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Top 10 All-Inclusive Resorts in Austria

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · Updated · 10 min read

Top 10 All-Inclusive Resorts in Austria

*Published June 23, 2026 · Updated June 23, 2026*

Direct Answer

Austria gets closer to genuine all-inclusive than Switzerland does, because the country actually hosts several club-style resorts that bundle full board, drinks, ski passes, and activities into one price. The leaders are the Aldiana Club resorts and Falkensteiner's family-and-spa hotels.

Our Best Overall pick is the Aldiana Club Schlanitzen Alm (the former Robinson Club, rebranded by Aldiana in late 2024), sitting at 1,400 m directly in the Nassfeld ski area with full board, ski pass, and ski guiding included. Our Best Value pick is the Aldiana Club Salzkammergut in Bad Mitterndorf, whose direct-access GrimmingTherme spa and family childcare make its nightly rate one of the strongest deals in the Alps.

Be honest about the rest of the list: Austria's most famous luxury houses — Hotel Sacher Salzburg, Schloss Fuschl, Stanglwirt, Astoria Resort Seefeld — are largely half-board or room-with-breakfast properties, not true all-inclusive. We flag the board basis for every entry.

For 2027, the genuine all-in value is at the Aldiana clubs and Falkensteiner; the prestige houses are where you go for the address, not the bundled bar tab.

flowchart TD A[Want an Austrian resort stay?] --> B{True all-inclusive<br/>full board, drinks, ski pass?} B -->|Yes| C{Skiing or wellness focus?} C -->|Skiing| D[Aldiana Schlanitzen Alm / Hochkonig] C -->|Wellness + family| E[Aldiana Salzkammergut] B -->|Half board is fine| F{What matters most?} F -->|Family spa value| G[Falkensteiner Schladming / Carinzia] F -->|Iconic prestige| H[Sacher / Schloss Fuschl / Stanglwirt] F -->|Quiet plateau scenery| I[Astoria Seefeld / Travel Charme Werfenweng]

1. Aldiana Club Schlanitzen Alm 🏆 BEST OVERALL

Aldiana Club Schlanitzen Alm
Aldiana Club Schlanitzen Alm

Type: True all-inclusive ski club | Price: from ~$845/night | Location: Nassfeld / Hermagor, Carinthia | Best for: Skiers and families wanting one price

Formerly the Robinson Club Schlanitzen Alm, this resort was taken over by Aldiana on 14 December 2024 and now runs as the Aldiana Club Schlanitzen Alm. Perched at 1,400 m directly in the Nassfeld ski area with over 110 km of slopes, it offers all-inclusive full board plus ski pass and ski guiding — the rare Austrian address where the alpine all-inclusive promise is real.

With 169 rooms, two bars, buffet and specialty restaurants, and the Welldiana Club Spa (indoor pool and panorama sauna), it covers a full ski week without a stack of side bills.

The club format is sociable and family-forward rather than hushed and formal, which is exactly what you want when the lift pass and dinner are already paid for.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: Austria's strongest true all-inclusive ski club — one price, slopes at the door, everything handled.

2. Aldiana Club Salzkammergut 💎 BEST VALUE

Aldiana Club Salzkammergut
Aldiana Club Salzkammergut

Type: All-inclusive wellness & family club | Price: from ~$310/night | Location: Bad Mitterndorf, Styria | Best for: Spa-and-family value

On the edge of Bad Mitterndorf with panoramic Ausseerland views, this club connects directly to the 8,000 m² GrimmingTherme, which packs 3 outdoor and 6 indoor saunas plus 6 pools, with separate kids' areas. Families lean on the professional Flosse Club childcare. Room rates have been seen from roughly $306 to $576, averaging around $400 — making it the best-value all-inclusive on this list.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The smartest-value all-inclusive in Austria — a huge thermal spa and family program at a gentle rate.

3. Aldiana Club Hochkönig

Aldiana Club Hochkönig
Aldiana Club Hochkönig

Type: All-inclusive (Half Board Plus) club | Price: from ~$130/person/night | Location: Mühlbach am Hochkönig, Salzburgerland | Best for: Salzburgerland skiers and families

At roughly 1,000 m at the foot of the Hochkönig, this 133-room club offers "Halbpension Plus" — half board plus drinks with dinner — and includes the Hochkönig Card for free cable cars, regional transport, and public pools. Summer 2026 starts from €885 per person for the period; winter 2026/27 from €829 per person with early-booking savings up to 20%.

