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Austrian Airlines vs Lufthansa 2026: Same Group, Different Hubs

Both Lufthansa Group. Same Miles & More loyalty. Austrian's Vienna hub for CEE; Lufthansa's Allegris on A350. Bags, premium cabins, US gateways compared.
By Caden Sorenson Sourced from official Austrian Airlines & Lufthansa policy pages

Quick verdict

Carry-on
Tie
Checked bag
Tie
Basic economy
Tie
Overall: It depends on your priorities

Austrian Airlines and Lufthansa are sister airlines under Lufthansa Group with nearly identical baggage policies, the same Miles & More loyalty program, the same Star Alliance membership, and similar fare class structures. Austrian's Vienna (VIE) hub specializes in Central and Eastern European routes that Lufthansa does not cover directly (Belgrade, Sofia, Bucharest, Tbilisi, and others). Lufthansa's two-hub German network (Frankfurt + Munich) plus the new Allegris business class hard product on A350 fleet gives it global reach and premium product depth Austrian cannot match. Choose by hub geography and whether your trip needs Eastern Europe (Austrian) or global Star Alliance reach (Lufthansa).

Austrian Airlines vs Lufthansa specification comparison
Spec Austrian Airlines Lufthansa
Carry-on (in) 21.7 x 15.7 x 9.1" 21.7 x 15.7 x 9.1"
Carry-on (cm) 55 x 40 x 23 cm 55 x 40 x 23 cm
Carry-on weight 8 kg (17.6 lb) 8 kg (17.6 lb)
Carry-on fee Free Free
Personal item 15.7 x 11.8 x 5.9" 15.7 x 11.8 x 5.9"
1st checked bag $0 $0
2nd checked bag Not published Not published
Basic economy Economy Light Economy Light
Gate-check risk Medium Medium

Austrian Airlines and Lufthansa are sister airlines under Lufthansa Group, sharing the Miles & More loyalty program, Star Alliance membership, and nearly identical fare-class structures and baggage policies. The two airlines codeshare on most major routes, and a frequent flyer earning Miles & More benefits identically from either airline.

The differences come down to hub geography and global reach. Austrian Airlines is built around Vienna (VIE) and specializes in Central and Eastern European routes (Belgrade, Sofia, Bucharest, Tbilisi, and 20+ CEE destinations) that Lufthansa does not serve directly. Lufthansa operates from Frankfurt (FRA) and Munich (MUC) with 20+ US gateways and the new Allegris business class hard product (Suite Plus enclosed pods) rolling out across the A350 fleet.

For most US travelers needing Eastern European access on a single ticket, Austrian via Vienna is the better connection. For US travelers to anywhere in Northern, Western, or Southern Europe, Lufthansa’s two-hub network has more US gateways and broader European reach.

What We Looked For

  • Baggage policies, which are nearly identical given shared Lufthansa Group standards
  • Eastern European route network coverage, where Austrian’s Vienna hub dominates
  • Business class hard product, comparing Austrian’s 2-2-2/1-2-1 lie-flat to Lufthansa Allegris
  • US gateway access including the smaller Austrian US network from JFK/EWR/IAD/ORD vs Lufthansa’s 20+ cities
  • Loyalty program identity since both share Miles & More
  • Fare-class structures and the small differences in checked bag bundling

Which airline charges less for bags, Austrian or Lufthansa?

Nearly identical policies. Both Lufthansa Group standards: 55x40x23 cm 8 kg cabin bag included on every fare, 40x30x15 cm personal item, fare-class-based checked bag bundling.

Carry-on. Both airlines: 55x40x23 cm (21.7x15.7x9.1 in), 8 kg, free on every fare including Economy Light. The 8 kg weight limit is enforced at European gates on both carriers.

Personal item. Austrian: 40x30x15 cm (15.7x11.8x5.9 in). Lufthansa: 40x30x15 cm (15.7x11.8x5.9 in). Identical dimensions on both carriers. Both fit standard handbags, laptop bags, and small backpacks.

