Activation guide
Your First 30 Days in Vienna
Use this to turn a new city into a working setup fast instead of drifting through admin and random coffees.
A first-month operating plan for turning a new European city into a working setup: admin, housing, banking, routine, people, and the decision to commit or move on. This version is tuned for Vienna; the main local setup item to check early is Meldezettel address registration at a Vienna Meldeservice within three days of moving in.
Best if you just landed or are moving in the next 30 days
30-day spine
From landing plan to stay-or-leave decision.
Use this as the first-month sequence for Vienna; the local sections below tune the admin, housing, and room choices.
- Before landingPre-load the boring winsBook the reversible setup, prepare the document folder, and join only the rooms that help week one land cleanly.
- Week 1Become reachable, payable, and legal enoughClear the first admin path, test payment in real life, and choose the daily defaults that stop the city from eating your calendar.
- Week 2Turn novelty into routinePick a repeat work base, protect actual work blocks, and track costs before vibes become the spreadsheet.
- Week 3Let the city see you twiceShift from logistics to local signal: one strong event, one builder room, and repeated contact with useful people.
- Day 30Commit, extend, or leave cleanlyReview burn, work quality, housing odds, useful meetings, and energy. Location is a product decision too.
The month needs a finish line
Your output by day 30
The goal is not to 'settle in' in some vague romantic way. By day 30, you should know whether the city helps you build. That means you have an admin/legal setup path, somewhere workable to live, a payment stack that functions, a repeat work base, a few real people in the city, and enough evidence to decide whether to go deeper.
Think like an operator. The first month is not a personality test. It is a setup sprint.
- By day 30, you should know your monthly burn within a realistic range.
- You should have one repeat workspace and one repeat social room.
- You should know the admin step that unlocks the next 90 days.
Pre-load the boring wins
Before you land
The fastest settlers do not arrive with twelve tabs and hope. They arrive with enough scaffolding that the first week does not disappear into logistics.
- 01Book 10-14 days of extendable temporary housing, not a fantasy lease from abroad.
- 02Build a document folder: passport, visa/right-to-work proof, insurance, income proof, bank statements, references, and housing documents.
- 03Set up a bridge account like Wise, Revolut, or another card you know works internationally.
- 04Join two or three local communities before arrival, but do not overbook week one.
- 05Save official admin links for your visa, registration, banking, healthcare, and tax path.
Admin before ambition
Week 1: unlock the city
Week one is not for becoming iconic. It is for becoming reachable, payable, legal enough, and physically stable. Most momentum comes from clearing the small blockers early.
- 01In Vienna, treat this as the admin unlock: Meldezettel address registration at a Vienna Meldeservice within three days of moving in.
- 02Banking shortcut for Vienna: Revolut or N26 work for EUR; Erste Bank, Bank Austria, and Raiffeisen are common local options.
- 03Good first SIM options in Vienna: A1, Magenta, Drei, HoT, or an Airalo eSIM for the first days.
- 04Test your payment stack in real life: transit, groceries, rent transfer, ATM, card acceptance.
- 05Start viewings if your temporary stay does not buy at least two calm weeks.
- 06Find your defaults: grocery store, pharmacy, transit line, coffee spot, gym or run route, and place to work.
Make the generic plan local
Vienna local operating map
The first month in Vienna gets easier when you choose local defaults early. Use this as the lightweight map for where friction usually appears and where momentum usually compounds.
- 01Housing: Treat the Meldezettel as a first-week unlock and confirm your address works for registration.
- 02Work base: Use the 2nd or 7th district as a practical routine base, then test weXelerate, Startup House, or university-linked rooms.
- 03People: The Residency Vienna, AustrianStartups, and ViennaUP are better first reads than waiting for visible hype.
- 04Mobility/admin: Wiener Linien lets you live slightly farther out without losing the city if your routine is clear.
- 05Avoid: Do not expect Vienna's builder scene to announce itself; it opens through trusted, repeated rooms.
- 06Day-7 proof: You have a Meldezettel-capable address plan, the right immigration portal if non-EU, and one repeat builder room to test again.
Create fallback capacity
Do not leave week one fragile
A good first week does not mean everything is solved. It means you have removed the obvious fragility: one way to pay, one way to receive messages, one way to work, one place to sleep if the flat search slips, and one official source for your next admin step.
- 01Extend or identify backup housing before your temporary stay has only two nights left.
- 02Keep two payment methods working: one card or wallet for daily spend and one route for rent or deposit transfers.
- 03Save scans, receipts, contracts, appointment confirmations, and landlord messages in one folder.
- 04Pick one backup work base in case your room, cafe, or coworking plan fails.
- 05Write the next admin action as a verb with a date: book, upload, email, register, call, or wait.
Routine beats novelty
Week 2: build operating defaults
A new city can trick you into consuming novelty and calling it momentum. Week two is where you pick repeatable defaults so real work becomes possible.
- Choose one primary work base: coworking, home desk, university library, or a cafe rotation that does not punish you.
- Set two or three fixed work blocks. If you do not protect mornings, the city will eat them.
- Keep events low-volume and high-quality: one or two is enough.
- Sort insurance, healthcare access, visa follow-up, and tax/accounting questions before they become urgent.
- Cook enough meals to understand daily-life cost instead of only restaurant cost.
Memory is a bad operating system
Keep one setup ledger
A new city creates too many small open loops to track casually. Keep one simple note or sheet for the first month: documents, admin steps, costs, people, spaces, and decisions. The point is not bureaucracy for its own sake. It is to stop the month from turning into vibes and scattered receipts.
- 01Track real spend by category: housing, food, transit, workspace, setup fees, events, and surprise costs.
- 02Track each admin step with source link, status, deadline, appointment, and the next action.
- 03Track useful people and rooms separately from nice conversations.
- 04Track energy and work quality twice a week; a city that looks good on paper can still drain your output.
- 05Use the ledger in week four to decide whether to commit, extend, or leave.
The city needs to see you twice
Week 3: enter repeat rooms
By week three, stop orbiting logistics and start building a local base. The trick is not more coffees. It is repeated contact in rooms where your actual peers show up.
- Go to one event where builders in your category actually show up.
- Visit a coworking campus, accelerator, hacker house, university lab, or builder community even if you do not join yet.
- Post publicly that you moved, what you are building, and who would be useful to meet.
- Choose repeat rooms over random rooms. Familiarity compounds.
- Notice who is building versus who is permanently around the scene.
Commit, extend, or iterate
Week 4: decide with data
Do not ask only whether you liked the month. Ask whether the city made your work sharper. Those can be different answers. A city can be fun and wrong. A city can be slightly less glamorous and wildly useful.
- Review actual burn, useful meetings, work quality, commute, housing odds, and energy.
- If it is working, commit harder: lease, membership, routines, 90-day goals.
- If it is ambiguous, buy another month of learning instead of forcing certainty.
- If it is wrong, leave cleanly. Location is a product decision too.
- Write down what the city taught you while it is fresh.
Use the maintained city page
Vienna setup sections
Use this guide for the first-month sequence; use the Vienna city page for the maintained setup resources. Those sections are where visa/admin, housing, registration, and legal links should stay current.