ExpatCopilotExpatCopilot

Arrival

First 60 Days in the Netherlands: What Expats Usually Set Up

A practical guide to the first 60 days after moving to the Netherlands. What expats commonly set up in their second month, from banking and health insurance to DigiD, housing, and daily-life routines.

Arrival Guide
Expat organizing first 60 days setup in the Netherlands
Share

Plan your next 30 days with less guesswork

Use the First 90 Days Planner to track what usually happens after the first month — and keep your banking, insurance, DigiD, housing, and admin setup on track.

Check Document Readiness

ExpatOS summary

At a glance

Who this is for, realistic timing, and the first moves that matter—before you scroll.

Who this is for
  • WHAT CHANGES AFTER THE FIRST MONTH?: Core registrations are usually done; the focus shifts to making daily life stable and closing remaining admin gaps.
  • COMMON FOCUS AREAS: Banking, health insurance, DigiD, housing follow-up, direct debits, local doctor registration, and routine admin.
  • BEST NEXT STEP: Use the First 90 Days Planner to track what still needs attention between day 30 and day 90.
Timeline

Core registrations are usually done; the focus shifts to making daily life stable and closing remaining admin gaps.

Key steps
  1. First 30 Days — Register, receive BSN, start daily-life setup.
  2. Day 30–60 — Confirm essentials, stabilize routines, review housing and admin.
  3. First 90 Days — Close remaining gaps, understand longer-term systems, settle in.

Second month

From first month to day-60 stability

Confirm essentials, routines, and admin follow-ups before you move deeper into settling in.

Weeks 7–8: Build stable routines

  • Set up recurring payments for rent, utilities, subscriptions, and insurance
  • Review your mobile plan and connectivity
  • Register with a local GP if you have not done so already
  • Learn local transport patterns and choose the right OV / bike / commute setup
  • Check which official letters or app notifications still need action

Housing and address follow-up

  • Confirm the registered address on file is correct
  • If moving again, plan municipality address change steps early
  • Keep rental agreement and proof-of-address documents organized
  • Check whether your bank, insurer, employer, and other services use the correct address
  • Review whether temporary accommodation allowed all the registration steps you expected

A simple "admin health" check

  • Do you have a BSN and registered address?
  • Is your bank account working for salary and direct debits?
  • Is health insurance active?
  • Is DigiD set up if you need online government access?
  • Have you registered with a GP if appropriate?

Overview

The first 60 days are usually about stabilizing what was started in the first month. Many expats move from "arrival admin" into "settling-in admin." That often includes checking that registrations work properly, making recurring payments function, finalizing DigiD and insurance, and reviewing housing plans.

Requirements vary by nationality, municipality, employer, and household situation. If you have just finished your first month, the first 30 days guide and the moving timeline can help you see how the second month fits in. Already past the first month? Use the 90-day planner to see what people commonly finalize next.

Weeks 5–6: Confirm the essentials

This period is often about checking that earlier setup is actually working. Problems often appear only after the first salary, first insurance letter, or first login attempt — so confirming each piece now can prevent friction later.

  • Confirm municipality registration completed successfully
  • Check your BSN is being accepted where needed
  • Make sure your Dutch bank account works for salary and direct debits
  • Confirm health insurance is active and linked correctly
  • Activate or finish DigiD access
  • Review whether employer onboarding or payroll still needs any missing documents

Planning note

This page is a practical guide to what expats commonly do in their second month. Exact timing varies by municipality, employer, and household setup.

Services often used in this step

bunq

bunq

Digital bank with expat-friendly signup and multi-currency options. Often used for quick account setup and international use.

From ~€2.99/mo

Knab

Knab

Dutch online bank (no branches). Full Dutch payment account with iDEAL and debit card; often chosen for straightforward pricing and digital experience.

From ~€3.50/mo

ABN AMRO

ABN AMRO

Major Dutch bank with branches and online banking. Full current accounts, iDEAL, and in-branch support.

Free basic account

Some links may be affiliate links. If you use them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Curated partners

Hand-picked for this guide

Compare health insurance and banking options we recommend on Netherlands relocation content.

Zilveren Kruis

Zilveren Kruis

  • Basic package
  • Large network
  • Supplementary options

One of the largest Dutch insurers (Achmea group). Often compared for broad care networks and optional supplementary cover such as dental or physiotherapy.

