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Life in the Netherlands · Culture

Dutch Holidays and Traditions

Discover the celebrations, customs and traditions that shape life in the Netherlands throughout the year.

King's DaySinterklaasChristmasLiberation DayCarnivalSchool holidays

Orientation only — dates, opening hours and local events change yearly. Confirm public holiday schedules, school calendars and municipal listings before planning travel or work.

Unique photorealistic King's Day vrijmarkt on Haarlem Grote Markt — cobblestone town square, historic gabled buildings and church tower, orange bunting, families at blanket stalls, children in orange crowns, bicycles by iron railings, warm spring afternoon light.
King's Day27 AprilOrange street parties nationwide
SinterklaasNov–DecFamily gifts 5 December
Christmas25–26 DecTwo public holidays
May 4–5Remembrance & LiberationNational ceremonies

Quick answer

What Holidays Do the Dutch Celebrate?

Dutch holidays blend historical commemorations, Christian calendar dates, royal celebrations and regional folklore. For expats, the calendar explains why trams run differently, why colleagues leave early before pakjesavond, and why orange outfits appear suddenly in April.

This guide maps major holidays, public holiday rules, school breaks, food traditions and city differences — without political or religious debate. For everyday etiquette at parties and visits, pair it with our Dutch Social Norms guide.

Premium orientation board — national holidays, religious commemorations, regional traditions and modern festivals across the Dutch year.
Holidays blend history, family life and city-wide parties — use this guide to plan participation, not just tourism.

Do I need to celebrate?

No — observing respectfully and learning calendar rhythms helps daily life. Participation accelerates community ties.

Are shops always closed?

Public holidays reduce hours but tourist areas and Sunday-style rules vary — check listings the day before.

What should families know first?

Sinterklaas and school holiday calendars affect children's social life from autumn onward.

Best first experience?

King's Day if you like crowds; a local Christmas market if you prefer winter atmosphere; Carnival if you live in the south.

At a glance

Dutch Holidays at a Glance

Six orientation signals — then pick one celebration per season to experience first.

Premium snapshot cards — King's Day, Sinterklaas, Christmas, Liberation Day, Carnival and Easter with timing and participation notes.
Pick one celebration per season to experience before trying to cover the whole calendar.

Carnival

February (south)

Brabant & Limburg

Easter

March/April

Long weekend common

New Year

31 Dec–1 Jan

Fireworks & oliebollen

School summer

6 weeks regional

Travel peak

King's Day

Nationwide orange celebration with vrijmarkt flea markets, music and canal parties — busiest in Amsterdam.

Sinterklaas

Children's tradition with arrival parades, pepernoten and pakjesavond gifts on 5 December.

Christmas

Family dinners, markets and two public holidays — quieter than some countries but deeply home-focused.

Liberation Day

5 May festivals celebrate freedom — solemn remembrance on 4 May at 20:00.

Carnival

Costumes and parades in the south — Maastricht and 's-Hertogenbosch are flagship cities.

Easter

Spring family meals, chocolate eggs and garden-centre weekends — Easter Monday is a public holiday.

How to use this snapshot

  • Mark three dates on your calendar now — King's Day, Christmas and your school region's summer start.
  • Subscribe to your gemeente event newsletter.
  • Ask colleagues which holidays they actually take off work.
  • Revisit this page each September when school calendars publish.

Annual Holiday Calendar

Month-by-month overview of major Dutch holidays, commemorations and family seasons — confirm exact dates yearly.

Premium annual timeline — January through December with major Dutch holidays, long weekends and family seasons.
Confirm exact dates yearly — Easter, Ascension and Pentecost shift with the church calendar.

Month-by-month overview

Use this as orientation — confirm parade dates and market openings on municipal sites.

MonthHolidaysNote
JanuaryNew Year's Day (1 Jan)Public holiday; fireworks aftermath; nieuwjaarsduik dips on 1 Jan.
FebruaryCarnival (south)Not nationwide — peaks in Brabant and Limburg.
March/AprilEaster weekendEaster Sunday & Monday public holidays; dates shift yearly.
AprilKing's Day (27 Apr)Nationwide celebration; 26 Apr if Sunday.
MayRemembrance (4 May) & Liberation (5 May)Silence 20:00 on 4 May; festivals on 5 May.
MayAscension DayPublic holiday; often part of long weekend.
May/JunePentecost Sunday & MondaySecond spring long weekend for many families.
NovemberSinterklaas arrivalParades from mid-November; shops fill with seasonal treats.
DecemberSinterklaas (5 Dec) & ChristmasPakjesavond then Christmas markets and kerst.
DecemberChristmas & New Year's Eve25–26 Dec public holidays; 31 Dec celebrations.

