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The regional football league is the third highest level in Austrian football and is divided into three “regional” leagues of equal rank. The Eastern Regional League comprises the provinces of Vienna, Lower Austria and Burgenland. The Central Regional League comprises the provinces of Styria, Carinthia, Upper Austria and the territory of East Tyrol. The Regionalliga West includes the federal states of Salzburg, Tyrol (excluding East Tyrol) and Vorarlberg. Two of the three regional league champions are promoted to the 2nd league, whereby there is a direct promoted team as well as a play-off between the two remaining champions for the second promotion place. Depending on the number of relegates from the first league to the respective regional league squadron, two to four clubs each relegate from the regional league to the fourth highest league, the Landesliga, which is structured according to the borders of the Austrian provinces, while the respective champion moves from the Landesliga to the regional league.
Promotion mode
Since the 2014/15 season, there have been two fixed promoted players from the regional leagues into the first league according to a decision of the ÖFB board of directors. One of the three champions of the regional league squadrons is promoted to the second highest league in Austria as a direct promoted player, while the two remaining regional league champions determine the second promoted player in a play-off. The direct promoted player is placed in a rotation mode by another regional league every year. The order was drawn as follows:
- 2014/2015: Champion of the Regional League West
- 2015/2016: Champion of the Eastern Regional League
- 2016/2017: Champion of the Middle Regional League
Amateur teams of Bundesliga clubs are excluded from promotion to the first division.
History
With the transformation of the first class into the league A in the season 1949/50, which was conceived again as a professional league for the first time since the end of the war, there was also a change in the class division in amateur football: At the end of the individual championships in the provinces, a promotion delegation was played between the provincial champions from Burgenland, Upper Austria, Lower Austria, Styria, the preliminary round delegation of the provincial champions from Tyrol or Vorarlberg and the Tauernliga (Carinthia and Salzburg) in two groups of three. The first-placed player from these groups of three was qualified for the Staatsliga A, the second-placed player for the Staatsliga B and the last player had to play in his Landesliga again. The champion of the Viennese League was directly eligible for promotion. In the following transitional season 1950/51 the league B (also state league B) was created. This extended geographically to Burgenland, Lower Austria, Upper Austria, Styria, Tyrol and Vienna, clubs from Carinthia, Salzburg and Vorarlberg could not qualify.
The second-rate teams from Carinthia and Salzburg played in the newly founded Tauernliga as early as 1949/50 and in the Tauernliga Süd for Carinthia and the Tauernliga Nord for Salzburg from the 1955/56 season to the 1958/59 season. From the 1950/51 season to the 1959/60 season, the clubs from Tyrol also played with the clubs from Vorarlberg in the Arlberg League. These leagues can be regarded as the second level – next to league B – since their champions played in direct duels for promotion to league A. The league B was the second level.
In the 1959/60 season, the Regionalliga Ost and Mitte were introduced, and in the following year the Regionalliga West was introduced. The Regionalliga was the second highest league in Austria until the 1973/74 season. The respective champions were allowed to advance directly to the top league.
The 1974/75 season saw the introduction of the first and second Bundesliga with 10 clubs each and the dissolution of the regional leagues West and Mitte. The champions of the regional leagues from Salzburg, Tyrol, Vorarlberg, Carinthia, Upper Austria and Styria, who had to play relegation games, played for the promotion to the second Bundesliga; the champion of the regional league East was allowed to advance directly. In the 1977/78 season, the provinces of Salzburg and Tyrol took the Alpenliga as the third stage ahead of their provincial leagues.
In the 1980/81 season, the Regionalliga West including Vorarlberg was reinstalled as the third division. The Regionalliga Ost, on the other hand, was not played from 1980/81 to 1983/84 and was not reintroduced until 1984/85. Until the 1995/96 season, the champions of the West and East Regional Leagues had direct promotion rights to the second Bundesliga. The Regionalliga Mitte, on the other hand, has only been played again since the 1994/95 season. The champions of the provincial associations of Upper Austria, Carinthia (with Osttirol) and Styria played in relegation matches the promoted player in the second league.
Between the 1996/97 and 2003/04 seasons, the three champions of the regional leagues had to play relegation games for two promotion places with the penultimate of the first league, Austria’s second-highest division. After an increase of the first league to twelve clubs had been decided as of the 2005/06 season (due to a denial of a licence, however, ten clubs were initially allowed to continue playing and only in the following season were actually increased to twelve clubs), the winners of the regional leagues could be promoted again directly. Since the 2009/10 season, relegation matches of the three regional leagues and the ninth of the first division have been played again, as this has been reduced to ten clubs as of the 2010/11 season. With the 2014/15 season, the current promotion mode was introduced with a direct promoted team and a play-off for the second promoted team into the first league.