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Slope accidents

Ski, snowboard and toboggan accident, when compensation is realistic

FIS rules, fault and evidence: when a compensation claim is realistic after a ski, snowboard or toboggan accident in Austria.

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Mag. Christopher Angerer, Rechtsanwalt

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12 June 2026 · Mag. Christopher Angerer, Rechtsanwalt

A fall on the slope, a collision while snowboarding or an accident on the toboggan run quickly raises the question of whether someone has to pay for it. A compensation claim does not arise automatically, but only where another person culpably breached the recognised rules of conduct and thereby caused the accident. The decisive factors are the FIS rules as the standard of care, fault, any contributory negligence and, above all, the evidentiary position.

The legal basis is fault liability under §§ 1293 ff ABGB, supplemented by contributory negligence under § 1304 ABGB, pain and suffering under § 1325 ABGB and the limitation period under § 1489 ABGB. Alongside other slope users, the slope operator may also be liable under its slope-safety duty, but only for atypical dangers. The FIS rules of conduct of the International Ski Federation serve here as the recognised standard and concretise the required care.

This post is a compact introduction to the topic of compensation after ski, snowboard and toboggan accidents. It sets out when a claim is realistic and, for the detailed questions, on collision, pain and suffering, rescue costs or liability at the slope edge, refers to the in-depth posts of this specialist domain.

Cause of the accident and evidentiary position

Is a claim realistic after your ski, snowboard or toboggan accident?

Answer two short questions about the cause of the accident and the evidence available. You receive a first assessment under the FIS rules, §§ 1293 ff ABGB and § 1304 ABGB.

You already know you want to send a request? Go directly to the contact form.

01 Question 1

What caused your accident?

A compensation claim requires that someone else culpably caused the accident. In a pure self-inflicted fall, or where the general alpine risk materialises, each person bears their own loss.

All paths at a glance

Overview of all answers.

01

Claim realistic; a culpable breach by another and secured evidence support you.

Where another person breached a FIS rule or duty of care and thereby caused the accident, a claim under §§ 1293 ff ABGB comes into consideration. With witnesses or camera and GPS data the breach can be established. Any contributory negligence under § 1304 ABGB may reduce the compensation proportionally, but does not eliminate the claim.

Next steps: secure the evidence, make no admission of fault, gather records of treatment and loss, and have the liability quota assessed by a lawyer.

02

Claim conceivable, but a difficult evidentiary position; early preservation is decisive.

A claim may exist, but without witnesses and without camera or GPS data the injured party bears the burden of proof for the other party's fault (§ 1296 ABGB). The injury pattern, the tracks and the slope-rescue protocol can serve as circumstantial evidence. In practice such cases often end in a settlement because the litigation risk is considerable for both sides.

Next steps: secure all still available circumstantial evidence, prepare a written account of the facts and weigh up with a lawyer whether settlement or litigation is the better option.

03

Liability of the slope operator is possible where an atypical danger existed.

The slope operator owes a slope-safety duty. It is liable for atypical dangers that a winter-sports participant cannot reasonably expect. For typical alpine risks it is not liable. Whether an atypical danger existed is a question of the individual case and the evidentiary position.

Next steps: photograph the accident site, the markings and the visibility and snow conditions, request the slope-rescue protocol and have the safety situation assessed by a lawyer.

04

Pure self-inflicted fall; no claim against third parties; check your own insurance.

Where someone falls without external influence, or the general alpine risk materialises, there is no compensation claim against third parties. The loss remains with the injured party. A private accident insurance can pay here independently of any liability.

Next steps: check your own insurance documents, report the accident to the accident insurer and document treatment costs and consequences.

The FIS rules as the standard for skiing, snowboarding and tobogganing

There is no separate code of conduct for behaviour on the slope in Austria. Instead the courts draw on the FIS rules of conduct of the International Ski Federation. They count as a recognised standard and concretise the care that an average slope user must observe. Anyone who breaches them and thereby injures another acts, as a rule, culpably within the meaning of §§ 1293 ff ABGB.

Central points are consideration for others, control of speed and manner of skiing according to visibility and ability, the choice of track by the skier coming from behind or above, careful overtaking with sufficient distance, controlled entering and starting, and stopping only at clearly visible places. Added to this are observance of signs and markings and the duty to give assistance. These standards apply by analogy to snowboarders; on toboggan runs a comparable care adapted to the run is required.

The most frequent dispute concerns collisions between slope users. Anyone coming from behind or above must choose a line that does not endanger the skier ahead. If they run into them, this regularly indicates their fault. For tobogganing it applies by analogy that the run must be used under control and at an adapted speed.

When a claim is realistic: fault, causation, contributory negligence

A realistic claim requires four steps. First, another person must have breached a FIS rule or duty of care. Second, that conduct must have been at least negligent. Third, it must have been precisely this breach that caused the accident (causation). Fourth, it must be examined whether the injured party bears contributory negligence under § 1304 ABGB.