National public holidays

Paid day off for many employees — verify your contract for Good Friday and Liberation Day.

HolidayDatePaid day offNote
New Year's Day1 JanuaryYes — public holidayShops often closed or limited.
Easter SundayMarch/April (varies)YesChurch and family meals.
Easter MondayDay after EasterYesPopular bridge-day travel.
King's Day27 April (26 if Sunday)YesMajor nationwide events.
Liberation Day5 MayEvery 5 years for many; optional other yearsVerify employer policy.
Ascension Day39 days after EasterYesOften Thursday long weekend.
Whit Sunday (Pentecost)49 days after EasterYesSunday public holiday.
Whit MondayDay after PentecostYesSecond Monday holiday in spring.
Christmas Day25 DecemberYesFirst Christmas day.
Boxing Day26 DecemberYes — Second Christmas DayFamily visits continue.

Employer-dependent or regional dates

These shape work and travel but are not always national paid holidays.

OccasionDatePaid day offNote
Good Friday (Goede Vrijdag)Friday before EasterEmployer-dependentCommon in schools and some sectors — confirm your contract.
Liberation Day (Bevrijdingsdag)5 MayPaid every 5 years for many workersFestivals still happen annually — verify if you must work.
Carnival (Vastenavond)February / early MarchNot a national public holidayMajor in Brabant and Limburg — plan south trips separately.

King's Day (Koningsdag)

King's Day on 27 April (26 April when 27 falls on Sunday) celebrates the monarch's birthday with nationwide street markets (vrijmarkt), music, boats on canals and orange clothing. Amsterdam draws the largest crowds; smaller cities offer a more local feel.

Historically linked to the House of Orange, the day is less about royal ceremony and more about communal outdoor partying — though official visits still occur in a chosen city each year.

Premium King's Day guide — orange clothing, vrijmarkt markets, canal boats, music, food and city comparison tips.
King's Day is the loudest nationwide party — book accommodation early and expect crowds in Amsterdam.
TopicWhat to expect
Orange clothingWear orange if you like — flags, wigs and accessories are common but not required.
VrijmarktFree flea markets on streets — children sell toys; adults clear attics.
Music & boatsCanal boats with DJs in Amsterdam; live stages in many cities.
What closesBanks and many offices closed; some supermarkets open with holiday hours.
Best for expatsTry Utrecht or Haarlem if Amsterdam crowds feel overwhelming.

King's Day checklist

  • Book accommodation months ahead for Amsterdam King's Day weekend.
  • Use public transport — road closures are extensive in city centres.
  • Carry cash for vrijmarkt stalls — not every seller accepts cards.
  • Agree a meeting point — mobile networks can overload in crowds.
  • Respect residents — don't litter in canal streets after parties.

Sinterklaas

Sinterklaas arrives from mid-November with televised parades and local intochten (arrival events). Children receive gifts on pakjesavond (evening of 5 December) often attributed to Sinterklaas and helpers, separate from Christmas Day gifts in many families.

Chocolate letters, pepernoten spice cookies and speculaas appear in shops weeks ahead. Offices may host informal Sinterklaas gift exchanges with poems.

Premium Sinterklaas guide — arrival parade, pepernoten, chocolate letters, pakjesavond and family gift customs.
Sinterklaas is separate from Christmas — families with children experience it most intensely in November–December.
TopicWhat to expect
Arrival paradesCity parades with Sinterklaas on horseback and Piet characters — very crowded with families.
Pakjesavond5 December evening — main gift moment for many children.
Chocolate lettersInitial-shaped chocolate gifts — popular in November–December.
PepernotenSmall spiced cookies thrown during parades and eaten at home.
vs ChristmasMany families separate Sinterklaas gifts from 25 December traditions.

Sinterklaas checklist

  • Arrival parades are crowded — arrive early if visiting with children.
  • Pakjesavond (5 December) is the main family gift night for many households.
  • Chocolate letters and pepernoten appear in shops from October.
  • Ask colleagues politely how their family celebrates — customs vary.
  • Office Sinterklaas exchanges often include short humorous poems with gifts.

