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Netherlands · Business · ZZP

ZZP in the Netherlands

Understand how the Dutch ZZP system works, including registration, taxes, clients, invoicing and what expats should know before becoming self-employed.

KvK registrationTax & BTWClient invoicingExpat context

This guide is practical orientation only — not tax, legal or immigration advice. ZZP rules depend on your permit, client mix, registration and official regulations.

Photorealistic editorial photo of a South Asian ZZP professional at a bright Amsterdam canal-side home office — laptop, KvK registration document, Dutch BTW invoice and notebook on desk, canal houses and bicycle visible through the window.
Popular modelWidespread
Expat useCommon
RegistrationUsually KvK
TaxesYour responsibility

Overview

What Is a ZZP'er?

ZZP stands for Zelfstandige Zonder Personeel — self-employed without employees. It describes one of the most common forms of independent work in the Netherlands.

A ZZP'er typically works independently, invoices clients, manages their own administration and pays their own taxes — without hiring staff. Many international professionals, consultants, developers and creatives operate this way.

This guide explains the system clearly for expats and newcomers. It is practical orientation only — not tax, legal, immigration or business consulting advice. Verify your situation with KvK, Belastingdienst, IND and qualified professionals.

Premium infographic record-file builder explaining ZZP (Zelfstandige Zonder Personeel) with six planning areas — definition, registration, taxes, clients, risks and expat context — with concrete examples and checklist rail.
Start here: confirm what a ZZP'er is, whether it fits your situation and bookmark official sources before registering.

Key points

What to know about ZZP in the Netherlands

ZZP is a Dutch self-employment framework

Example: IT consultant registers at KvK as eenmanszaak, invoices clients €95/hour ex BTW — verify whether your activity fits ZZP rules.

Not the same word as generic freelancing

Freelancing is a broad international concept; ZZP is how many Dutch self-employed professionals register and operate locally.

Registration usually comes first

Example: designer starts client work without KvK number — register before substantial invoices to avoid backdating issues.

Responsibility shifts to you

Tax, BTW, contracts, pension gaps and sick days are typically yours to plan — unlike employment with an employer safety net.

Three orientation moves before your first invoice

  • Confirm whether ZZP fits your work pattern, income stability needs and permit situation.
  • Bookmark KvK, Belastingdienst and IND — read official pages before registering.
  • Plan tax buffers and admin setup before your first substantial invoice.

Examples

When ZZP affects real plans

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Developer — first ZZP yearOffered €90/hour contract; unsure about KvK and BTWRegister at KvK, confirm BTW status and written contract before day one.
Consultant — EU clientsBased in Utrecht; invoices Germany and FranceCross-border VAT and foreign income rules — accountant orientation early.
Expat — permit questionWants ZZP side income while on employment permitIND rules on additional self-employment — separate from KvK registration.
Former employee — one clientLeaving job to invoice former employer as ZZPEmployment vs contractor classification — verify with accountant, not verbal OK.

At a glance

ZZP at a Glance

Practical orientation on KvK registration, BTW, tax responsibility, flexibility and admin obligations before you commit to self-employment.

Premium at-a-glance infographic with six ZZP cards — popularity, expat use, registration, tax responsibility, flexibility and admin obligations.
Compare these six areas against your plans — exact rules depend on nationality, income and client mix.

Popular model

Widespread

Common across consulting, tech, creative and business services.

Expat use

Common

Many international professionals operate as ZZP'ers in major cities.

Registration

Usually KvK

Most solo self-employed register with the Chamber of Commerce.

Taxes

Your responsibility

Income tax and often BTW — plan set-asides from month one.

Flexibility

High

Client choice, hours and remote work — within contract and permit rules.

Admin

Ongoing

Invoices, bookkeeping, filings and contracts need consistent attention.

Comparison

How ZZP compares to employment at a glance

Use this table to orient yourself before choosing between a job offer and ZZP registration — headline rates rarely tell the full story.

