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Registering Your Address in the Netherlands

How expats register with the municipality (gemeente) after arrival.

GuideUpdated regularly
Expat preparing municipality registration documents in the Netherlands
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Use our tools to prepare your registration steps, check what documents you may need, and plan what usually happens after arrival.

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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 is municipality registration?: Recording your residential address with the local gemeente.
  • Why it matters: It commonly leads to a BSN and unlocks many admin steps.
Timeline

Often within the first days after arrival (timing may vary).

Key steps
  1. What is municipality registration?: Recording your residential address with the local gemeente.
  2. When do people register?: Often within the first days after arrival (timing may vary).
  3. Why it matters: It commonly leads to a BSN and unlocks many admin steps.
Diagram
Infographic of registering a residential address with a Dutch municipality and how it ties to BRP and BSN.
Address registration is the gemeente appointment — bring housing proof; BSN follows in the same flow in most cases.

Overview

Municipality registration (inschrijving at the gemeente) is how your address is recorded in Dutch municipal records. For most expats it is one of the first admin steps after arrival and often connects to receiving a BSN. The exact process varies by municipality.

This page explains the usual process for expats. Exact requirements vary by municipality, address type, and household situation. Always confirm with your gemeente.

Why registering your address is important

Address registration records where you live in municipal records. It is commonly linked to receiving a BSN and affects access to other admin steps. Many people need it before banking, insurance, or payroll setups can progress.

Getting your address registered and your BSN in hand usually unblocks opening a Dutch bank account, arranging health insurance, and having your employer process salary correctly.

  • It can be a prerequisite for receiving a BSN.
  • It links your address to municipal records.
  • It may be needed before certain services can be set up.

Step-by-step: how municipality registration usually works

1. Find your local municipality. You register with the gemeente where you live. Use the address of your accommodation to determine which municipality handles your registration.

2. Book an appointment if required. Many municipalities use an appointment system, especially in larger cities. Check the gemeente website for how to book and what to bring.

3. Prepare your documents. Requirements vary; commonly requested items include a valid passport or ID, residence permit if applicable, and proof of address (e.g. rental agreement or housing confirmation). See the documents section below and the Documents needed to move guide for more.

4. Attend the appointment in person. You usually need to go to the municipal office. Bring originals and any copies they ask for.

5. Registration is processed. The municipality records your address. Processing time can vary.

6. Receive confirmation and, where applicable, your BSN. You may get a confirmation letter or extract; in many cases your BSN is created during or shortly after this process.

In many cases, expats do not apply separately for a BSN. The BSN is often created during or after address registration.

Documents municipalities may request

Requirements vary by municipality, address type, immigration status, and household setup. The list below gives typical examples; your gemeente may ask for more or fewer items.

Commonly requested: passport or identity document; residence permit if applicable; rental agreement or housing confirmation; proof you live at the address if they ask for it; birth certificate in some situations; marriage certificate or household documents when registering with a partner or children; and any supporting documents the municipality specifies.

  • Passport or identity document
  • Residence permit (if applicable)
  • Rental agreement or housing confirmation
  • Proof you live at the address (if requested)
  • Birth certificate (in some situations)
  • Marriage certificate / household documents (when registering with partner or children)
  • Any supporting documents requested by the municipality
Documents often requested for municipality registration in the Netherlands, including passport, residence permit, rental agreement, proof of address, and birth or marriage certificates.
Typical documents municipalities may request when you register your address in the Netherlands.

Can you register with temporary housing?

Some expats arrive in temporary housing. Not every temporary address can be used for registration; rules vary by municipality and housing arrangement. Some short-term rentals do not allow registration. Confirming address eligibility matters because later admin steps often depend on it.

Confirm with your landlord or accommodation provider whether the address can be used for municipal registration. Then confirm with the municipality. Temporary housing may still work in some situations, but do not assume every booking can be used for registration.

Common surprise

Some expats assume any accommodation can be used for registration. In practice, whether you can register depends on the address and housing arrangement.

When expats usually register

Many people register shortly after arrival. Timing varies by municipality; some cities use appointment systems and availability can vary. Once an address is confirmed, some people book their appointment in advance.

  • Some cities require booking online
  • Appointment availability may vary by season and city
  • Temporary housing may still allow registration in some situations (confirm locally)

What tends to take longer than expected

Popular municipalities may have limited appointment slots. Documentation issues can delay the visit, and unclear housing registration rights can slow things down.

What expats typically arrange next

After address registration and once a BSN is available, people usually move on to bank account setup, health insurance, mobile phone setup, DigiD or government access, and first-90-days admin. Planning these steps can reduce friction with salary, rent, and basic services.

  • Open a Dutch bank account
  • Arrange health insurance
  • Set up a mobile phone plan
  • Apply for DigiD / government access
  • Tackle first-90-days admin

Helpful tools

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

Tool: Generate a Moving Checklist

Create a practical relocation checklist covering preparation, arrival admin, and your first months.

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Tool: Check Document Readiness

See which documents often matter for registration, visas, housing, and first appointments.

Open

Tool: Plan Your First 90 Days

Map the typical admin and daily-life setup steps that happen after arrival.

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Support

FAQ

Optional support

Relocation help during registration and arrival

Some expats brief destination-services firms for logistics and paperwork. Others handle gemeente steps alone—use this as orientation, not a requirement.

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

We show this because many readers on BSN, address, and municipality pages compare self-serve timelines with light professional support.

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.

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

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