Christmas in the Netherlands

Dutch Christmas is often quieter and more home-focused than commercial displays in some countries. Kerst (Christmas) dinners on 25 December gather family; second Christmas day (26 December) extends visits.

Christmas markets, light festivals and ice rinks run in cities from late November. School children have kerstvakantie (Christmas school break) overlapping the holidays.

Premium Dutch Christmas guide — markets, kerst dinners, decorations, ice skating and winter school break rhythms.
Two Christmas days (25 and 26 December) are public holidays — plan shopping and travel accordingly.
TopicWhat to expect
MarketsRotterdam, Maastricht, Dordrecht and Amsterdam host popular markets — check dates yearly.
Family dinnersGourmetten (table grills) or shared meals — invitations may come from Dutch colleagues.
DecorationsNeighbourhood lights and municipal light trails — less uniform than some countries.
ShoppingPeak shopping before Sinterklaas and mid-December — 25–26 Dec quieter commercially.
Ice skatingTemporary rinks at museums and squares — book slots in popular cities.

Christmas checklist

  • 25 and 26 December are public holidays — supermarkets may close or shorten hours.
  • Christmas markets run in many cities from late November — check opening nights.
  • Kerst dinners are often home-based — invitations may come from colleagues or neighbours.
  • Reserve restaurants early if you plan to dine out on 25 or 26 December.
  • Ice rinks and light trails extend through December in larger cities.

New Year (Oud & Nieuw)

New Year's Eve (oudjaarsavond) features fireworks — private and municipal — plus oliebollen (oil balls) sold from stalls. New Year's Day is a public holiday; polar plunge events happen at beaches and lakes.

Firework rules vary by municipality — some designate zones or restrictions. Pets and wildlife are stressed — plan accordingly.

Premium New Year guide — oliebollen, fireworks traditions, polar plunge events and safety reminders.
Fireworks peak at midnight 31 December — check municipal rules and pet care plans.
TopicWhat to expect
OliebollenDeep-fried dough balls with powdered sugar — classic New Year treat.
FireworksMidnight peaks nationwide — check local rules and curfews.
NieuwjaarsduikCharity polar plunges on 1 January — Scheveningen is famous.
SafetyEye protection for fireworks; supervise children; avoid DIY mishaps.

New Year checklist

  • Oliebollen stalls appear from late December — try a few flavours before 31 December.
  • Fireworks are widespread but rules vary by municipality — check restriction zones.
  • Nieuwjaarsduik polar plunges happen on 1 January at beaches and lakes.
  • Keep pets indoors and plan for loud midnight peaks in urban neighbourhoods.
  • New Year's Day is a public holiday — banks and many offices stay closed.

Easter (Pasen)

Easter combines church traditions for some families with secular spring celebrations — brunches, egg hunts and garden-centre visits. Good Friday is not a universal paid public holiday — confirm with your employer.

Easter Monday (Tweede Paasdag) is a public holiday and popular for day trips and family visits.

Premium Easter guide — family brunches, chocolate eggs, garden centres and spring events.
Easter Monday is a public holiday — many people take a long weekend trip.
TopicWhat to expect
Family mealsBrunch or lunch gatherings — restaurants book up in cities.
Chocolate eggsShops sell eggs from early spring — children's school activities common.
Garden centresBusy weekends — families buy plants for spring gardens.
EventsMuseums and parks host egg hunts and spring festivals.

Easter checklist

  • Good Friday is not a national paid holiday for all workers — check your employer.
  • Easter Monday creates a popular long weekend — book brunch and trains early.
  • Garden centres are busy — combine plant shopping with a family walk if possible.
  • Children's egg hunts happen at schools, neighbourhoods and museums.
  • Mark Easter dates when published — they shift every year with the church calendar.

Remembrance Day & Liberation Day

On 4 May (Dodenherdenking), the Netherlands commemorates war victims with ceremonies and a national two-minute silence at 20:00. On 5 May (Bevrijdingsdag), liberation from German occupation in 1945 is celebrated with festivals and concerts.

Liberation Day is a paid public holiday for many workers only once every five years — other years employers may still grant time off or host events. Check Government.nl and your contract.