TopicEmploymentZZP
Income patternMonthly salary + vakantiegeldVariable client invoices; plan slow months
RegistrationEmployer payroll setupKvK number + Belastingdienst choices
Tax adminHandled via employerIncome tax + often quarterly BTW yourself
Leave & sick payStatutory employment protectionsUnpaid unless contracted; build buffers
PensionEmployer contributions commonVoluntary gap to model in your rate

Examples

ZZP examples expats often see

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
First-year ZZP — developerStrong Q1–Q2 then quiet Q3Buffer fund and pipeline rebuild — normal freelance cycle.
Expat comparing offers€95/hr ZZP vs €6,200/mo employmentModel pension, holiday and sick pay in total package.

Three moves after reading this snapshot

  • Read the comparison section if you are choosing between employment and ZZP.
  • Walk through registration and KvK steps before committing to client dates.
  • Open the freelancing guide for broader freelance context beyond ZZP definition.

Compare routes

ZZP vs Freelancing vs Employment

Employment, freelancing and ZZP are often confused — especially by expats comparing offers in different countries.

Employment typically means salary, employer benefits and workplace protections. Freelancing is a broad international label. ZZP is the Dutch framework many self-employed professionals use to register and invoice clients.

Premium three-way bridge infographic comparing employee, international freelancer concept and Dutch ZZP framework — salary vs invoicing, benefits vs admin.
ZZP is the Dutch self-employment framework many freelancers use — not the same word as generic freelancing abroad.
TopicEmploymentZZP
IncomeFixed salary + benefitsClient invoices; variable monthly cash flow
RegistrationEmployer handles payrollKvK + Belastingdienst setup typically your task
TaxPayroll tax via employerIncome tax + often BTW filings yourself
Leave & sick payStatutory protectionsNo paid leave unless contracted; plan buffers
PensionEmployer scheme commonVoluntary pension gap to plan
Client riskEmployer bears business riskClient loss = income loss

Examples

ZZP vs employment — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Rate comparison trap€95/hour ZZP vs €75/hour employment offerModel pension, holiday, sick pay and tax — headline rate is not total package.
Same employer, new hatPermanent role ends; same team wants contractorWritten contract + classification review — not just a title change.

Sectors

Common ZZP Professions

ZZP exists across many industries — from tech and consulting to creative and coaching work. Remote and international client work is common among expats.

Your sector affects typical rates, client acquisition channels and whether Dutch or international clients dominate your pipeline.

Premium profession grid with ten common ZZP roles and a schematic Randstad corridor diagram showing Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Utrecht in correct relative positions — orientation only, not a geographic map.
ZZP spans many industries — the Randstad diagram shows relative city positions for orientation; verify whether your activity and client pattern fit self-employment rules.

Software Developers

Agency and product clients; often remote with EU and global teams.

IT Consultants

Project and day-rate work for corporates and scale-ups.

Designers

Brand, UX and visual work for agencies and direct clients.

Marketing Specialists

Campaign, content and growth roles on project basis.

Writers & Translators

Content, copy and multilingual projects locally and abroad.

Coaches

Career, business and life coaching — verify sector norms and contracts.

Photographers

Events, commercial and creative assignments.

Project Managers

Interim delivery roles across industries.

Business Consultants

Strategy, operations and change projects.

Data & Analytics

Reporting, BI and data science contracts.

Sector checklist before you register

  • Confirm your activity description matches how you will invoice clients at KvK.
  • Research typical day rates and contract lengths in your sector before setting prices.
  • Check whether your profession has sector-specific insurance or qualification expectations.
  • Plan client mix — Dutch agencies, direct clients and international remote work differ in admin load.

Examples

ZZP professions — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Developer — Amsterdam scale-upDay-rate via agency; 6-month renewable contractClassification, BTW on invoices and whether agency acts as intermediary.
Translator — EU clientsWord-count projects in DE, FR and ENPer-client VAT treatment and foreign income reporting with accountant.
Coach — international audienceOnline sessions; payments via Stripe in USDPermit rules, BTW and currency conversion in rate model.
Designer — one agency anchor80% revenue from single Amsterdam agencyClient dependency risk and written contract renewal terms.

Setup

How ZZP Registration Works

Registration is a conceptual sequence — exact order and requirements depend on your situation, nationality and business activity.

Most ZZP'ers register with KvK, set up tax administration with Belastingdienst and prepare banking and invoicing before substantial client work.

