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VISA TOOL

Find the Best Visa for Moving to the Netherlands

Answer a few questions to see which Dutch visa or residence routes may fit your situation, compare likely options, and get a practical plan for your move.

A person planning an international move to the Netherlands at a wooden desk by a window overlooking a Dutch canal. On the desk, a laptop displays a European map with a route, alongside documents titled 'Move to the Netherlands Plan' and 'BUSINESS PLAN', a notebook, and a passport, symbolizing detailed relocation and visa planning.

Moving to the Netherlands requires the right visa or residence route if you are not covered by free movement rules. The best route depends on your citizenship, job offer, salary, study plans, partner or family status, or business plans.

This tool gives a practical first recommendation and points you to the right visa pages and planning tools. Major routes include the Highly Skilled Migrant permit, EU Blue Card, DAFT for US entrepreneurs, the self-employed route, student visa, and the partner & family visa.

Disclaimer

This tool gives planning guidance, not legal advice.

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Citizenship

What passport or citizenship do you hold?

More about this tool

What this tool does

Recommends Dutch visa or residence routes based on your situation.

What it checks

Citizenship, work, salary, study, partner/family status, and business plans.

What you get

Suggested visa options, comparison, next steps, and links to the right guides and tools.

How to choose the right visa for moving to the Netherlands

The right visa depends on why you are moving. Work routes (Highly Skilled Migrant, EU Blue Card) suit people with a job offer from a qualifying or recognized employer. Study routes suit students admitted to Dutch education. Partner and family routes suit those joining someone already living in the Netherlands. Entrepreneur routes (DAFT for US citizens, self-employed permit for others) suit people who will work for themselves.

Your country of origin matters: EU/EEA/Swiss citizens generally do not need a visa. US citizens have access to the DAFT route for self-employment; others use the general self-employed permit. Non-EU nationals need a residence permit for work, study, or family reunification.

Having a job offer changes everything for work-based moves. With a recognized sponsor and a salary that meets the threshold, the Highly Skilled Migrant route is one of the most common. The EU Blue Card is an alternative with slightly different salary and EU-wide mobility rules; compare both if you have an offer.

US entrepreneurs should compare DAFT with the general self-employed permit. DAFT has a lower capital requirement (e.g. €4,500 for common business forms) and is designed for Americans; the self-employed permit has viability and profit criteria that apply to all nationalities.

Students and family movers need different planning. Students rely on their institution to submit the application and must show proof of funds. Partner and family applicants need a sponsor in the Netherlands who meets income and housing requirements. Use the visa checker to see which route may fit, then read the full guide and use the relocation cost estimator and moving checklist to plan.

Frequently asked questions