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Plan Your First Days in the Netherlands

Create a simple arrival plan for your first week and first month after moving to the Netherlands.

  • First-week and first-month priorities
  • Tasks that often need appointments
  • Reminders that reduce admin surprises
Arrival planner for first days in the Netherlands with municipality, BSN and banking steps

After arriving in the Netherlands, many expats ask what to do first. This arrival planner helps you prioritize your first week and first month based on your housing status, household setup, and banking urgency.

Use it as a practical checklist for your first week in the Netherlands, your first month checklist, and steps that often need appointments or lead time. This is planning guidance, not legal advice.

Disclaimer

This planner is for general relocation planning only. It is not legal, immigration, tax, or financial advice. Confirm your exact requirements with official sources and your local municipality.

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Your arrival situation

Your arrival plan

Your personalized arrival plan

You're planning your arrival from India. Long-distance moves often benefit from a bit of buffer in the first week for admin and appointments. Some steps will wait until you have a stable address; the plan below reflects that. Banking is prioritised so salary and payments can flow as soon as possible.

Moving from India

Region: Non-EUDistance: far

Country guide: India → Netherlands

Must do early

9 tasks
  • Confirm your move-in date and where official mail can reach youHigh priority

    Confirm the date you can move in and which address will receive official letters (e.g. from the municipality, IND, or bank). Clarify with your landlord or host that you can use this address for registration and that post in your name will be accepted and passed to you.

  • Prepare documents for municipality registrationHigh priority

    Collect the documents you are likely to need for municipality registration: valid passport, proof of address (e.g. rental contract or landlord confirmation), and any required civil or residence documents. Check your municipality’s website for the exact list, as requirements can vary slightly.

  • Book or prepare municipality registration as soon as your address is activeHigh priority

    Book an appointment with your municipality for registration, or confirm the process (e.g. online) as soon as you have a valid address.

  • Complete municipality registrationHigh priority

    Attend your registration appointment and complete the process. You will receive your BSN (citizen service number) as part of this. Bring your passport, proof of address, and any civil or residence documents the municipality has asked for. After the appointment, note your BSN and keep the confirmation safe.

  • Receive your BSN and note which steps depend on itHigh priority

    After registration, ensure you have your BSN (on paper or in the letter from the municipality) and list which next steps need it: opening a bank account, applying for DigiD, taking out health insurance, and giving your employer your details. Plan the order so you can start each step as soon as you have the BSN.

  • Set up mobile connectivityHigh priority

    Arrange a Dutch mobile number and data so you can receive one-time codes (OTPs), confirmations, and calls for appointments and services. Use this number when signing up for your bank, DigiD, and other official or financial services.

  • Collect your residence permit if applicableHigh priority

    If you have a residence permit or need to collect it from the IND, do so as soon as you are notified.

  • Track which tasks must wait for a stable addressHigh priority

    Identify which tasks (e.g. registration, BSN, banking) depend on having an address and plan the order.

  • Confirm your short-term housing planHigh priority

    Confirm where you will stay in the short term and how long, and whether you can receive mail there.

Do in the first 2 weeks

7 tasks
  • Open a Dutch bank accountHigh priority

    Open a Dutch bank account once you have your BSN and proof of address (and any other documents your bank requires). Compare banks for fees, app quality, and branch or online support; many offer basic accounts with no or low monthly fees.

  • Prepare bank onboarding documentsMedium

    Have your passport or ID, BSN, proof of address (e.g. rental contract or municipality confirmation), and any employment or residency documents your chosen bank asks for. Check the bank’s website or branch for the exact list before you apply.

  • Confirm payroll readiness with your employerHigh priority

    Confirm with your employer (or HR) which account details and documents they need for salary payment—usually your BSN and Dutch (or SEPA) bank account—and when the first payment will be made. Ask whether they need anything else (e.g. tax form, proof of address) and what to do if your account is not ready by the first pay run.

