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Moving to the Netherlands Timeline

Understand the typical preparation stages before and after relocating.

Timeline Guide
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Moving to the Netherlands timeline and relocation planning stages, with a checklist on a table overlooking an Amsterdam canal and a person with a backpack looking towards a windmill.

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What this page shows

The typical relocation stages before and after moving.

Why timelines help

Understanding the sequence of steps reduces surprises.

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Overview

Planning a move to the Netherlands is easier when you understand the typical preparation timeline. This guide walks through the common stages expats go through before relocating, during arrival, and throughout the first 90 days after moving.

Your own timeline will depend on your nationality, visa or residence route, employer, and household. Use this page as a roadmap and the planning tools below to tailor the sequence to your situation.

Timeline at a glance

A quick summary of what usually happens at each stage:

  • 3–6 months before move → documents, visa route, housing research, employer or sponsor coordination
  • 1–2 months before move → finalize housing, travel, and admin prep; build your relocation document pack
  • Arrival → register address, receive BSN, start practical setup
  • First 30 days → DigiD, GP registration, utilities, bank and insurance
  • First 90 days → settle finances, services, and daily routines

3–6 months before moving

Many expats begin with documents, visa or residence route, employer planning, and housing research. This is usually the best time to start apostille, legalization, or translation work, since these steps can take several weeks.

It helps to understand whether your route is employer-led (e.g. highly skilled migrant), study-led, partner-led, or self-directed. That determines which documents and approvals you need and in what order.

In practice, people in this window often confirm their job offer or relocation plans, gather identity and supporting documents, research visa or residence requirements, and start exploring housing options. Building a rough relocation budget now reduces stress later.

  • Confirm job offer or relocation plans
  • Prepare identity and supporting documents
  • Research visa or residence requirements
  • Coordinate with employer or sponsor if applicable
  • Start early housing research
  • Plan relocation budget and key costs

Example

A software engineer relocating from South Africa may start preparing identity documents, employer paperwork, and housing research several months before departure — especially if their residence process depends on employer sponsorship.

1–2 months before moving

The focus shifts from broad research to concrete preparation. Many expats confirm housing, travel, and logistics, and start building a relocation document pack. Administrative readiness — knowing what you need for registration, banking, and insurance — becomes practical rather than theoretical.

This is when people often finalize temporary or permanent housing, organize their document pack, plan arrival administration tasks, and research banking and insurance options so they can act quickly after arrival.

  • Confirm temporary or permanent housing
  • Prepare relocation logistics and travel
  • Organize your document pack
  • Plan arrival administration tasks
  • Research banking and insurance options

Recommended tool

Moving Checklist Generator

Generate a practical checklist covering documents, housing, logistics, arrival admin, and your first months in the Netherlands.

Open tool →

Arrival in the Netherlands

The first week usually focuses on address registration, BSN, and practical setup. Many downstream steps — opening a bank account, arranging health insurance, activating a mobile plan — depend on having registered your address and received your BSN. Getting the sequence right matters.

In practice, expats often register at the municipality, receive their BSN, then open a bank account and arrange health insurance. The arrival planner tool helps you build a practical first-week sequence based on your housing status and priorities.

  • Register address with the municipality
  • Receive your BSN
  • Open a bank account
  • Arrange health insurance
  • Activate mobile phone plan
Infographic detailing the five key steps for first-week setup upon arrival in the Netherlands: registering address with municipality, receiving a BSN, opening a Dutch bank account, arranging health insurance, and activating a mobile phone plan. Each step is represented by an icon with a checkmark.

First 30 days

During the first month, the focus is on service setup: DigiD, GP registration, utilities, banking, and insurance. Closing these administrative loops early makes the rest of your first 90 days smoother.

Most people activate DigiD (needed for many government and health services), register with a GP, set up utilities if needed, and organize banking and recurring payments. Our first 30 days guide goes into more detail.

  • Activate DigiD
  • Register with a GP
  • Set up utilities if needed
  • Organize banking and payments

First 90 days

This is when most people stabilize daily life. The focus moves from "arrival admin" to taxes, local services, recurring payments, and housing stability. Review your tax situation, consolidate financial routines, and settle into the services you will use long term.

The first 90 days guide and the First 90 Days Planner help you see what typically happens in this period and plan the sequence that fits your situation.

  • Understand tax administration
  • Review housing and recurring costs
  • Set up financial routines
  • Become familiar with local services

Tools

Use these tools to plan your move step by step.

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FAQ

Services commonly used by expats

These services are commonly used by expats during relocation. Compare options and confirm requirements for your situation.

Useful services for expats

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

bunq logo
Popular with expatsFast setup

bunq

Expat-friendly banking with fast onboarding.

Wise logo
Popular with expatsMulti-currency

Wise

Low-cost international transfers and multi-currency

International transfers and multi-currency.

HousingAnywhere logo
Students & expats

HousingAnywhere

Temporary rentals for internationals

Temporary rentals.

Simyo logo
No contract

Simyo

Simple SIM plans for the Netherlands

Simple SIM plans to get connected.

Independer logo
Comparison site

Independer

Compare Dutch insurance and utilities

Compare health and other insurance.

ABN AMRO logo
Established bank

ABN AMRO

Major Dutch bank with expat services

Full-service Dutch bank with expat support.

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Plan your first 90 days

Once you know your move timeline, use the First 90 Days Planner to map out what typically happens after arrival.

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