Premium Remembrance and Liberation Day guide — May 4 silence, May 5 concerts and national commemorations.
May 4 is solemn nationwide — avoid loud celebrations until after the evening silence.
TopicWhat to expect
4 May silencePause at 20:00 — trams and events stop in many places.
CeremoniesDam Square Amsterdam and local monuments — respectful dress.
5 May festivalsBevrijdingsfestivals with music — many cities participate.
Expat participationObserve silence even if you do not attend ceremonies — neighbours notice respect.

May 4–5 etiquette checklist

  • Pause conversations outdoors at 20:00 on 4 May — trams and events stop in many places.
  • Remembrance ceremonies are solemn — avoid party atmosphere until after the evening.
  • Liberation Day festivals with music occur in many cities on 5 May.
  • Paid public holiday on 5 May happens every five years for many — verify employer policy.
  • Wear respectful dress if attending Dam Square or local monument ceremonies.

Ascension Day & Pentecost

Ascension Day (Hemelvaart) and Pentecost (Pinksteren) weekend create spring long breaks. Many Dutch families camp, visit relatives or take short European trips.

Dates follow the Christian calendar — mark them when published each year for bridge-day planning.

Premium Ascension and Pentecost overview — long weekends, outdoor activities and bridge-day travel patterns.
These spring public holidays often create four-day weekends — trains and campsites fill early.
TopicWhat to expect
AscensionThursday public holiday — Friday bridge day common.
PentecostSunday and Monday public holidays — second May long weekend.
ActivitiesOutdoor cafés, cycling trips and family barbecues.
TravelNS and highways busy — book trains in advance.

Long weekend planning

  • Bridge days (brugdag) before or after create five-day breaks for many workers.
  • Campsites and NS peak pricing apply — book early for Ascension and Pentecost weekends.
  • Outdoor events and family visits dominate these spring long weekends.
  • Church calendar sets dates — mark them when published each year.
  • Thursday Ascension plus Friday off is a common four-day pattern in offices.

Carnival

Carnival (vastenavond) is strongest in North Brabant and Limburg with costumes, parades and brass bands. Cities like 's-Hertogenbosch (Oeteldonk), Maastricht and Breda transform for several days.

The Randstad generally does not celebrate Carnival the same way — expats in Amsterdam may need a south trip to experience it fully.

Premium Carnival guide — Brabant and Limburg costumes, parades and southern Netherlands atmosphere.
Carnival is regional — Randstad cities feel different from 's-Hertogenbosch or Maastricht.
TopicWhat to expect
CostumesPlayful dress — locals plan outfits weeks ahead.
ParadesFloats and marching bands — city centres pedestrian-focused.
Best placesMaastricht, 's-Hertogenbosch, Tilburg, Breda, Venlo.
TimingUsually February or early March — weekend before Ash Wednesday.

Carnival checklist

  • Strongest in North Brabant and Limburg — not a nationwide costume day.
  • Parades and brass bands fill town centres — hotels sell out locally.
  • Dress codes are playful — check weather for long outdoor standing.
  • Randstad cities may feel quiet compared with 's-Hertogenbosch or Maastricht.
  • Plan a south weekend trip if you live in Amsterdam and want the full Carnival atmosphere.

School Holidays

Dutch school holidays are set regionally (north, middle, south) to spread traffic. Summer vacation lasts about six weeks; autumn, Christmas and spring breaks are shorter.

Expat families should follow their child's school calendar — international schools may differ from Dutch regional dates.

Premium school holiday calendar — summer, autumn, spring and Christmas breaks by region with travel impact.
North, middle and south regions stagger breaks — check your gemeente school calendar.

Regional school breaks

North, middle and south regions stagger dates — international schools may differ.

BreakDurationTravel impactRegion note
Summer (zomervakantie)6 weeksPeak pricing — campsites & NSStaggered by north, middle and south regions.
Autumn (herfstvakantie)1 weekModerate family travelOften October — exact week varies by region.
Christmas (kerstvakantie)~2 weeksHoliday travel peakOverlaps Christmas and New Year school break.
Spring (voorjaarsvakantie)1 weekModerate — museums busierOften February or May depending on region.

School holiday planning

  • Regions (north, middle, south) stagger summer dates to spread highway traffic.
  • Check your child's school or gemeente PDF each September — not one national week.
  • International schools may publish different dates from Dutch regional calendars.
  • Attractions and camps raise prices during summer peaks — book childcare early.
  • Autumn and spring breaks are shorter but still affect museum crowds and family trips.

Regional Traditions

Beyond national holidays — regional events reward short trips outside your home city. Combine with a weekend plan.