Premium five-step registration timeline from business planning through KvK, Belastingdienst, administration, banking and first invoice.
Register in a sensible order — KvK and tax choices before substantial client invoices.

Registration checklist

  • Confirm permit rules on ind.nl if you are not on EU free movement.
  • Register KvK before large client invoices — avoid backdating surprises.
  • Choose bookkeeping approach (software or accountant) in month one.
  • Open business bank account if client payments warrant separation.

Examples

Registration — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
New arrival — BSN firstHas BSN and address; client start date in 3 weeksKvK registration timeline + BTW choice before first invoice.
Side projectFull-time job plus evening freelance ideaEmployment contract + IND rules on additional self-employment.
Remote EU freelancer — moves to NLExisting EU clients; relocates to RotterdamTax residency shift, KvK registration and cross-border VAT with accountant.
Late registration — 3 invoices sentConsultant operated 2 months before KvKBackdating questions, BTW on past invoices — Belastingdienst and accountant.

KvK

Understanding the KVK

The KVK (Kamer van Koophandel) is the Dutch Chamber of Commerce. It plays a central role in business registration and maintains company records.

Entrepreneurs use KvK for registration, updating business information and accessing orientation resources. Requirements vary by legal form and activity.

Premium KvK desk scene explaining Chamber of Commerce registration, company records, business information and entrepreneur resources.
The KvK is the starting point for most ZZP registrations — verify requirements on kvk.nl.

KvK checklist

  • Read kvk.nl starting pages for your legal form before enrolling.
  • Prepare ID, BSN, address and activity description for registration.
  • Keep KvK number on invoices and contracts as required.
  • Update KvK when activity or address changes materially.

Examples

KvK — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Trade name choiceWants personal name vs brand name on invoicesKvK trade name rules and client contract expectations.
Activity descriptionIT consultant also wants coaching incomeWhether KvK activity covers both or needs update later.
Address changeMoves from Amsterdam to Utrecht mid-yearUpdate KvK and invoice details; client contracts may reference location.
Online registrationExpat registers via kvk.nl without Dutch fluencyEnglish resources on kvk.nl; prepare BSN, ID and activity text in advance.

Tax

Taxes for Self-Employed Professionals

ZZP'ers typically manage income tax on business profit, maintain records for deductible expenses and file annual returns. Many also handle BTW (VAT).

Expats with foreign clients, assets abroad or prior employment in other countries should treat tax planning as core setup — not a year-end surprise. This is orientation only, not tax advice.

Premium tax desk infographic on income tax, bookkeeping, business expenses, annual returns and accountant handoff for ZZP'ers.
Plan income tax and record-keeping from day one — this is orientation, not tax advice.

Tax planning checklist

  • Set aside monthly reserve for income tax and BTW — amount varies by situation.
  • Track invoices and expenses from first client payment.
  • Read expat taxes guide if you have foreign income or assets.
  • Confirm filing deadlines on belastingdienst.nl.
Client typeTypical treatmentConfirm with accountant
Dutch clients onlyStandard income tax + BTW workflowBTW scheme choice with Belastingdienst
EU clientsReverse charge may applyVAT rules per client country — accountant
Non-EU clientsOften simpler VAT on export of servicesStill confirm income tax and treaty context
Employed + ZZPCombined income in one returnPayroll vs freelance income separation

Examples

Taxes — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
First-year surpriseSpent full invoices; large tax bill duePayment plan with Belastingdienst; accountant for next-year reserves.
30% ruling — new ZZPFormer employee with ruling considering ZZP switchTax adviser on ruling eligibility with self-employment income.
Home office deductionWorks from apartment; wants to deduct rent portionBelastingdienst rules on home workspace — accountant calculation.
Mixed employment + ZZPJan–Jun employed; Jul–Dec ZZP same tax yearCombined annual return and pro-rata BTW quarters with accountant.

BTW

Understanding VAT (BTW)

BTW (VAT) is a separate layer from income tax. Many ZZP'ers charge BTW on invoices, collect it and report quarterly to Belastingdienst.

Thresholds, schemes and client location change treatment. Confirm your status officially — this section does not provide tax advice.