Checked bags. Austrian Economy Light: 0 included. Long-haul add-on $75 flat; intra-Europe add-on EUR 15-25 at booking. Austrian Economy Classic/Flex: 1x23 kg included. Austrian Business: 2x32 kg. Lufthansa intra-Europe Light: 0 included. Lufthansa transatlantic Light: typically 1x23 kg included (different from Austrian’s flat-fee model). Lufthansa Economy Classic/Flex: 1x23 kg. Lufthansa Premium Economy: 1x23 kg. Lufthansa Business: 2x32 kg.

The one structural difference: Lufthansa transatlantic Light typically includes a checked bag, while Austrian Light requires a flat $75 add-on. On Austrian long-haul Light, factor the $75 into your fare comparison.

Winner: Cabin bag policy
tie / Identical 55x40x23 cm 8 kg on both, same Lufthansa Group standard
Winner: Personal item size
tie / Both 40x30x15 cm; identical personal item allowance
Winner: Transatlantic Light checked bag
Lufthansa / Typically includes 1 bag; Austrian requires $75 flat add-on
Winner: Premium Economy availability
Lufthansa / Austrian has no Premium Economy cabin on most aircraft

Vienna (VIE) is the Eastern European gateway Lufthansa cannot match

Austrian Airlines’ Vienna hub specializes in Central and Eastern European routes that Lufthansa does not serve directly. For travelers to or from Belgrade, Sofia, Bucharest, Tbilisi, Yerevan, and similar CEE/Caucasus cities, Austrian via Vienna is often the only single-ticket option.

Austrian’s Vienna network covers an unusually deep set of Central and Eastern European destinations: Belgrade (Serbia), Sofia (Bulgaria), Bucharest (Romania), Skopje (North Macedonia), Sarajevo (Bosnia), Tirana (Albania), Pristina (Kosovo), Sibiu (Romania), Iasi (Romania), Cluj-Napoca (Romania), Chisinau (Moldova), Tbilisi (Georgia), Yerevan (Armenia), Baku (Azerbaijan), Astana (Kazakhstan), Almaty (Kazakhstan), and several others. Many of these routes operate multiple times per day from Vienna, making Austrian the default carrier for travelers connecting to these destinations from anywhere outside the immediate region.

Lufthansa flies some CEE destinations from Frankfurt and Munich (Warsaw, Prague, Budapest, Belgrade seasonal, Sofia seasonal) but the network is meaningfully thinner than Austrian’s, with less frequency and fewer destinations. Most US-to-CEE travelers connecting on Lufthansa end up going through Vienna anyway on a codeshare with Austrian, since Austrian operates the actual flight to the smaller CEE city.

For Western, Northern, and Southern Europe, Lufthansa’s network is far broader through Frankfurt and Munich. For Central and Eastern Europe, Vienna is the better hub.

Winner: Central/Eastern European routes
Austrian / Vienna hub dominates CEE/Caucasus access
Winner: Northern/Western European reach
Lufthansa / FRA+MUC two-hub network has more EU destinations

Business class: Allegris Suite Plus vs Austrian lie-flat

Lufthansa Allegris is the rolling-out (2024-2026) business class hard product with five seat types including Suite Plus enclosed pods. Austrian’s business class on 767-300 and 777-200ER widebodies is standard 2-2-2 or 1-2-1 lie-flat without the door, pod, or premium amenity features.

Lufthansa Allegris on A350-equipped routes through 2026 offers five seat types: Suite Plus (enclosed pod with door, ottoman, wardrobe, larger IFE), Business Class Suite (similar without door), Standard Business (lie-flat 1-2-1), Extra Long Bed, and Extra Wide. Suite Plus is widely regarded as one of the best business class seats in commercial service. Lufthansa is also rolling Allegris to the incoming Boeing 787-9 fleet.

Austrian Airlines business class on the 767-300 (older aircraft) and 777-200ER (newer) is a more standard lie-flat product: 2-2-2 on 767-300, 1-2-1 on 777-200ER. Good but not class-leading. No enclosed pod, no door, more limited IFE and amenity kit relative to Allegris. Round-trip Austrian Business transatlantic typically runs EUR 3,000-5,500; Lufthansa Allegris typically runs EUR 3,500-7,000+.