The typical inherent risk of winter sports, by contrast, is borne by each person themselves. If someone falls without external influence, there is no claim against third parties. Contributory negligence is often taken into account, for instance for one's own excessive speed or lack of attention. The result is then a quota that reduces the compensation proportionally, without eliminating it. Fault is therefore rarely a matter of all or nothing.

The burden of proof is important: under § 1296 ABGB the injured party must in principle establish and prove the other party's fault. This is eased by the prima facie case, for instance in a rear-end collision. How exactly the quota is assessed in a collision is dealt with in the detail post on the apportionment of fault under FIS rules.

No automatic claim. An accident alone does not establish compensation. It requires a culpable breach by another that caused the accident. In a pure self-inflicted fall, or where the general alpine risk materialises, the loss remains with the injured party. A private accident insurance can pay here independently of any liability.

Which losses are compensated and which time limit applies

Where a claim exists, it typically covers treatment costs, loss of earnings, property damage to skis, snowboard or equipment, and pain and suffering under § 1325 ABGB. Pain and suffering is assessed according to the nature, duration and intensity of the pain and any permanent consequences. Details of the assessment and the comparison with Germany are explained in the post on pain and suffering after a ski accident.

The costs of a rescue can also be considerable. Who bears them and which insurance applies is the subject of the post on rescue costs after a helicopter operation. For your own cover it is also worth looking at the scope of private liability insurance for skiing.

Compensation claims become time-barred under § 1489 ABGB, in principle three years from knowledge of the damage and the tortfeasor. This period runs even if the consequences of injury are not yet fully foreseeable. Where healing is protracted, a declaratory action can suspend the limitation period for future losses not yet quantifiable.

Liability of the slope operator and the distinction from insurance

Alongside the liability of other slope users, the slope operator may also be held responsible. It owes a slope-safety duty: it must protect against atypical dangers, that is, dangers that a winter-sports participant cannot reasonably expect. For typical alpine risks it is not liable. When a danger at the edge of the slope is atypical is examined in depth in the post on liability at the slope edge.

The distinction from insurance is important. A liability insurer of the wrongdoer only comes into play where the wrongdoer is actually liable. Where, by contrast, there is a pure self-inflicted fall or a general alpine risk, one's own private accident insurance helps, independently of any liability. Many winter-sports participants are covered through such policies or through club and association memberships; a look at one's own insurance documents is worthwhile after every accident.

Securing evidence after a slope accident, what counts in the first hours:

  • Note the names and contact details of independent witnesses immediately.
  • Request that the accident be recorded by the slope rescue or lift staff and keep the protocol.
  • Photograph the accident site, the slope markings and the visibility and snow conditions.
  • Save helmet and ski-camera recordings and GPS and tracker data, do not delete them.
  • Have injuries examined medically without delay, important for causation and pain and suffering.
  • Record the identity and contact details of the person involved, but make no admission of fault.
Frequently asked

Compensation after a ski, snowboard and toboggan accident in practice.

Do I get compensation after every ski, snowboard or toboggan accident? +

No. A claim exists only where another person culpably caused the accident, for instance through a breach of the FIS rules. In a pure self-inflicted fall, or where the general alpine risk materialises, each person bears their own loss.

What role do the FIS rules play in court? +

The FIS rules of conduct count in Austria as a recognised standard and concretise the care required on the slope. A breach, for instance careless overtaking or excessive speed, as a rule indicates fault within the meaning of §§ 1293 ff ABGB.

Do the FIS rules also apply to snowboarders and to tobogganing? +

For snowboarders the FIS rules apply by analogy, because they use the same slope with the same hazards. On toboggan runs a comparable care adapted to the run is required: the run must be used under control and at an adapted speed. Anyone who runs into another without braking, or uses a visibly closed run, risks liability.

What does contributory negligence mean for my claim? +

If the injured party bears contributory negligence under § 1304 ABGB, for instance through their own excessive speed, this reduces the compensation proportionally according to a quota. The claim is not thereby eliminated entirely. The concrete quota is determined by the court according to the shares of causation in the individual case.

Is the ski resort liable as well? +

The slope operator owes a slope-safety duty. It is liable for atypical dangers that a winter-sports participant cannot expect. For typical alpine risks it is not liable. Whether an atypical danger existed is a question of the individual case and the evidentiary position.

How long do I have to assert my claim? +

Compensation claims become time-barred under § 1489 ABGB, in principle three years from knowledge of the damage and the tortfeasor. Where healing is protracted, a declaratory action can suspend the limitation period for future losses not yet quantifiable. Waiting too long puts the claim at risk.

Topics
ski accidentsnowboard accidenttoboggan accidentFIS rulescompensationpain and sufferingslope liabilityevidence

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