It sits between full all-inclusive and half board, but the included card and drinks push it toward the all-in feel.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A well-priced Salzburgerland club where the included mountain card does a lot of the all-inclusive work.

4. Falkensteiner Hotel Schladming

Falkensteiner Hotel Schladming
Falkensteiner Hotel Schladming

Type: Four-star-superior spa hotel (half board) | Price: from ~$200/night | Location: Schladming, Styria | Best for: Ski-and-spa value in a lively town

A four-star-superior in the center of Schladming, just steps from the Planai cable car, with the Acquapura Spa (indoor and outdoor pools, sauna world, fitness) and Alpine-Mediterranean and Styrian dining. Sold predominantly half board, not all-inclusive, but Falkensteiner's spa-and-family packaging makes it a reliable value base for one of Austria's best ski towns.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The dependable ski-and-spa value pick in Schladming.

5. Falkensteiner Hotel & Spa Carinzia

Falkensteiner Hotel & Spa Carinzia
Falkensteiner Hotel & Spa Carinzia

Type: Four-star-superior spa hotel (half board) | Price: from ~$210/night | Location: Nassfeld, Carinthia | Best for: Spa-focused stays at Nassfeld

At the foot of the Carinthian Nassfeld, this Falkensteiner pairs ski access with a large Acquapura spa and a family-friendly setup. Like its Schladming sibling, it is a half-board house rather than all-inclusive, but the wellness facilities and Carinthia's quieter pace make it a strong relaxation base near the same slopes as the Schlanitzen Alm club.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A spa-led Nassfeld base for travelers who prioritize wellness over an all-in bar tab.

6. Travel Charme Bergresort Werfenweng

Travel Charme Bergresort Werfenweng
Travel Charme Bergresort Werfenweng

Type: Mountain resort hotel (half board) | Price: from ~$190/night | Location: Werfenweng, Salzburgerland | Best for: Soft-mobility eco-minded mountain stays

Set in the car-light "soft mobility" village of Werfenweng, this Travel Charme resort offers a spa, family facilities, and easy access to gentle ski and hiking terrain in a quieter corner of Salzburgerland. Sold on a half-board / room-plus-breakfast basis, not all-inclusive.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A calm, eco-minded mountain base for travelers who want gentle terrain and less crowding.

7. Stanglwirt

Stanglwirt
Stanglwirt

Type: Luxury bio-resort (half board) | Price: from ~$350/night | Location: Going am Wilden Kaiser, Tyrol | Best for: Tyrolean character with serious wellness

The family-run Stanglwirt is one of Tyrol's most characterful luxury resorts — an organic "bio" hotel with its own farm, a vast spa, indoor tennis, and a famous Wilder Kaiser backdrop. It hosts celebrity events and ski-season galas. Sold half board / room-plus-breakfast, not all-inclusive, but the on-site farm-to-table dining and wellness depth are a draw in their own right.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: Tyrol's most distinctive luxury wellness resort, if you accept a half-board model.

8. Astoria Resort Seefeld

Astoria Resort Seefeld
Astoria Resort Seefeld

Type: Adults-friendly spa resort (half board / 3/4 board) | Price: from ~$280/night | Location: Seefeld, Tyrol | Best for: Spa relaxation on the Seefeld plateau

On the high Seefeld plateau — a former Olympic Nordic venue — the Astoria is a spa-forward five-star resort with extensive pools, saunas, and a strong culinary program often sold as 3/4 board (breakfast, afternoon snack, dinner). It is a wellness-and-dining resort rather than a true all-inclusive, but the generous board basis nudges it closer than most prestige houses.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: A spa-and-cuisine retreat where the board basis is more generous than most Austrian luxury hotels.