Best for
People who want a high-recognition brand and flexible add-ons on top of mandatory cover.
Pricing
~€145–165/mo basic indicative; excess and extras change the total
CZ

CZ

  • Basic package
  • National coverage

Established Dutch insurer with a large member base and a wide choice of basic and supplementary packages.

Best for
Straightforward comparison shopping among major domestic insurers.
Pricing
~€142–160/mo basic indicative; verify with zorgwijzer or insurer
Menzis

Menzis

  • Basic package
  • Flexible add-ons

Major Dutch insurer offering basic insurance plus optional modules; frequently shortlisted when balancing premium and package flexibility.

Best for
Expats comparing mid-tier premiums with clear supplementary options.
Pricing
~€138–158/mo basic indicative
VGZ

VGZ

  • Basic package
  • Wide product range

Large cooperative-style insurer in the Netherlands with a broad range of basic and supplementary products.

Best for
Those who want many package variants from a single established brand.
Pricing
~€140–160/mo basic indicative

How we choose

  • Expat fitUseful for people moving or living in the Netherlands, not generic domestic-only products.
  • Ease of onboardingHow straightforward sign-up and getting started tend to be for newcomers.
  • English supportEnglish-language websites, apps, or support paths where that matters for this category.
  • Practical suitabilityHow well the option matches common relocation scenarios we describe on the page.

How we rank servicesAffiliate disclosureEditorial policy

Transparency

  • Some links may be partner links. When we use them, we aim to label them clearly.
  • We only surface options we believe are relevant to this topic and typical expat journeys.
  • Always confirm pricing, contract terms, and eligibility on the provider’s own site or with a professional.

Editorial selections are not paid placement unless explicitly stated. We may earn a commission on some partner links at no extra cost to you.

Weeks 7–8: Build stable routines

Second-month life becomes more routine for many expats, but admin still matters. This is when many people start simplifying payments, transport, communication, and healthcare usage. One missed step can cause friction later with payments, insurance, or appointments — so a little structure now helps.

  • Set up recurring payments for rent, utilities, subscriptions, and insurance
  • Review your mobile plan and connectivity
  • Register with a local GP if you have not done so already
  • Learn local transport patterns and choose the right OV / bike / commute setup
  • Check which official letters or app notifications still need action
  • Start keeping a simple admin folder for account confirmations, policy details, and login records

Services often used in this step

Simyo

Simyo

Dutch SIM-only mobile brand (KPN network). Often used for straightforward prepaid or monthly plans and quick local number setup.

~€7–25/mo depending on data bundle

Zilveren Kruis

Zilveren Kruis

One of the largest Dutch health insurers (Achmea). Broad care network, basic and supplementary packages; widely recognised by expats.

~€145–162/mo

bunq

bunq

Digital bank with expat-friendly signup and multi-currency options. Often used for quick account setup and international use.

From ~€2.99/mo

Lebara

Lebara

Mobile brand focused on internationals in the Netherlands. Prepaid and monthly options; useful when you want flexible plans and international calling bundles.

~€5–20/mo typical entry plans; varies by bundle

CZ

CZ

Large Dutch insurer with a big customer base. Standard basic and various supplementary packages; solid option for daily cover.

~€142–158/mo

Knab

Knab

Dutch online bank (no branches). Full Dutch payment account with iDEAL and debit card; often chosen for straightforward pricing and digital experience.

From ~€3.50/mo

Independer logo

Independer

Dutch comparison platform often used to compare health insurance and other household cover.

Free comparison service.

Helpful for reviewing or comparing health insurance options once BSN and registration are done.

Some links may be affiliate links. If you use them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Housing and address follow-up

If you started in temporary housing, the second month is often when longer-term housing decisions become more urgent. Changing addresses may trigger more admin, and some services still rely on the currently registered address.

  • Confirm the registered address on file is correct
  • If moving again, plan municipality address change steps early
  • Keep rental agreement and proof-of-address documents organized
  • Check whether your bank, insurer, employer, and other services use the correct address
  • Review whether temporary accommodation allowed all the registration steps you expected

If your address changes

Many systems use your registered address as a reference point. If you move during your first two months, keep a simple checklist of which services may need updates.

Services often used in this step

Funda

Funda

Major Dutch platform for homes for sale and rent. Listings from estate agents and landlords across the Netherlands.

