contest.

Television and radio commentators and spokespersons
YearTelevisionRadioSpokespersonRef.
ChannelCommentator(s)ChannelCommentator(s)
1956ORFUnknownNo radio broadcastDid not participate
1957Unknown
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963Hanns Joachim Friedrichs
1964Unknown
1965
1966Hans-Joachim Rauschenbach[de]
1967FS1Emil Kollpacher
1968Unknown
1969Did not participate
1970Ernst Grissemann
1971No spokesperson
1972FS2
1973Did not participate
1974
1975
1976Unknown
1977FS1
1978FS2
1979FS1
1980FS2
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985FS1
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990Barbara Stöckl
1991Unknown
1992Ernst Grissemann
1993ORF 1
1994Tilia Herold[de]
1995FM4Stermann & Grissemann
1996Martina Rupp[de]
1997Adriana Zartl[de]
1998Did not participate
1999Andi KnollDodo Roscic[de]
2000
2001Did not participate
2002Dodo Roscic
2003No radio broadcast
2004
2005
2006ORF 1 (Final)Did not participate
2007ORF 1Eva Pölzl[de]
2008ORF 1 (Final)Did not participate
2009ORF 1Benny Hörtnagl[de]
2010No broadcast
2011ORF einsAndi KnollHitradio Ö3Martin Blumenau[de] (All shows) Benny Hörtnagl[de] (Final)Kati Bellowitsch
2012Andi Knoll (All shows) Stermann and Grissemann and Lukas Plöchl[de] (Final)No radio broadcast
2013Andi Knoll
2014
2015
2016
2017Kristina Inhof
2018Kati Bellowitsch
2019Philipp Hansa
2020ORF 1Not announced before cancellation
2021ORF 1Andi KnollNo radio broadcastPhilipp Hansa
2022FM4 (final)Kurdwin Ayub, Florian Alexander, Hannes Duscher and Roland Gratzer
2023Jan Böhmermann and Olli Schulz
2024
2025

Photo gallery

Notes and references

Notes

Works cited

  • O'Connor, John Kennedy (2010). The Eurovision Song Contest: The Official History (2nd ed.). London: Carlton Books. ISBN 978-1-84732-521-1.
  • Roxburgh, Gordon (2020). Songs for Europe: The United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest. Vol. Four: The 1990s. Prestatyn: Telos Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84583-163-9.