If you've been offered a job in the Netherlands — or you're already here — you've probably heard someone mention "the 30% ruling." Maybe a colleague said it saved them thousands. Maybe a recruiter casually dropped it into a conversation. Maybe you Googled "Dutch taxes" at 1 AM and fell down a rabbit hole.
Here's what it is in one sentence: the 30% ruling lets you receive up to 30% of your gross salary completely tax-free. Instead of paying Dutch income tax on your full salary, you only pay tax on 70% of it. The other 30% goes straight into your bank account.
On a salary of €70,000, that's roughly €600 more per month in your pocket. Over 5 years, we're talking €35,000+. It's the single biggest financial advantage of being an expat in the Netherlands — and a lot of people miss it because they didn't know to ask.
How it actually works
The 30% ruling is officially called the "expat scheme" (30%-faciliteit). It exists because the Dutch government wants to attract skilled workers from abroad, and they recognize that moving to another country comes with extra costs — higher cost of living, double housing, flights home, that kind of thing.
Instead of making you keep receipts for all those expenses, they just let your employer pay 30% of your salary as a flat-rate tax-free allowance. No paperwork, no receipts, no justification needed. It doesn't matter if your actual "extra costs" are €2,000 or €20,000 — you get the 30% regardless.
Here's what it looks like in practice:
| With 30% ruling | Without | |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | €70,000 | €70,000 |
| Taxable portion | €49,000 | €70,000 |
| Approx. monthly net | ~€4,150 | ~€3,550 |
| Extra per month | ~€600 | |
| Extra over 5 years | ~€36,000 | |
Your employer doesn't pay you more — they just structure your existing salary so that 30% of it is classified as a tax-free "extraterritorial costs" allowance. Same gross cost to the company, significantly more net pay for you.
Do you qualify?
There are four main requirements. You need to meet all of them.
1. You were recruited from abroad
You must have been hired or transferred to work in the Netherlands. You can't already be living here when you're recruited. The whole point is that you moved here for the job.
2. The 150 km rule
For at least 16 of the 24 months before your first working day in the Netherlands, you must have lived more than 150 km from the Dutch border. This is measured as the crow flies, not by road.
What this means in practice:
- Belgium, Luxembourg, western Germany, and northern France — most residents don't qualify (too close)
- UK — almost everyone qualifies, except possibly the very southeast corner of England near Dover
- Everything else (Spain, Italy, US, India, Brazil, etc.) — you're fine
If you're from Dusseldorf or Antwerp, this one probably kills it. If you're from London, New York, or São Paulo, don't worry about it.
30% ruling salary threshold 2026
Your taxable salary (the 70% portion, after the 30% deduction) must meet a minimum. Here are the 30% ruling salary thresholds for 2026 in the Netherlands:
| Category | Min. taxable salary | Min. total gross salary |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | €48,013 | ~€68,590 |
| Under 30 + Master's degree | €36,497 | ~€52,139 |
| Scientific researchers | No minimum | No minimum |
The reduced threshold for under-30s with a Master's is a big deal. If you've just finished a Master's program abroad and land a job in the Netherlands paying €52k+, you probably qualify. That's a very normal starting salary in tech, consulting, or finance in Amsterdam.
4. Specific expertise
You need to have "specific expertise that is scarce on the Dutch labor market." This sounds vague — and it is — but in practice, meeting the salary threshold is considered proof enough. The tax office rarely asks for additional evidence beyond your salary and employment contract. If you earn above the threshold, you're assumed to be a specialist.
How to apply
This is important: your employer applies for it, not you. You can't submit the application yourself. It's a joint application from employer and employee, submitted by the employer.
The process:
- Get the form from the Belastingdienst (Dutch tax administration) website
- Fill it in with your employment details, previous address abroad, and supporting documents (employment contract, proof of prior residence, degree certificate if claiming the under-30 threshold)
- Mail it — yes, physical mail. It's the Netherlands: digital in most things, paper for this one
- Wait — typically 8 weeks, sometimes up to 6 months
While you wait, your employer can already apply the 30% ruling to your payroll provisionally. If it's approved, great — nothing changes. If it's rejected, you'll need to pay back the tax difference. Most employers are willing to start applying it right away if your case is straightforward.
What it lasts and what can end it
The ruling lasts a maximum of 5 years (60 months) from your first day of employment in the Netherlands. It used to be 8 years — that was reduced in 2019.
Things that can shorten or kill it:
- Previous time in the Netherlands — if you lived or worked here before, that time gets subtracted from your 5 years
- Changing jobs with a gap over 3 months — you can transfer the ruling to a new employer, but the gap between jobs must not exceed 3 months. Even one day over and the ruling is terminated. This is strictly enforced
- Salary dropping below the threshold — if you go part-time or take a pay cut that drops you below the minimum, you lose the ruling
If you're between jobs, watch that 3-month window like a hawk. Your new employer needs to submit a fresh application, and the clock is ticking.
The salary cap
As of 2024, the 30% ruling is subject to a salary cap of €233,000 (the so-called "Balkenende norm" or WNT cap). The maximum tax-free allowance is therefore capped at roughly €70,000 per year. Income above the cap is fully taxed.