Free to browse; agent or landlord fees may apply.

HousingAnywhere

HousingAnywhere

Online platform connecting people looking for a home with landlords. Not a real estate agency. Mid- and long-term furnished rentals.

Check platform pricing and booking fees.

Pararius

Pararius

Rental listing platform for apartments and houses in the Netherlands. Listings from agents and landlords.

Free to browse; agent or landlord fees may apply.

Some links may be affiliate links. If you use them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

A simple "admin health" check

By day 60, many expats benefit from a quick review of what is completed, what is pending, and what still feels unclear. This is not about perfection — it is about reducing unknowns.

  • Do you have a BSN and registered address?
  • Is your bank account working for salary and direct debits?
  • Is health insurance active?
  • Is DigiD set up if you need online government access?
  • Have you registered with a GP if appropriate?
  • Are your housing documents easy to find?
  • Do you know what still needs attention before day 90?

Checklist by day 60

By the end of the second month, many expats aim to have the core systems of daily life working reliably. Use the checklist generator or 90-day planner if several items are still open.

  • Municipality registration completed
  • BSN available where needed
  • Dutch bank account active
  • Salary and direct debit setup tested
  • Health insurance active
  • DigiD set up (if needed)
  • GP registration considered or completed
  • Current housing situation clear
  • Key documents stored in one place
  • Remaining first-90-days tasks identified

What expats typically arrange next

After the first two months, many expats start shifting from immediate setup into longer-term planning and integration.

  • Review longer-term housing decisions
  • Understand tax and payroll administration more clearly
  • Learn local healthcare and insurance routines
  • Improve commute and transport setup
  • Start language and integration awareness
  • Build more stable weekly routines around payments, appointments, and government correspondence

Helpful tools

Use these tools at the right moment in your move—the same utility cards as the main Move hub.

Tool: Plan Your First 90 Days

Track what usually still needs attention after the first month.

Open

Tool: Generate a Moving Checklist

Build a practical checklist for your relocation stage and household.

Open

Tool: Check Document Readiness

See whether your essential admin documents are likely in place.

Open
Share

Support

FAQ

Useful services for expats

A curated list of common services people use during the move.

Some links may be affiliate links. If you use them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Learn more

Recommended

Services for your Netherlands move

Curated partners we surface on similar guides—shipping, relocation, and setup help.

Expat2Holland

Expat2Holland

  • Amsterdam region
  • Settling-in
  • Housing support

Amsterdam-area relocation partner for housing search, municipal registration, BSN, and practical settling-in—often used by families and employers.

Best for
Moves centred on Amsterdam where you want hands-on coordination.
Pricing
Typical packages from roughly €1,500; request a written scope
Packimpex

Packimpex

  • Corporate
  • Immigration
  • End-to-end

Relocation provider covering immigration coordination, housing, tax orientation, and move logistics—common in employer-led programmes.

Best for
Complex moves where visa, housing, and shipment timing must align.
Pricing
Quoted per scope; employer-funded or individual
Jimble

Jimble

  • Amsterdam
  • Mobility
  • Registration

Relocation and mobility services for internationals in the Amsterdam area, including housing and registration support.

Best for
Amsterdam-region arrivals comparing local relocation boutiques.
Pricing
Typically €1,000–2,500+ for core services; confirm quote
Crown Relocations

Crown Relocations

  • Global
  • Employer programmes
  • Moving

Global relocation and moving company used for international assignments; combines shipment management with destination services in many markets.

Best for
Corporate assignees or employer-managed international moves.
Pricing
Usually bundled in employer relocation benefits

How we choose

  • Expat fitUseful for people moving or living in the Netherlands, not generic domestic-only products.
  • Ease of onboardingHow straightforward sign-up and getting started tend to be for newcomers.
  • English supportEnglish-language websites, apps, or support paths where that matters for this category.
  • Practical suitabilityHow well the option matches common relocation scenarios we describe on the page.

How we rank servicesAffiliate disclosureEditorial policy

Transparency

  • Some links may be partner links. When we use them, we aim to label them clearly.
  • We only surface options we believe are relevant to this topic and typical expat journeys.
  • Always confirm pricing, contract terms, and eligibility on the provider’s own site or with a professional.

Editorial selections are not paid placement unless explicitly stated. We may earn a commission on some partner links at no extra cost to you.

Some links may be affiliate links. If you use them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.