  • Apply for DigiD when eligibleMedium

    Apply for DigiD online once you have your BSN and a Dutch address where you can receive post. You will receive an activation letter at that address; follow the instructions to activate. Use a Dutch mobile number if possible for smoother verification.

  • Arrange Dutch health insuranceHigh priority

    Take out Dutch basic health insurance (basisverzekering) once you are resident. It is mandatory within four months of registration; many people arrange it in the first month. You will need your BSN and usually a bank account for the premium. Use comparison sites to compare packages and prices.

  • Confirm your next housing decision dateMedium

    If your housing is temporary, set a date by which you will decide or secure longer-term housing.

  • Plan a long-haul arrival bufferMedium

    Allow extra time for jet lag, document checks and first-week admin when moving from far away.

Do in the first month

6 tasks
  • Register with a GP (huisarts)Medium

    Register with a local GP. Practices can have waiting lists, especially in busy areas, so contact them early.

  • Set up recurring paymentsMedium

    Organise direct debits or standing orders for rent, insurance, utilities and other recurring costs so nothing is missed.

  • Check driving licence usage and exchange if neededMedium

    Check how long you may drive on your current licence and whether you need to exchange it for a Dutch one; take action before the deadline.

  • Set up transport and mobility (train, bike, OV-chipkaart)Medium

    Arrange how you will get around: get an OV-chipkaart for trains, buses and trams (e.g. via NS or Translink); consider a bike (buy second-hand or lease); check NS subscriptions if you commute by train.

  • Consider other insurances (liability, contents)Low

    Once you have an address, consider liability insurance (aansprakelijkheidsverzekering) and contents insurance (inboedelverzekering). Many Dutch residents have these; comparison sites (e.g. Independer) can help.

  • Track admin follow-ups weeklyMedium

    Review pending admin tasks once a week (confirmations, reference numbers, next steps) so nothing is missed.

Country-specific follow-up

2 tasks
  • Bring India-issued official records if registration or family admin may need themMedium

    If municipality, IND or family registration may require Indian civil or education documents, ensure you have them to hand when you arrive.

  • Read the India → Netherlands country guideLow

    Use the India → Netherlands guide for origin-specific document and practical advice.

    Open guide: India → Netherlands

Helpful reminders

  • Save reference numbers and confirmations in one place
  • Keep screenshots or PDFs of important confirmations
  • Keep originals and scans separate to avoid mix-ups
  • Review pending tasks once a week and reprioritise

Related tools

Save your arrival plan

Create a free account to keep your milestones, track what's done, and unlock a fuller relocation workspace.

  • save your plan
  • track completed arrival tasks
  • keep reminders in one place
  • unlock more personalized planning tools
Coming soon

Visual overview

First steps after arriving in the Netherlands: Arrival, Register Address, Receive BSN, Start Daily Life

More about this tool

What the arrival planner helps you do

This planner focuses on your first days, first week, and first month after arriving in the Netherlands. It helps you see which tasks to prioritize and which depend on your address and BSN.

You get a clear view of first-week milestones, first-month milestones, and admin dependencies—so you can book appointments and gather documents in the right order.

What usually depends on your address and BSN

Municipality registration is typically one of your first steps; it gives you your BSN (citizen service number). Many next steps depend on that: opening a bank account, taking out health insurance, and applying for DigiD.

If you do not yet have a stable address, the planner still helps you see which tasks must wait and what you can do in the meantime.

  • Municipality registration → BSN
  • Bank account (often needs BSN and proof of address)
  • Health insurance (mandatory once resident)
  • DigiD (often after you have BSN and address)

Common arrival bottlenecks

  • Unstable address—registration and many services need a fixed address
  • No bank account—salary and payments depend on it
  • Document gaps—missing ID or certified copies can delay registration or banking
  • Unclear employer onboarding timing—align with HR on when documents and bank details are needed

What happens after the first weeks

Once you have completed your first week and first month priorities, use the First 90 Days Planner to plan from week 2 to month 3: DigiD, GP, recurring payments, transport routines, and housing stability.

Frequently asked questions