English buyer guide for the Dutch housing market
Buying a House in the Netherlands
A plain-English guide to the Dutch buying process, from budget preparation and viewings to your offer, valuation, notary transfer and keys.
Buying a house in the Netherlands is easier to plan when you know what happens before the search, before the offer and before the notary transfer. Use this guide to understand the steps, prepare your documents and decide when to ask for help.
Guidance from Dutch property and valuation experience, written for expats and English-speaking buyers.
Choose your route
Start with the stage you are in
Most buyers arrive with one urgent question. Choose the stage closest to your situation and move from there.
I am checking if buying is possible
Start with budget, mortgage readiness, savings for buyer costs and the documents a mortgage adviser will usually ask about.
I am booking viewings
Prepare your questions before you visit a property, especially around ownership, condition, service charges, energy label and timing.
I am thinking about making an offer
Check your financing position, decide which conditions you need and understand what happens after the seller accepts.
My offer was accepted
Move carefully through the purchase agreement, valuation, mortgage documents, notary checks and transfer date.
Process map
The Dutch buying process, from budget to keys
The order matters. A buyer who understands the sequence can prepare earlier and avoid rushing decisions after an offer is accepted.
Check your budget
Speak with a mortgage adviser, estimate your own savings and separate purchase costs from the property price.
Choose search areas
Compare commute, schools, local services, building type, ownership structure and monthly costs before you fall in love with one listing.
View properties
Use viewings to check the property condition, documents, asking price context and anything that may affect your offer.
Make an offer
Your offer can include price, transfer date and conditions such as financing or structural inspection. These choices affect risk and timing.
Sign the purchase agreement
After signatures, the Dutch process has strict timing. Read every condition and deadline before you rely on it.
Arrange valuation and mortgage documents
The lender usually needs a valuation report and complete buyer documents before the mortgage can move forward.
Go to the notary
The notary handles the legal transfer and mortgage deed. You receive the keys after the transfer is signed and the money is settled.
Before you bid
Get clear before you bid
The offer stage is where many international buyers feel pressure. Slow down enough to check the parts that can affect your money, timing and room to withdraw.
Plain English terms
Dutch terms you will meet
Dutch property words become less stressful when you know where they appear in the process.
The purchase agreement between buyer and seller.
The legal cooling-off period after receiving the signed purchase agreement.
Buyer costs, often shortened to k.k. in listings.
Real estate transfer tax.
Valuation report, often needed for the mortgage.
The notary who handles the legal transfer.
Financing condition in the offer or agreement.
Structural inspection.
Two ways to move forward
Use the guide, then ask for the next step
Request a buyer consultation
A consultation is useful when you need to connect the general process to your actual situation.
- Buying in the Netherlands for the first time
- Unsure what to do before viewings
- Preparing for valuation, mortgage and notary steps
- Need a clearer route for a preferred city or area
Get the Netherlands home buying checklist
Use the checklist before you start viewings, before you bid and after an offer is accepted.
- Questions to answer before you search
- Viewing preparation
- Offer and condition checks
- Mortgage, valuation, notary and after-keys reminders
Professional boundaries
Where specialist advice fits
This site gives plain-English process guidance. Your mortgage adviser, notary, buyer agent, lawyer or tax adviser should handle advice that depends on your contract, financing, tax position or legal risk.
For quick Dutch mortgage estimates, use the mortgage calculator Netherlands from Orange Fox. For local valuation questions in and around Eindhoven, use property valuation in Eindhoven from Cheetah Valuations. If you are planning the other side of the move, the related guide to sell a house in the Netherlands is separate.
That boundary protects you. It also helps you arrive at professional conversations with better questions.
Early questions
Questions buyers ask early
Can expats buy a house in the Netherlands?
Many expats buy homes in the Netherlands. Your route depends on residence status, income, savings, mortgage eligibility and the property you want to buy.
Do I need a mortgage adviser before viewings?
It is wise to understand your budget before serious viewings. A mortgage adviser can explain what a lender may consider and which documents you should prepare.
What should I prepare before making an offer?
Prepare your maximum price, savings buffer, financing route, preferred transfer date and the conditions you want included.
Does this site replace a notary or mortgage adviser?
Use this site for plain-English process context, and use licensed professionals for advice on your contract, mortgage, tax position or legal risk.
Next step
Plan your next step before you bid
If you are serious about buying, use the checklist and request a buyer consultation before the process starts moving faster than expected.