9. Hotel Sacher Salzburg

Hotel Sacher Salzburg
Hotel Sacher Salzburg

Type: Iconic city grand hotel (room + breakfast) | Price: from ~$500/night | Location: Salzburg city, Salzburgerland | Best for: Culture-first Salzburg luxury

The Sacher's Salzburg house sits on the Salzach with views of the Old Town and fortress, home of the original Sacher-Torte and a benchmark of Austrian grand-hotel service. This is a city hotel sold room-plus-breakfast, not an all-inclusive resort — included here as the prestige urban option for travelers pairing alpine days with culture.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: The definitive Salzburg city luxury stay; a culture counterpoint to the mountain clubs.

10. Schloss Fuschl, a Luxury Collection Resort & Spa

Schloss Fuschl, a Luxury Collection Resort & Spa
Schloss Fuschl, a Luxury Collection Resort & Spa

Type: Lakeside castle resort (room + breakfast / half board) | Price: from ~$600/night | Location: Hof bei Salzburg, Fuschlsee | Best for: Lakeside castle grandeur near Salzburg

A restored 15th-century castle on the shore of the Fuschlsee, Schloss Fuschl reopened as a Luxury Collection resort with a private lakeside spa, fine dining, and rooms framing the water and surrounding peaks. Sold room-plus-breakfast with half-board options, not all-inclusive, but the lakeside setting and spa place it among Austria's most romantic resort stays.

Pros:

Cons:

Verdict: Austria's standout lakeside castle resort, ideal for a romantic 2027 escape near Salzburg.

flowchart TD Start[Choosing an Austrian resort for 2027] --> Q1{One all-in price<br/>required?} Q1 -->|Yes, skiing| Schl[Aldiana Schlanitzen Alm] Q1 -->|Yes, wellness value| Salz[Aldiana Salzkammergut] Q1 -->|Close enough, with mountain card| Hoch[Aldiana Hochkonig] Q1 -->|No, half board fine| Q2{Priority?} Q2 -->|Ski-and-spa value| Falk[Falkensteiner Schladming / Carinzia] Q2 -->|Tyrolean character| Stang[Stanglwirt / Astoria Seefeld] Q2 -->|Prestige and lakes| Pres[Sacher / Schloss Fuschl]

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Austria have real all-inclusive resorts? Yes — more than Switzerland. The Aldiana Club resorts (Schlanitzen Alm, Salzkammergut) bundle full board, drinks, and often ski passes into one price, which is genuinely all-inclusive.

Is the Robinson Club Schlanitzen Alm still open? It is open but renamed. Aldiana took it over on 14 December 2024, and it now operates as the Aldiana Club Schlanitzen Alm in the Nassfeld ski area.

Which Austrian resort is the best value? The Aldiana Club Salzkammergut in Bad Mitterndorf — rates often from around $306, with direct access to the huge GrimmingTherme spa and a family childcare program included.

Are Hotel Sacher and Schloss Fuschl all-inclusive? No. Both are prestige properties sold room-plus-breakfast with optional half board. They are included for their setting and service, not for bundled inclusions.

When should I book for the 2026/27 winter season? Book by late spring for the best Aldiana early-booking savings — Aldiana Hochkönig advertised up to 20% off for winter 2026/27 booked by 31 May 2026, and similar windows recur.

What does "Half Board Plus" mean? It is half board (breakfast and dinner) with drinks included at dinner — common at Aldiana Hochkönig and a step toward all-inclusive without covering lunch or daytime drinks.

Bottom Line

Austria is the better bet of the two alpine giants if you genuinely want all-inclusive. Lead with the Aldiana Club Schlanitzen Alm for ski-in full board, or the Aldiana Club Salzkammergut for the best wellness-and-family value, with Aldiana Club Hochkönig close behind thanks to its included mountain card.

The Falkensteiner hotels add dependable half-board ski-and-spa value. The famous names — Sacher, Schloss Fuschl, Stanglwirt, Astoria Seefeld — are about the address and the cuisine, not a bundled bar tab, so book them with eyes open for 2027 and add your extras knowingly.

Sources

*Review keywords: all-inclusive resorts in Austria review, best all-inclusive resorts in Austria reviews, all-inclusive resorts in Austria rating, all-inclusive resorts in Austria review 2027, review of all-inclusive resorts in Austria.*

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