Premium BTW orientation board on VAT invoices, collection, quarterly reporting and when to confirm rules with Belastingdienst.
Many ZZP'ers handle BTW — confirm your VAT status with official sources and an accountant.

BTW checklist

  • Confirm whether you must register for BTW before first invoice.
  • Use invoice templates that meet Belastingdienst requirements.
  • Set aside collected BTW in a separate mental (or bank) bucket.
  • File quarterly returns on time — penalties add up quickly.
Client / schemeTypical BTW treatmentConfirm with accountant
Dutch B2B clientUsually BTW on invoice unless exempt schemeClient VAT number and correct rate on invoice
EU B2B clientReverse charge may apply — no Dutch BTW on invoiceValid EU VAT ID and invoice wording with accountant
KleineondernemersregelingSmall-business VAT scheme below thresholdsEligibility on belastingdienst.nl — do not assume
Non-EU export servicesOften 0% BTW on export of servicesStill confirm income tax and proof of foreign client
VAT NetherlandsComing soonFuture dedicated BTW guide — confirm rules with Belastingdienst meanwhile.
Expat taxes NetherlandsBroader tax orientation when BTW sits alongside other income streams.Open

Examples

BTW — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Under threshold questionLow revenue first year; unsure about BTW registrationBelastingdienst small business rules — do not guess.
First BTW quarter — designer€18,000 revenue Q1; forgot BTW set-asideBelastingdienst payment plan and accountant catch-up filings.
EU reverse chargeFirst invoice to German agency; zero-rated BTWValid client VAT ID and correct invoice wording before sending.
Collected BTW spentUsed BTW cash for personal expenses before filingSeparate BTW reserve immediately; accountant for correction path.

Clients

Working With Clients and Invoicing

ZZP'ers commonly manage proposals, contracts, invoices and payment tracking themselves. Clear terms reduce disputes — especially when clients are former employers.

Dutch clients often expect specific invoice fields; international clients may need currency and VAT clauses in contracts.

Premium desk scene on proposals, contracts, Dutch invoices, payment tracking and hourly vs project work.
Solid invoicing and contracts reduce disputes — especially when switching from employment.

Invoicing checklist

  • Include required invoice fields for Dutch clients — verify on belastingdienst.nl.
  • Agree payment terms (14 or 30 days) before work starts.
  • Use written contracts for projects over a few days of work.
  • Track hours if billing hourly — clients may audit timesheets.

Invoicing rules and contract law are separate topics — use qualified help for high-value or cross-border deals.

Examples

Invoicing — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Late payerDutch client pays 60 days late regularlyContract terms, reminders and whether to adjust terms or client mix.
Former employer invoiceSame team, new ZZP contract after leaving jobWritten scope, rate and classification review — not verbal OK.
Milestone project€24k fixed fee across three deliverablesInvoice per milestone with acceptance criteria in contract.
Missing invoice fieldsClient rejects invoice missing KvK numberBelastingdienst invoice requirements before resending.

Global clients

Working With Foreign Clients

Many expats invoice US, UK, EU and other international clients while based in the Netherlands. Cross-border work adds invoicing, tax and contract considerations.

Foreign income guides help orient you — confirm each client country with an accountant.

Premium map-and-bridge infographic on US, UK, EU and remote clients with cross-border invoicing and foreign income context.
International clients add complexity — link tax planning to foreign income guides.

International client checklist

  • Confirm VAT treatment before first invoice to each new country.
  • Read foreign income guide if revenue sits outside the Netherlands.
  • Use contracts that specify currency, jurisdiction and IP.
  • Keep exchange rate records if invoicing in non-euro currencies.
Client typeTypical contextConfirm before invoicing
EU B2B clientReverse charge VAT common with valid client VAT numbersValidate VAT ID and invoice wording per country
UK clientPost-Brexit rules differ from pre-2021 assumptionsAccountant review before long retainer contracts
US client — USDExport/service treatment; FX and tax reportingCurrency clause, BTW and income tax with tax adviser
Multi-country mixDifferent VAT rules per client in same quarterPer-client invoice template — not one-size-fits-all

Examples

International clients — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
USD retainerMonthly $5k retainer from US SaaS clientInvoice currency, BTW/VAT and income tax reporting — accountant setup.
German agency — remote devUtrecht-based; 12-month project; invoices in EURReverse charge VAT, contract law and payment terms in writing.
UK client post-BrexitMarketing retainer billed monthly in GBPVAT and service export rules with accountant — not 2020 assumptions.
Multi-client EU mixNL, BE and FR clients same quarterPer-client VAT treatment on each invoice template.