Premium regional traditions map — Elfstedentocht, cheese markets, flower parade, tulip season and Saint Martin.
Regional events reward short trips outside your home city — combine with weekend plans.

Regional events worth a day trip

TraditionTimingWhereExpat tip
Tulip seasonMarch–MayBollenstreek, Keukenhof areaBook Keukenhof tickets and train seats early on spring weekends.
Cheese marketsSummer seasonAlkmaar, GoudaCheck municipal schedules — displays are seasonal not weekly year-round.
Flower parade (corso)SpringBollenstreek routeCombine with a tulip-region day trip and cycle rental.
ElfstedentochtRare winter iceFrieslandLegendary tour only when ice allows — follow Dutch news in cold snaps.
Saint Martin (Sint Maarten)11 NovemberMany neighbourhoods nationwideJoin children's lantern walks if neighbours invite — bring small treats.
Local fairs (kermis)Summer–autumnMany gemeentenCheck gemeente event pages — fairs move street parking and noise patterns.

Tulip season

March–May flower fields and Keukenhof area visits — book tickets early.

Cheese markets

Alkmaar and Gouda host traditional cheese market displays in season.

Flower parade

Bollenstreek corso floats with flowers — spring dates vary.

Elfstedentocht

Legendary ice skating tour — only when winter ice allows in Friesland.

Saint Martin (Sint Maarten)

11 November lantern walks for children in many neighbourhoods.

Local fairs (kermis)

Town fair rides and food stalls — summer and autumn in many gemeenten.

Seasonal Holiday Foods

Taste the calendar — seasonal treats appear in shops weeks before each celebration.

Premium seasonal food board — oliebollen, pepernoten, banketstaaf, tompouce and bitterballen with timing labels.
Seasonal treats appear in shops weeks before the holiday — taste early to learn what locals queue for.

What to try and when

FoodSeasonWhat to expect
OliebollenNew Year's EveDeep-fried dough balls with powdered sugar.
PepernotenSinterklaasSmall spiced cookies — also thrown at parades.
Chocolate lettersSinterklaasGift initials in chocolate — supermarket shelves from November.
BanketstaafChristmasAlmond pastry log — popular kerst treat.
TompouceKing's Day (orange)Pastry with orange icing on King's Day variants.
BitterballenYear-round partiesDeep-fried snack balls — party staple.
StamppotAutumn/winterMashed potato with vegetables — hearty cold-season dinner.
KerststolChristmasFruit bread with almond paste — breakfast tradition.

Taste the calendar

  • Try seasonal foods at markets first — fresher than supermarket-only sampling.
  • Learn the Dutch name for a dish — helps when searching shop shelves.
  • Gift food boxes spike before Sinterklaas and Christmas — budget accordingly.
  • Orange tompouce variants appear around King's Day — easy conversation starter.
  • Bitterballen dominate party seasons but appear year-round at casual gatherings.

What Expats Should Expect

Public holidays affect work, shops and travel — plan ahead like mini peak seasons.

Premium expat checklist — travel booking, shop closures, transport changes and King's Day crowds.
Treat public holidays like mini peak seasons — especially in Amsterdam and student cities.

At work

Public holidays reduce office hours but Good Friday and Liberation Day policies vary by employer and sector.

Read your contract and internal holiday calendar each January.

Shops & services

Supermarkets may open Sunday-style hours in cities; banks and post offices usually close on public holidays.

Check chain apps the evening before — tourist centres differ from suburbs.

Travel & crowds

King's Day, summer school breaks and spring long weekends fill trains, highways and campsites.

Book NS and accommodation months ahead for April and July peaks.

With children

Sinterklaas and school holiday calendars shape playdates, gifts and childcare needs from autumn onward.

Save the school region PDF and note pakjesavond on 5 December.

Expat planning checklist

  • Book King's Day and summer holiday travel months ahead.
  • Check supermarket hours the day before public holidays.
  • Read employer calendar for Good Friday and Liberation Day policy.
  • Expect crowds on King's Day — secure accommodation and return transport.
  • School holidays raise campsite and attraction prices — plan childcare.
  • Reserve restaurants for Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and New Year's Eve if dining out.
  • Subscribe to gemeente event newsletters for free local activities.
  • Learn one Dutch holiday name — helps shop signage and colleague chat.

How to Experience Dutch Traditions

Showing up locally beats only watching tourist highlights — start with one event per season.

