Cheap Flights from Berlin to Vienna, Starting Around €29
I booked the €31 easyJet fare without much thought — a spontaneous long weekend, checked out on a Tuesday night, flying Wednesday morning. The catch I expected never came. No rogue bag fee that tripled the price, no 5am departure, no mystery surcharge at the gate. Eighty minutes after leaving Berlin Brandenburg I was standing on the Ringstrasse in Vienna’s crisp October air, wondering why I’d waited this long to make the trip.
Cheap flights from Berlin to Vienna exist in serious numbers, and the route has never been more competitive. Austrian, easyJet, Eurowings, Ryanair and Wizz Air all fly it non-stop. Here’s the fast answer: one-way fares start around €29 in off-peak months, and a midweek return for under €80 is very achievable if you fly lean.
Read on for the cheapest months, an airline comparison, the honest case for the overnight train, and every tip that keeps the price down.
Check live prices for your dates first, then come back to find the combination of airline, day and bag strategy that lands you the best total cost.
Best Time to Fly from Berlin to Vienna
The price difference between a peak Saturday in August and a Tuesday in November can be €120 on the same route. Getting the timing right is the highest-leverage move you can make.
| Month | Typical one-way fare | Weather in Vienna | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | €29–€45 | Cold, 0–4°C | Cheapest of the year |
| February | €30–€50 | Cold, 2–6°C | Ball season can spike fares midweek |
| March | €35–€65 | Cool, 6–12°C | Good value; Easter weekend pushes prices up |
| April | €40–€70 | Mild, 10–16°C | Spring in Vienna — great timing, moderate fares |
| May | €45–€80 | Warm, 15–21°C | Lovely; book a touch earlier |
| June | €55–€90 | Warm, 18–24°C | High demand begins |
| July | €60–€100 | Hot, 22–28°C | Peak summer; avoid last-minute |
| August | €60–€100 | Hot, 22–27°C | Stays expensive; book 10+ weeks out |
| September | €45–€75 | Mild, 17–22°C | Best shoulder month — pleasant and cheaper |
| October | €35–€60 | Cool, 11–16°C | My favourite window: golden city, lower fares |
| November | €30–€50 | Cold, 5–9°C | Near the cheapest of the year |
| December | €35–€110 | Cold, 1–5°C | Cheap until mid-month, then Christmas surge |
January and November are the clear bargain months. September and October are the smart traveller’s pick — Vienna’s parks turn amber, the cultural season kicks off, the Schönbrunn Palace gardens are gorgeous, and fares haven’t climbed to summer levels.
The one trap to watch is February: the Vienna Philharmonic Ball and the broader Fasching (carnival) season bring a rush of European visitors, which nudges midweek fares higher than you’d expect for a quiet winter month.
Airlines Compared: Berlin to Vienna
Five carriers means genuine competition, and that’s what keeps prices low. Here’s how they stack up.
| Airline | Fare from | Carry-on included | Checked bag | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ryanair | €29 | Small personal item only | Extra cost | Lowest headline price |
| Wizz Air | €30 | Small personal item only | Extra cost | Lowest price, flexible changes |
| easyJet | €34 | Carry-on bag included | Extra cost | Carry-on travellers |
| Eurowings | €39 | Carry-on bag included | Extra cost | Lufthansa connection |
| Austrian Airlines | €55 | Carry-on + meal | Included on many fares | Comfort and Miles & More |
Ryanair and Wizz Air
These two fight each other hardest on price, and fares regularly fall to €29 to €35 one-way in the off-season. The small print: only a personal item (under the seat) is free. A cabin bag adds around €10 to €20 booked ahead, or much more at the gate. Pack one small bag, live by the rules, and the saving is real.
easyJet
easyJet includes an overhead cabin bag in most of its fares, which is a genuine advantage over Ryanair if you need more than a backpack. Fares start around €34 and the booking experience is clean. It’s the airline I used for that October trip and had no complaints.
Eurowings
Eurowings fares typically start a little higher but include carry-on allowance and earn Lufthansa Miles & More. Worth checking if you’re loyal to the Star Alliance ecosystem, or if you need a seamless connection elsewhere.
Austrian Airlines
Austrian is the premium choice: a full-service cabin with a meal, a generous carry-on, and Miles & More miles on every flight. Fares from around €55 to €80 are higher than the budget carriers, but the real-cost gap closes considerably once you add bag fees to the budget fares. Austrian also has the most flights per day, which gives you better flexibility if plans change.
Ready to see what this route costs on your specific dates?
The Overnight Train Alternative
Here’s the thing nobody mentions when searching for the cheapest way from Berlin to Vienna: the ÖBB Nightjet is a legitimate competitor to flying once you add everything up.
The train departs Berlin Hauptbahnhof in the evening and arrives at Wien Hauptbahnhof — right in the heart of Vienna — the following morning. You board after dinner, sleep in a couchette or private sleeper, and wake up already in the city. No airport transfer, no 6am alarm, no bag fees. Couchette fares start around €29 per person, and a private two-bed sleeper cabin runs €60 to €90.
The honest trade-off: flying takes 80 minutes, the train takes around 12 to 13 hours. If you have flexibility and your time in Berlin extends into the evening, the Nightjet earns its keep — you swap a night at a hotel for the journey itself. If every hour of your weekend counts, fly.
Use the Live Price Calendar
The calendar highlights the cheapest available days at a glance. Green cells mean cheap — scan a month, spot the midweek dip, and book the day everyone else overlooks.