For most expats, this doesn't matter — you'd need to earn well over €200k for it to kick in. But if you're in a senior executive or high-level finance role, it's worth knowing.
Important for long-term holders: if you got the ruling before 2023, you were previously exempt from this cap under transitional rules. That exemption expired on January 1, 2026. The cap now applies to everyone.
What's changing in 2027
Here's what's coming:
- The percentage drops from 30% to 27% — starting January 1, 2027, for employees whose ruling started on or after January 1, 2024
- Higher salary thresholds — the minimums will increase (indicative: ~€50,400 standard, ~€38,300 for under-30 with Master's)
- Partial non-resident tax status fully ends — see below
If your ruling started before January 1, 2024, you keep the full 30% for the rest of your 5-year period. You're grandfathered in.
If your ruling started on or after that date, you'll get 30% through 2026 and then 27% from 2027 onward.
The partial non-resident tax thing (and why it's ending)
This is the part most people's eyes glaze over — but if you have savings, investments, or property outside the Netherlands, pay attention.
Historically, 30% ruling holders could elect to be treated as "partial non-resident taxpayers." This meant that while your salary was taxed normally in the Netherlands, your foreign savings, investments, and real estate were exempt from Dutch wealth tax (Box 3). Foreign business interests (Box 2) were also exempt.
This was a massive benefit for expats with significant assets abroad. You could hold investment portfolios, bank accounts, and property in your home country without the Dutch taxing them.
This benefit was abolished in 2025. There's a transitional period for people who had the ruling before 2024 — they can use partial non-resident status through the end of 2026. But after that, it's gone for everyone. From 2027, all 30% ruling holders are taxed as full Dutch residents on their worldwide income.
If this applies to you, talk to a tax advisor before the end of 2026. There may be things you can restructure to minimize the impact.
Common mistakes
After talking to dozens of expats who either missed out or got tripped up, here are the biggest ones:
- Not asking about it. Many employers — especially smaller companies — don't proactively offer to apply for the 30% ruling. They might not even know about it. If you think you qualify, bring it up. It costs them nothing; the tax savings are all yours.
- Missing the 4-month deadline. This is the most painful one. You start the job, get busy, assume HR is handling it — and three months later nobody's filed anything. Set a reminder on day one.
- Thinking the employee can apply alone. You can't. The employer must be involved. If your employer refuses to apply (rare but it happens), you have no recourse — it's a joint application by design.
- Confusing it with a bonus. The 30% ruling doesn't give you extra money from your employer. It restructures your existing salary for tax purposes. Your gross cost to the employer stays the same.
- Not planning for the end. The ruling lasts 5 years and then it stops. Your net salary will drop noticeably when it ends. Budget for this. Some expats get a nasty shock when their monthly net suddenly drops by hundreds of euros.
- Leaving a gap when switching jobs. If you change employers, the gap must be 3 months or less. Plan accordingly — don't take a 4-month sabbatical between jobs unless you're prepared to lose the ruling.
The 30% ruling vs. actual cost reimbursement
There's actually a choice here that most people don't know about. Instead of the flat 30%, your employer can reimburse your actual extraterritorial costs tax-free (the "ETK scheme"). This has no percentage cap — if your real costs are 40% of your salary, you can claim 40%.
The catch: you need receipts for everything, and the administrative burden is significant. For most people, the flat 30% is simpler and more generous. But if you have exceptionally high costs (think: kids in international school at €25,000 per year per child, plus regular flights to your home country), the ETK scheme could save you more.
You must choose one option at the start of each calendar year and stick with it. You can't switch mid-year.
Speaking of international school: regardless of which option you choose, your employer can reimburse international school fees separately and tax-free, on top of either the 30% allowance or the ETK reimbursement. Always ask.
What to do next
If you're job hunting: know that the 30% ruling exists and factor it into your salary expectations. A €65k offer with the 30% ruling can net you more than an €80k offer without it. When you get an offer, ask: "Will you apply for the 30% ruling on my behalf?" If they seem unsure, send them the link to the Belastingdienst page. It's free to apply and costs them nothing. If you're not an EU citizen, the 30% ruling and your work permit are closely connected — the salary thresholds are nearly identical, and qualifying for one usually means qualifying for the other. (For a full breakdown of how Dutch compensation works — vakantiegeld, 13th month, and what to negotiate — read our salary negotiation guide.)
If you just started a job: check whether the application has been filed. If not, remind your employer immediately. You have 4 months from your start date and the clock is ticking. Our guide on your first 30 days at a Dutch company has a full HR checklist for everything else to sort out in week one.
If you already have the ruling: make sure you understand what changes in 2027 (the drop to 27%) and plan for when the ruling ends entirely. A tax advisor can help you optimize the transition — especially if you have foreign assets affected by the end of partial non-resident status.
And if you're still putting together your application materials, make sure your CV is in the format Dutch recruiters expect. It's one of those small things that makes a big difference. Grab our free Dutch CV template — it takes five minutes and might save you weeks of silence.