Premium participation ideas — markets, neighbourhood events, arrivals, volunteering and community celebrations.
Showing up locally beats only watching tourist highlights on social media.

Visit a vrijmarkt

Browse King's Day street markets — low-cost entry to Dutch party culture.

Christmas market evening

Walk a market with colleagues — easy first winter tradition.

Sinterklaas arrival

Watch a local intocht parade with neighbourhood families.

Neighbourhood Saint Martin

Join lantern walks if invited — children's tradition in many streets.

Volunteer at a festival

Bevrijdingsfestival or local fair — meet locals behind the scenes.

Regional day trip

Carnival south or tulip season — combine travel with tradition.

Participation checklist

  • Browse a King's Day vrijmarkt — low-cost entry to Dutch street-party culture.
  • Walk a Christmas market evening with colleagues before hosting at home.
  • Watch a local Sinterklaas intocht parade with neighbourhood families.
  • Join a Sint Maarten lantern walk if invited on 11 November.
  • Volunteer at a Bevrijdingsfestival or buurt fair for community contact.
  • Plan one regional day trip — Carnival south or tulip season in spring.

Holiday Celebrations by City

Choose cities by the holiday you care about — Carnival south, King's Day canals, Christmas markets north.

Premium city holiday comparison — Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, Utrecht, Eindhoven and Maastricht celebrations.
Choose cities by the holiday you care about — Carnival south, King's Day canals, Christmas markets north.

Common Questions

Quick clarifiers on shops, work days, public holiday status and school calendars.

Premium common questions cards — shops open, work days, public holiday status and school calendars.
Rules vary by employer and municipality — verify locally when planning work or childcare.

Are shops open on holidays?

Public holidays reduce hours — tourist centres may open Sunday-style; always check the evening before.

Do I have to work?

Depends on contract and sector — public holidays are paid off for many but not all workers.

Is it a public holiday?

Government.nl lists official holidays — Good Friday and Liberation Day vary by employer.

Should I celebrate?

Optional — respectful observation and one local event per year builds belonging.

How do schools work?

Regional calendars on gemeente sites — international schools publish separately.

What traditions matter most?

King's Day, Sinterklaas and Christmas shape most family conversations — start there.

Common Mistakes

Calendar gaps that catch expats off guard — adjust plans before concluding holidays are impossible to navigate.

Premium mistake cards — assuming everything closes, King's Day without planning, ignoring 4 May silence.
Most friction is planning — calendar awareness beats last-minute scrambling.

Assuming everything closes

Some supermarkets and tourist shops open on holidays with shortened hours.

Check chain apps the night before.

King's Day without planning

Amsterdam accommodation sells out — day trips need early train tickets.

Book or pick a smaller city.

Ignoring 4 May silence

Outdoor noise during 20:00 silence reads as disrespect.

Pause conversations at 20:00.

Confusing Sinterklaas and Christmas

Gift expectations differ by household across December.

Ask colleagues about family customs.

Missing school calendar

Childcare and travel clash with regional summer weeks.

Save school PDF each September.

Quick recovery guide

Use this table when a planning gap catches you off guard.

MistakeFixNote
Assuming everything closesCheck supermarket chain apps the night before.Tourist centres often open Sunday-style hours.
King's Day without planningBook accommodation or pick Utrecht or Haarlem.Amsterdam sells out months ahead.
Ignoring 4 May silencePause outdoors at 20:00 on 4 May.Neighbours notice respectful behaviour.
Confusing Sinterklaas and ChristmasAsk colleagues about family gift customs.December expectations differ by household.
Missing school calendarSave gemeente or school PDF each September.Summer weeks vary by north, middle, south.

Frequently Asked Questions

Confirm dates and employer policies locally — holiday rules vary by sector and municipality.

Premium FAQ board — public holidays, King's Day, Sinterklaas, Christmas, school breaks and traditional foods.
Revisit this page each autumn when school and shop calendars update.

New Year's Day, Easter Sunday and Monday, King's Day, Ascension, Whit Sunday and Monday, Christmas Day and Boxing Day are national public holidays. Liberation Day paid status varies; Good Friday depends on employer. Confirm on Government.nl and your contract.

Explore next

Plan the Next Step

Move from holiday orientation into social norms, community integration and city guides.

Premium explore-next cards — culture overview, social norms, community basics, festivals and cities.
Pick the next guide based on whether you need etiquette, friends or city logistics.