For pure cabin product, Lufthansa Allegris Suite Plus is meaningfully ahead when available. For Austrian-hub-direct value, Austrian Business is competitive.

Winner: Business class hardware (Suite Plus)
Lufthansa / Allegris Suite Plus enclosed pod; Austrian has no equivalent
Winner: Business class value
Austrian / EUR 3,000-5,500 vs Lufthansa EUR 3,500-7,000+

Miles & More: identical earning across both airlines

Both airlines share the same Miles & More loyalty program. A mile earned on Austrian is identical to a mile earned on Lufthansa, SWISS, Brussels Airlines, or any Star Alliance partner.

Miles & More is one of the largest and most established European FFPs with global Star Alliance reciprocity, deep credit card co-brand support (Miles & More Mastercard, Lufthansa Amex Card in the US and Europe), elite status tiers (Frequent Traveller, Senator, HON Circle) that earn benefits across the entire Star Alliance, and award redemptions on Star Alliance partners worldwide.

There is no “Austrian Miles & More” vs “Lufthansa Miles & More” distinction. The program is unified across Lufthansa Group. Status earned by flying Austrian counts identically toward elite tier requirements as status earned by flying Lufthansa. Credit card earning is identical. Award redemption is interchangeable.

The practical implication: choose your airline based on hub geography (Vienna vs Frankfurt/Munich), cabin product (Allegris vs Austrian Business), or route convenience, not based on loyalty earning. The Miles & More math is the same.

Winner: Loyalty program identity
tie / Both share Miles & More; identical earning, redemption, status
Winner: Star Alliance reciprocity
tie / Both flagship members; 20+ partner benefits identical

Who should pick Austrian Airlines

  • Your origin or destination is in Central or Eastern Europe (Vienna, Belgrade, Sofia, Bucharest, Tbilisi, Yerevan, Baku, and many others Austrian serves nonstop from VIE)
  • You are flying nonstop between a US gateway Austrian serves (JFK, EWR, IAD, ORD, seasonal LAX) and Vienna
  • Connecting through Vienna fits your itinerary geographically (CEE-bound or returning from CEE)
  • You hold Miles & More elite status and crediting flight segments to Lufthansa Group works for your status tier
  • Austrian business class transatlantic at EUR 3,000-5,500 is the right cabin price point

Who should pick Lufthansa

  • Your transatlantic destination is anywhere in Northern, Western, or Southern Europe (or onward Star Alliance destinations in Asia, Africa, Middle East)
  • You want Lufthansa Allegris Suite Plus business class on a route operated by an Allegris-equipped A350
  • You need access to one of Lufthansa’s 20+ US gateways (most US travelers have a closer Lufthansa airport than Austrian)
  • Frankfurt or Munich connections work for your downstream itinerary
  • You value the broader Lufthansa fleet diversity (A220, A320, 737, 787, 777, A350, A380) for varied cabin experiences
  • Lufthansa Premium Economy is the right cabin for your transatlantic flight (Austrian does not have Premium Economy on most aircraft)

The bottom line

This is the rare airline comparison where the loyalty program is identical (Miles & More), the alliance is identical (Star Alliance), the baggage policies are nearly identical (55x40x23 cm 8 kg cabin bag, 40x30x15 cm personal item), and the airlines are corporate sisters under Lufthansa Group. The differences come down to hub geography and global network scale.

For Central and Eastern European travel, Austrian via Vienna is the obvious choice with route depth Lufthansa cannot match. For everything else in Europe and globally, Lufthansa’s two-hub German network plus the Allegris Suite Plus business class hard product wins on both reach and cabin product.

Loyalty earning is identical between the two carriers; do not let FFP considerations factor into the decision. Pick by route convenience, cabin product, and hub geography.

For more comparisons, see SWISS vs Lufthansa and ITA Airways vs Lufthansa.