Permits

ZZP for Expats and International Professionals

Some expats must consider residence permits, work permissions and self-employment rules before registering as ZZP. Permit route and business registration are separate planning tracks.

This is orientation only — not immigration advice. Verify current rules on ind.nl and with qualified immigration advisers.

Premium two-track bridge separating IND permit rules from ZZP business activity for expats and self-employment visa context.
Permit route and ZZP registration are separate tracks — verify IND rules independently.

Permit checklist before KvK

  • Check ind.nl before KvK if your permit is employment-linked.
  • Do not assume client work is allowed because KvK registration succeeded.
  • Keep permit and registration documents for mortgage or visa renewals.
  • Use immigration lawyers for route changes — not for everyday KvK questions.
RouteTypical contextVerify on ind.nl
EU free movementOften straightforward ZZP registrationActivity and insurance still your responsibility
Employment permitPrimary job tied to sponsorSide ZZP may be restricted — IND first
Self-employed visaBusiness plan and points systemSeparate from casual freelance projects

Examples

Permits and ZZP — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
HS migrant — side gigWeekend coaching income while in sponsored roleIND rules on additional activity before any invoice.
EU citizen — straightforward routeFrench developer registers ZZP in AmsterdamStill verify activity, insurance and tax setup — permit simpler than non-EU.
Self-employed visa applicantPlanning entrepreneur route vs casual ZZP projectsIND points system separate from occasional freelance invoices.
Search year holderWants consulting income during orientation periodStrict work limits — verify ind.nl before KvK and client work.

Some links may be affiliate or referral links. Listings are for discovery only — not pay-to-rank and not legal, tax or immigration advice. Confirm credentials and scope with any provider. Learn more

Balance

Benefits and Challenges of ZZP

Benefits are real — weigh them against admin, permit and financial responsibilities before leaving employment.

Honest pros and cons help you compare ZZP with employment offers and home-country self-employment habits.

Premium benefits board with six ZZP advantages — flexibility, independence, client choice, remote work, income potential and business ownership.
Benefits are real — weigh them against admin and financial responsibilities.
Premium challenge board with six self-employment risks — income uncertainty, tax admin, client acquisition, no pension, no paid leave and financial planning.
Honest expectations help you decide between ZZP and employment offers.

Advantages

  • Flexibility — choose projects, hours and location within client agreements
  • Independence — run your practice without employer hierarchy
  • Client choice — select sectors and missions that fit your skills
  • Remote opportunities — many ZZP roles support international clients
  • Income potential — higher day rates possible if pipeline and utilization hold
  • Business ownership — build brand, reputation and long-term relationships

Challenges

  • Income uncertainty — slow months and client loss hit directly with no salary floor
  • Tax administration — bookkeeping, BTW and filings are ongoing obligations
  • Finding clients — sales and networking time reduces billable hours
  • No employer pension — retirement savings become your responsibility
  • No paid leave — holiday and sick days are usually unpaid unless contracted
  • Financial planning — buffers, insurance and rate math need active management

Examples

Pros and cons — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Freedom vs stabilityLoves autonomy but needs predictable mortgage paymentsBuffer fund + client pipeline before leaving employment.
Parent — flexibility priorityChooses ZZP for school-hours schedulingBuffer for unpaid leave and health insurance during gaps.
High-demand dev — rate focus€110/hour vs €7k employmentStill model pension, sick buffer and 25% non-billable time.

Finance

Managing Finances as a ZZP'er

Self-employed professionals typically plan for taxes, retirement, insurance, emergency funds and occasional business investments. Employment benefits do not transfer automatically.

Premium financial planning board on tax reserves, retirement gaps, insurance, emergency funds and business investments for ZZP'ers.
Build buffers for tax, illness and slow months — employment safety nets do not apply by default.