Seven Ways to Pay Less for Berlin to Vienna Flights
- Fly midweek. Tuesday and Wednesday departures regularly cost €15 to €30 less each way than Friday or Sunday.
- Carry-on only. A checked bag costs €20 to €35 on budget carriers. One well-packed cabin bag or personal item keeps the headline fare intact.
- Compare all five carriers in one search on your exact dates — prices can vary by €40 on the same day.
- Set price alerts. Flash sales on competitive routes like this one drop fares 30 to 50 percent for 24 to 48 hours. An alert costs you nothing.
- Book 5 to 8 weeks ahead as a rule; extend to 10 to 12 weeks for Easter, peak summer and the Christmas week.
- Consider the Nightjet for longer trips. A Thursday night train means you wake up in Vienna on Friday morning having spent nothing on a hotel — and the fare from €29 can beat flying once extras are factored in.
- Check nearby Austrian destinations. If Vienna fares spike, Salzburg and Graz airports sometimes offer a cheaper entry point to the country for the same dates.
Stay connected when you land
Roaming charges can add up quickly, especially for city navigation, map apps and booking confirmations. A travel eSIM loads onto your phone before you fly and connects the moment you land at VIE, so you step off the plane already navigating.
- Activate before you fly — data works on arrival
- Plans for 200+ countries from a few dollars
- Keep your number; no physical SIM swap
Sorting out where to stay? Browse our Vienna hotel guides to pair a cheap fare with a well-located room near the Ringstrasse or the Prater.
- Non-stop fares from around €29 in off-peak months
- Five airlines competing keeps prices low
- Fast 1h20 flight
- Overnight train is a genuine, low-cost alternative
- Vienna is easily walkable — low costs on the ground
- Budget bag fees can add €20–€35 to the headline fare
- Summer peak (July–August) prices climb sharply
- Christmas week fares spike significantly
- February Ball season adds unexpected midweek pressure
What to Do in Vienna (Without the Tourist Trap Pricing)
Vienna rewards a little planning. Schönbrunn Palace and its formal gardens are a full morning on their own — the palace interior is worth the entry fee, but the hilltop Gloriette viewpoint is free and gives you the classic Vienna skyline. The Ringstrasse walk from the State Opera past the Kunsthistorisches Museum to the Rathaus is one of the great free strolls in any European capital.
Vienna’s Kaffeehaus culture is one of its genuine, irreplaceable pleasures. Sitting for an hour over a Melange and a slice of Sachertorte in a grand café — Café Central, Café Landtmann, or the more local Café Schwarzenberg — isn’t tourist bait, it’s how Viennese people actually use the city. Budget around €6 to €10 for the coffee-and-cake experience and take your time.
The Prater park is free, the giant Riesenrad Ferris wheel costs around €14, and the 7km Hauptallee boulevard is one of the best urban walks in central Europe. The Naschmarkt is the city’s main food market — open Tuesday to Saturday — and a great place to graze on fresh produce, international street food and Austrian pastries without spending much.
For internal links to more flight guides or help finding a cheap hotel in Vienna, check the site navigation — we’ve got both covered.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest month to fly from Berlin to Vienna?
January and November offer the lowest fares, with one-way tickets from around €29 to €45. Demand drops sharply after the Christmas period and again in late autumn, so prices follow. Avoid Easter weekend and the very end of December, when fares spike. September and October are the best shoulder months — mild weather and fares well below the summer peak.
How long is the flight from Berlin to Vienna?
A direct flight from Berlin Brandenburg (BER) to Vienna International (VIE) takes around 1 hour 20 minutes. Austrian, easyJet, Eurowings, Ryanair and Wizz Air all fly the route non-stop, so there are usually multiple departures throughout the day.
Which airlines fly direct from Berlin to Vienna?
Austrian Airlines, easyJet, Eurowings, Ryanair and Wizz Air all operate non-stop flights. Austrian is the full-service carrier; the other four compete aggressively on price, with fares sometimes as low as €29 to €35 one-way in the off-season.
Is the overnight train from Berlin to Vienna worth it?
The ÖBB Nightjet departs Berlin Hauptbahnhof in the evening and arrives at Wien Hauptbahnhof in the morning, with couchette fares from around €29. It’s a strong alternative to flying once you factor in airport transfers and bag fees, particularly for travellers who’d otherwise need a hotel night at one end. The trade-off is time — around 12 to 13 hours versus 80 minutes in the air.
When should I book Berlin to Vienna flights?
Book five to eight weeks ahead for the best prices. For Easter, July and August, and the Christmas week, extend that to ten to twelve weeks. Price alerts are worth setting on this route — competitive pressure from five carriers means flash sales of 30 to 50 percent off appear regularly.
What is the cheapest way to travel from Berlin to Vienna?
Ryanair or Wizz Air with carry-on-only packing is the cheapest flying option, with fares from around €29 one-way. The ÖBB Nightjet is a close competitor once flight extras are added, offers a couchette from a similar price, and delivers you to the centre of Vienna. Compare both for your dates.
Book Your Berlin to Vienna Flight
I almost talked myself out of that October trip — too short a notice, too much on at work. The €31 fare was what made the decision for me. Eighty minutes in the air, an entire weekend in one of Europe’s most walkable, most beautiful cities, and back in Berlin by Sunday evening. The route is this competitive and this quick; the only thing that raises the real cost is a bag you didn’t need to check.
Book lean, fly midweek if you can, and let the five carriers on this route fight for your seat.
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