TOOL
Netherlands Visa Document Readiness Checker
Answer a few questions to see which document categories may matter for your move, how ready you are, what is missing, and what to prepare next.

Different Dutch visa and residence routes require different document sets. Your country of origin, family status, work route, study route, or business route all affect what you should prepare.
This tool helps you identify likely document categories, missing items, and extra complexity such as translation, apostille, or legalization. It does not replace official source checks or legal advice.
Common categories include: passport, employment contract, university admission, birth certificate, marriage or partnership proof, business documents, income proof, and housing / address documents. Answer a few questions to see which apply to you and how ready you are.
Disclaimer
Check your document readiness
Click "Use this example" to prefill the tool with that scenario. You can then adjust answers and see your readiness.
Indian engineer with employer-sponsored move
Non-EU professional with a Dutch job offer from a recognized sponsor; HSM or EU Blue Card route.
Focus: Passport, employment contract, salary proof, birth certificate, address proof.
Use this example →US founder exploring DAFT
American planning to work as self-employed in the Netherlands under DAFT.
Focus: Passport, business documents, proof of funds, civil documents.
Use this example →UK student preparing for university
Non-EU student with or expecting admission to Dutch education.
Focus: Passport, admission letter, proof of funds, birth certificate, housing.
Use this example →South African family joining partner in the Netherlands
Family relocating to join a sponsor in the Netherlands; partner and children.
Focus: Passport, marriage certificate, birth certificates, proof of relationship, address.
Use this example →Self-employed consultant planning a solo move
Non-DAFT entrepreneur or freelancer preparing for the self-employed visa route.
Focus: Passport, business plan, client documentation, proof of funds, civil documents.
Use this example →Couple moving on EU Blue Card
Primary applicant with job offer; partner joining on family permit.
Focus: Passport, employment contract, salary proof, marriage certificate, address.
Use this example →What this tool does
Shows which document categories may matter for your move and how ready you are.
What it checks
Visa route, citizenship, work, study, family, and business-related document categories.
What you get
A readiness score, missing-document list, risk flags, and practical next steps.
Country & citizenship
Quick pick or choose from the list below.
Recommended services
These services may help with different parts of your move and document planning. Estimated costs are indicative for planning—confirm current rates and suitability with each provider.
Everaert Immigration Lawyers
Complex route and document interpretation.
Consultation approx. €150–350; application support by hourly rate (e.g. €150–300/hr). Confirm current fees with the firm.
Visit site →Wise
Financial setup / moving money.
Low fees; typical transfer fee ~0.5–1% + small fixed amount. Free to hold multi-currency. Check wise.com for current rates.
Visit site →bunq
Dutch banking after arrival.
Free and paid plans; paid from approx. €8.99/month. Check bunq.com for current tiers.
Visit site →HousingAnywhere
Temporary housing while arranging arrival.
Rent and service fee vary by listing and stay length. Landlord may charge deposit. Check listing for prices.
Visit site →Simyo
Mobile setup.
SIM from a few euros; monthly plans from approx. €10–25. Check simyo.nl for current bundles.
Visit site →Independer
Insurance comparison.
Comparison free. Premiums depend on insurer and profile; Independer may receive commission from providers.
Visit site →ACCESS NL
Expat support and information.
Membership and services may have a fee; some resources free. Check access-nl.org for current options.
Visit site →More about this tool
What this tool does
Shows which document categories may matter for your move and how ready you are.
What it checks
Visa route, citizenship, work, study, family, and business-related document categories.
What you get
A readiness score, missing-document list, risk flags, and practical next steps.
What documents do you usually need to move to the Netherlands?
Document planning depends on your visa route. Identity documents (passport, copies) are needed for almost every route. Work routes such as Highly Skilled Migrant and EU Blue Card typically require an employment contract or job offer and salary proof. Study routes require admission proof and proof of funds. Partner and family routes centre on relationship and civil-status documents (marriage certificate, birth certificates). Self-employed and DAFT routes focus on business documents and proof of funds.
Your country of origin matters. Some countries’ civil documents need apostille or legalization before they are accepted in the Netherlands. Translation may be required for documents not in Dutch or English. Replacement or certified copies can take longer in some countries — plan early.
Families often need more documents and earlier planning: birth certificates for children, marriage or partnership proof, and sometimes custody or parental authority evidence. Connecting this tool with the visa checker and moving checklist helps you see the full picture: which route fits, which documents you need, and what to do next.
Document readiness affects your timeline and first-week admin. Missing or uncertified documents can delay registration, banking, or permit processing. Use this checker to see what is likely required, what you already have, and what still needs work — then confirm with official IND and municipality sources before you apply.
Frequently asked questions
It depends on your visa or residence route. Common categories include passport, employment contract or job offer (work routes), university admission (student route), business documents (self-employed/DAFT), birth and marriage certificates (partner/family), proof of funds, proof of housing, and health insurance awareness. Use this tool to see which categories likely apply to you and what may still be missing.
No. Different routes require different document sets. For example, the Highly Skilled Migrant route focuses on passport, employment contract, and salary proof; the student route on admission and proof of funds; the partner route on relationship and sponsor documents. This checker adapts to your chosen route and household.
Some documents from your country of origin may need apostille, legalization, or certified translation before they are accepted in the Netherlands. This varies by document type and country. The tool flags when translation, apostille, or legalization may add time; always confirm exact requirements with the IND or official source for your route.
Order it as early as possible from your country’s civil authority. Processing can take weeks or months in some countries. If the tool marks it as missing, plan to request it and allow time for apostille or legalization if required for your route.
Typically: passport, marriage or partnership certificate, proof of relationship, sponsor’s income and employment proof, and sometimes housing and registration details. Requirements vary; use this tool for a tailored list and read the partner & family visa guide for full details.
For routes like Highly Skilled Migrant or EU Blue Card: passport, signed employment contract or job offer, salary proof, and often birth certificate and proof of address. The employer or sponsor usually submits the application. Use this tool and the specific visa guide for your route.
Typically: passport, proof of admission or enrollment, proof of funds (study amount), and sometimes birth certificate and housing proof. The institution often submits the application. Use this tool and the student visa guide for the full list.
Yes. Choose “Not sure yet” for the route and you will get broad document guidance. For better results, use the Visa Checker first to find your likely route, then return here to check document readiness for that route.
No. This tool gives planning guidance only, not legal advice. It does not replace official IND or municipality requirements. Always confirm exact document lists and procedures with official sources or a qualified adviser.
Use the missing-document list and next steps to prioritize what to gather. Confirm requirements on the IND website or your visa guide. Then use the relocation cost estimator, moving checklist, and first 90 days planner to build your full move plan.
Related guides
Highly Skilled Migrant
Salary, sponsor, documents, and process.
EU Blue Card
Salary thresholds and process for the EU Blue Card route.
DAFT
US entrepreneur route: documents and process.
Self-Employed Visa
Business documents and requirements.
Student Visa
Admission and proof of funds.
Partner & Family Visa
Relationship and sponsor documents.
Documents needed
Core records to gather.
Moving documents checklist
Identity, civil, employment, housing.
Visa documents
Document categories for long-stay visa.
Moving to the Netherlands
Pillar guide with planning context.
Related tools
Visa Checker
Find your best visa route.
Visa Application Plan
Get a step-by-step application roadmap.
Relocation Cost Estimator
Estimate costs for your move.
Moving Checklist
Build a step-by-step relocation checklist.
First 90 Days Planner
Plan your first weeks after arrival.
Arrival Planner
Plan your first days after landing.
Official sources
Confirm exact document and application requirements with these official resources.