Financial planning checklist

  • Model net income after tax, BTW and non-billable time before quitting employment.
  • Compare pension gap with last employer package when setting rates.
  • Read pension for expats guide when moving from employment to ZZP.
  • Use financial advisors for buffers and insurance when complexity grows.
Planning areaTypical contextWhat to model
Calendar hours~160 hours/month if full-timeSales and admin reduce billable share
Billable targetOften 50–70% of calendar hoursTrack one month; adjust pipeline or rate
Tax + BTW reserveMany set aside 25–35% of revenueAccountant refines for your client mix
Pension gapNo employer accrual on ZZPAdd to hourly rate model

Examples

Financial planning — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Rate reality€100/hour but only 22 billable hours/monthEffective income far lower — raise rate or cut non-billable load.
Mortgage planningWants to buy apartment in 18 months on ZZP incomeLender view of income history — buffer and stable client mix matter.
AOV questionSole income earner; no disability coverInsurance adviser on AOV and emergency fund alongside health insurance.
Pension gap after employmentLeft job with employer pension; now ZZPModel voluntary pension in hourly rate — read pension for expats guide.

Avoid

Common Mistakes New ZZP'ers Make

New ZZP'ers — especially expats — often repeat predictable errors in the first year: late registration, optimistic tax math and over-reliance on one client.

Premium mistake board with eight common new ZZP errors — bookkeeping, taxes, one client, pricing, contracts, pension, cash flow and late registration.
Most costly mistakes happen in the first 90 days — register and ask accountants early.

Ignoring bookkeeping

Scrambling at year-end costs time and risks errors.

Underestimating taxes

Spending full invoices before BTW and income tax due dates.

One client dependency

Single client loss can zero income overnight.

Pricing too low

Forgotten pension, leave and admin time erode net pay.

Ignoring contracts

Verbal agreements fail on scope and payment disputes.

No retirement savings

Years without pension accrual compound later.

Poor cash-flow planning

Late payers create personal cash crunches.

Delaying registration

Backdating and compliance issues with KvK and tax.

Reality check before you invoice

  • Register KvK before substantial client revenue.
  • Set BTW and income tax aside from first payment.
  • Diversify clients within 12 months if possible.
  • Review employment vs contractor risk if one client dominates.

Examples

Common mistakes — practical examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
DBA context90% income from former employer as ZZPClassification review with accountant — not just convenient for employer.
Late KvK — consultantThree months of invoices; Belastingdienst inquiryAccountant to regularise registration and BTW filings.
Unpaid invoice — €9kClient delays 90 days; no contract late-fee clauseLegal collection route; future contracts with deposits.
Permit side workHSM invoices without IND clearanceImmigration lawyer before continuing activity.

Ask early

Questions Expats Often Ask

Use these prompts with accountants, KvK, IND and clients — verify your situation independently.

Premium eight-card Q&A infographic answering expat ZZP questions on definition, foreigners, freelancing comparison, KvK, tax, international work and popularity.
Use these as conversation starters with accountants and official sources — not legal advice.
AskQuestionWhy it matters
AccountantDoes my client mix and revenue require BTW registration?Avoid incorrect invoices and Belastingdienst corrections.
KvKWhich legal form fits my solo activity?Registration choice affects admin and liability context.
IND / immigration adviserDoes my permit allow this ZZP activity?Registration does not replace permit compliance.
ClientIs this a fixed project scope with written payment terms?Reduces scope creep and late payment disputes.
Financial adviserWhat buffer and pension gap should my rate cover?Employment benefits no longer apply by default.
YourselfWhat happens if my main client ends the contract in 30 days?Tests income resilience before committing full-time.

Quick answers

Orientation answers expats often need first

What is a ZZP'er?

A self-employed professional without employees — Zelfstandige Zonder Personeel — who typically invoices clients and manages their own admin and taxes.

Can foreigners become ZZP?

Many expats register as ZZP'ers, but permit rules vary — verify IND requirements independently before relying on client income.

Is ZZP the same as freelancing?

Freelancing is a broad term; ZZP is the common Dutch registration framework many freelancers use locally.

Do I need KVK registration?

Most solo self-employed professionals register with KvK — confirm requirements for your activity on kvk.nl.

How do taxes work?