Frequently asked questions

Are Austrian Airlines and Lufthansa the same company?
Both are subsidiaries of Lufthansa Group, but they operate as separate brands with different fleets, hubs, and route networks. Lufthansa Group also owns SWISS, Brussels Airlines, Eurowings, and Air Dolomiti. The airlines share the same Miles & More loyalty program (a Miles & More mile is identical whether earned on Lufthansa, Austrian, SWISS, Brussels, or Lufthansa Group partners), the same Star Alliance membership, similar baggage policies, and codeshare across most major routes. For most travel decisions, the airlines feel like sister rather than independent operators.
Austrian Airlines or Lufthansa for Eastern Europe?
Austrian Airlines, by a meaningful margin. Vienna (VIE) is one of the most strategically located hubs for Central and Eastern European travel, with direct service to Belgrade, Sofia, Bucharest, Skopje, Sarajevo, Tirana, Pristina, Tbilisi, Yerevan, Baku, Astana, and many other CEE destinations Lufthansa does not serve directly. Lufthansa requires connecting through Frankfurt or Munich for most CEE destinations, adding 1-2 hours and a layover. For Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia, North Macedonia, Bosnia, Albania, Kosovo, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Austrian is the better choice.
Does Austrian Airlines include carry-on on Economy Light?
Yes. Austrian Economy Light includes the full 55x40x23 cm (21.7x15.7x9.1 in) cabin bag at 8 kg plus a 40x30x15 cm personal item. The Light restriction is on the checked bag (none included; $75 flat on long-haul add-on, EUR 15-25 intra-Europe at booking). Lufthansa Economy Light has the same cabin bag but no checked allowance on intra-Europe; transatlantic Lufthansa Light typically includes 1 checked bag. Both airlines enforce the 8 kg cabin bag weight at European gates.
Lufthansa Allegris vs Austrian Airlines business class?
Lufthansa Allegris is the new (rolling out 2024-2026 on A350 fleet and new 787-9 deliveries) business class hard product with five seat types including the Suite Plus enclosed pod with door, ottoman, wardrobe, and large IFE. Austrian Airlines business class on its 767-300 and 777-200ER long-haul fleet is a standard 2-2-2 or 1-2-1 lie-flat product without the door or pod features. For US-Vienna or US-Eastern-Europe travel, Austrian business class is the only nonstop option but does not match Lufthansa Allegris hardware. For US-Frankfurt or US-Munich with Allegris-equipped aircraft, Lufthansa wins on cabin product.
Miles & More earning on Austrian vs Lufthansa?
Identical, since both are Lufthansa Group airlines sharing the Miles & More program. A Miles & More mile earned on Austrian is identical to one earned on Lufthansa, SWISS, Brussels Airlines, or any Star Alliance partner. Status earning, status benefits, and award redemption are interchangeable. The Lufthansa-branded Miles & More credit cards (Mastercard, Amex) earn miles equally on either airline. Your choice of airline does not affect your loyalty progress.
Austrian Airlines or Lufthansa for US gateways?
Lufthansa serves 20+ US gateways (JFK, EWR, BOS, IAD, MIA, FLL, MCO, ORD, MSP, DEN, IAH, DFW, LAX, SFO, SAN, SEA + seasonal) from Frankfurt and Munich. Austrian Airlines operates nonstop to Vienna from a much smaller US gateway list: JFK, EWR, IAD, ORD, plus seasonal LAX and others. For most US travelers, Lufthansa has the closer departure airport, and the connection through FRA or MUC to Vienna adds 1.5-2 hours. For travelers based in the East Coast cities Austrian serves nonstop, the direct VIE flight is faster and often comparably priced.

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Caden Sorenson

Travel research publisher and senior staff engineer

Caden Sorenson runs Vientapps, an independent travel research and tools site covering airline carry-on policies, packing lists, and head-to-head airline, cruise, and destination comparisons, with everything cited to primary sources. He's a senior staff engineer with 15+ years of experience building iOS apps, web platforms, and developer tools, and a Computer Science graduate from Utah State University. Based in Logan, Utah.

Last verified 2026-05-23 against official Austrian Airlines and Lufthansa policy pages. Airlines change rules without notice, so confirm with your carrier before flying. See our research methodology.