Common clients
Expats, freelancers, entrepreneurs
Netherlands ยท Services
Compare Dutch tax advisors, expat accountants and international tax specialists who help with tax returns, the 30% ruling, cross-border income, freelancing and relocation-related tax questions.

Many expats arrive with tax situations that are more complex than those of a typical local employee. Common topics include the 30% ruling, tax residency, foreign income, investments abroad, Dutch tax returns, payroll questions, freelancing or ZZP registration, and moving during a tax year.
Not everyone needs a tax advisor, but professional support can help in more complex international situations.

Use this snapshot to understand the category before comparing individual firms. The right provider depends on your tax topic, not a universal ranking.
Expats, freelancers, entrepreneurs
30% ruling
Tax returns
Foreign income and residency
VAT and bookkeeping
English-speaking advisors available
Complex international situations often involve multiple tax systems. These prompts help you decide when to compare support.
Moving to the Netherlands
Leaving the Netherlands
Applying for the 30% ruling
Filing an M-form
Working for a foreign employer
Owning investments abroad
Buying property
Freelancing / ZZP
Running a Dutch company
International payroll situations

Tax planning, tax returns, 30% ruling and residency issues.
Expat-focused filings, annual returns and international income.
Freelancer administration, VAT returns and ongoing compliance.
International payroll, employer support and expat compensation.
Cross-border tax issues, dual residency, foreign income and structuring.
These are neutral discovery cards for real businesses. They are not ranked and do not imply endorsement.
Netherlands tax advisory provider with expat-facing tax support.
Tax firm focused on Dutch and international tax matters for individuals and businesses.
Expat-oriented tax service provider for Dutch filing and relocation-related tax questions.
Dutch tax advisory firm serving private clients, expats and entrepreneurs.
Advisory firm offering tax, accountancy, payroll and cross-border support.
Tax and accounting provider for international individuals and businesses.
Expat-focused service provider for tax solutions and company support.
Expat-oriented provider for Dutch tax and administration support.
Global mobility and tax-focused legal/tax service provider.
Expatriate tax solutions provider focused on mobile employees and international tax questions.
Provider cards are neutral discovery entries for real businesses. Website buttons use affiliate/referral tracking where available, and we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Listings are not rankings, endorsements, reviews, tax advice or outcome guarantees. Confirm scope, credentials, pricing and terms directly with each provider.
These service groupings show where a provider may fit. They are examples for discovery, not rankings or guarantees that a provider is right for every case.
Do not choose based on a list position. Compare the type of help, scope, documents, pricing and whether the advisor regularly handles your situation.

Use these scenarios to decide what to read first and which service category might fit afterward. Start with the relevant guide, then compare provider scope only if your facts still need help.
Scenario path
1. Read the guide first.
2. Prepare dates and documents.
3. Compare advisor scope.
These answers set expectations before contacting a provider: what advisors often do, what they cannot guarantee, and where bookkeepers or payroll specialists may be a better fit.
Not always. Straightforward payroll situations may be manageable with official guidance and employer payroll, while cross-border or mixed-income cases often benefit from scoped help.
A Dutch tax advisor may help with tax returns, residency questions, 30% ruling issues, foreign income, business tax or communicating with tax authorities.
Some advisors help review eligibility, documentation, employer questions and payroll interpretation, but they cannot guarantee approval.
Many providers offer filing support, review-only support or coaching. Confirm scope and price before engaging.
An M-form is commonly associated with a tax year in which someone moves to or from the Netherlands. It can be more complex than a standard annual return.
International tax specialists can help map foreign income, assets and residency questions to Dutch filing obligations.
Some ZZP workers manage with bookkeeping tools, while mixed income, VAT or cross-border work can justify professional support.
Bookkeepers often manage records and VAT administration; tax advisors focus more on tax interpretation, returns, planning and complex questions.
Use official sources for tax authority rules and government business guidance. Directory sites can help identify providers, but they do not replace official tax information or professional advice for your file.
Move from provider discovery into tax guides, business setup and related services.