Typically income tax on profit plus often BTW — exact treatment depends on your situation; use Belastingdienst and an accountant.

Can I work internationally?

Many ZZP'ers invoice foreign clients — cross-border tax and VAT rules need per-country confirmation.

Can I have one client?

Possible, but heavy dependence on one payer raises classification and income risks — verify with professionals.

Is ZZP popular?

Yes — widespread across consulting, tech, creative and business services in the Netherlands.

Examples

When to use these questions — example situations

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Before registeringHas answers on KvK but not on INDPermit first, then KvK — order matters for many expats.
First client callClient asks for rate and start date tomorrowConfirm KvK, BTW and contract template before committing.
Accountant shortlistThree quotes; unsure what to askUse conversation prompts table — scope BTW, cross-border and first-year filings.

Professional support

Professional Services That May Help

Tax, immigration and business support may help with specific steps — this page does not replace KvK registration or qualified advice.

Premium provider map showing when accountants, tax advisors, business consultants, financial advisors and immigration lawyers may help during ZZP setup.
Use professionals for scoped review — still read official sources yourself.

Examples

When expats typically seek support

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Complex first yearEU + US clients; prior 30% rulingTax advisor + accountant scoping before Q4 surprise.
Permit changeEmployment permit ending; wants full-time ZZPImmigration lawyer before relying on client pipeline income.
Scaling beyond soloConsidering hiring first subcontractorBusiness consultant on structure — ZZP means no employees by definition.

Providers expats compare when setting up as ZZP in the Netherlands

Becoming a ZZP'er often overlaps with KvK registration questions, BTW and income tax setup, cross-border client invoicing, immigration and permit checks, banking and financial planning. These listings are for discovery when you need scoped help — not legal, tax or immigration advice. Confirm services, pricing and credentials before you commit.

Some links may be affiliate or referral links. If you use them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Ordering reflects relevance to ZZP setup, not pay-to-rank. This is not legal, tax or immigration advice — verify outcomes with KvK, Belastingdienst, IND or qualified advisers. Learn more

Browse more companies: Tax advisorsAccountantsImmigration lawyersBusiness consultantsFinancial advisorsBrowse all services

Some links may be affiliate or referral links. Listings are for discovery only — not pay-to-rank and not legal, tax or immigration advice. Confirm credentials and scope with any provider. Learn more

Professional listings help discovery — they do not replace KvK registration, Belastingdienst filings or IND compliance. Confirm credentials and scope before hiring.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

These answers help you identify what still needs verification — registration, tax, permits and financial planning.

Premium FAQ accordion board with eight ZZP questions and short orientation answers on definition, KvK, tax, expats, international work and risks.
FAQ answers orient you — confirm your situation with KvK, Belastingdienst and qualified advisers.

Examples

FAQ topics illustrated with examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
FAQ to actionUnderstands definition; ready to registerWalk registration section + accountant shortlist.
Expat permit FAQRead 'can foreigners become ZZP' — still unsureIND page for permit type; immigration lawyer if employment-linked.
International work FAQPlans US and EU clients from year oneForeign income guide + tax adviser before first cross-border invoice.

Trust

Official Sources

Business registration requirements, tax obligations and immigration rules can change over time. Always verify current information through official resources.

Premium Netherlands map pinning five official sources — KvK, Belastingdienst, Business.gov.nl, Government.nl and IND — with what to verify where.
Bookmark these before your first client invoice — rules and thresholds change over time.

Examples

Which official source when — examples

ProfileScenarioWhat to check
Official source routingUnsure whether question is tax or permitPermit → IND; registration → KvK; tax → Belastingdienst.
KvK vs BelastingdienstRegistered at KvK; unsure about BTW filingBelastingdienst for BTW; KvK does not handle tax returns.
Business.gov.nl orientationWants step-by-step setup checklist in EnglishBusiness.gov.nl for government overview; then KvK and Belastingdienst for specifics.

Explore next

Explore Next

Move from ZZP orientation into freelancing, taxes, foreign income, financial planning and entrepreneurship.

Premium canal-route journey with five next steps — freelancing guide, starting a business, expat taxes, foreign income and financial advisors.
Pick your next guide based on whether you are registering, planning taxes or building buffers.