Cost of Living in the Netherlands 2026: Complete Breakdown
Planning to move to the Netherlands? Understanding the true cost of living is essential for making informed decisions. This comprehensive guide provides realistic 2026 figures across all major expense categories.
Quick Summary: Monthly Cost Estimates
Single Person:
- • Amsterdam: €2,200 - €3,500/month (excluding rent)
- • Rotterdam/The Hague: €1,800 - €3,000/month (excluding rent)
- • Smaller cities: €1,500 - €2,500/month (excluding rent)
Family of Four:
- • Amsterdam: €4,500 - €6,500/month (excluding rent)
- • Rotterdam/The Hague: €4,000 - €5,500/month (excluding rent)
- • Smaller cities: €3,500 - €5,000/month (excluding rent)
These ranges reflect typical lifestyles—not budget minimums or luxury spending. Add housing costs (see below) for total monthly expenses.
Housing: The Biggest Expense
Rental Market (2026 Prices)
Prices shown are typical mid-range estimates for 2-bedroom apartments
Note: These are base rents. Most rentals exclude utilities (€100-200/month), though some are all-inclusive. Registration fees, deposits (1-2 months rent), and agency fees add upfront costs.
Buying Property
Average purchase prices vary dramatically by location:
- Amsterdam: €5,000 - €8,000+ per m² (total: €400k-700k+ typical apartment)
- Rotterdam/The Hague: €3,000 - €5,000 per m² (€250k-450k typical)
- Utrecht: €4,000 - €6,000 per m² (€350k-550k typical)
- Smaller cities: €2,500 - €4,000 per m² (€200k-400k typical)
Mortgages are typically 80-90% loan-to-value with interest rates around 3.5-5% (2026 rates). Monthly mortgage costs plus maintenance, insurance, and property tax (OZB) should be calculated.
Utilities and Services
Monthly Utility Costs
- Electricity + Gas: €100-200 (varies with usage and home size)
- Water: €30-50
- Internet (50-100 Mbps): €40-60
- Mobile phone: €15-40 (depending on data plan)
- Municipal taxes: €30-80 (waste collection, water board)
Total utilities average €250-400 monthly for typical households. Energy costs can spike in winter depending on heating type and home insulation.
Groceries and Food
Supermarket Shopping
Single person: €200-350/month
Couple: €350-550/month
Family of four: €600-900/month
Budget supermarkets (Lidl, Aldi) can reduce costs 20-30%. Premium stores (Albert Heijn, Jumbo upscale brands) increase them. These estimates assume home cooking most meals.
Sample Prices (2026)
- Bread (loaf): €1.50-3.00
- Milk (1L): €1.20-1.80
- Eggs (12): €3.00-5.00
- Chicken breast (1kg): €8-12
- Cheese (1kg): €10-16
- Apples (1kg): €2-3
- Tomatoes (1kg): €2.50-4
- Beer (supermarket, 6-pack): €6-10
- Wine (decent bottle): €6-12
Eating Out
- Coffee (cafe): €2.50-4.00
- Lunch (sandwich/salad): €8-14
- Casual restaurant (main course): €15-25
- Mid-range restaurant (3 courses for 2): €70-110
- Beer (bar): €3.50-6.00
- Takeaway (pizza, Chinese, etc.): €12-20
Transportation
Public Transport
- Single tram/bus/metro trip: €3.20
- Day pass (city): €8-9
- Monthly pass (unlimited city travel): €90-110
- NS train subscription: Varies widely by route, typically €150-400/month for unlimited travel
Most people use OV-chipkaart (public transport card) with pay-per-journey or subscriptions based on their routes.
Cycling
- Basic bike (used): €50-150
- Decent new bike: €300-600
- E-bike: €1,500-3,500
- Annual maintenance: €50-100
- Lock (essential!): €40-80
Car Ownership
- Purchase price: Varies widely (€5k-40k+ typical)
- Insurance: €600-1,500/year
- Road tax (MRB): €300-1,000/year (depends on vehicle weight/emissions)
- Maintenance: €500-1,000/year
- Fuel: €1.90-2.20/liter (€150-300/month typical usage)
- Parking (Amsterdam): €50-300/month depending on area
Car ownership in major cities is expensive and often unnecessary. Most urban residents rely on bikes and public transport, renting cars when needed.
Healthcare
Mandatory health insurance (basisverzekering): €120-150/month per adult
This covers basic healthcare. Most people add supplemental coverage (tandarts/dental, fysiotherapie/ physiotherapy, etc.) for €10-50/month additional.
Annual deductible (eigen risico): €385 (2026 mandatory minimum)—you pay this before insurance covers costs, though GP visits are exempt.
Zorgtoeslag (healthcare subsidy): Lower-income households receive government subsidy to offset insurance costs (up to €150/month depending on income).
Childcare and Education
Childcare (Kinderopvang)
Full-time daycare: €1,500-2,200/month per child before subsidies
Kinderopvangtoeslag (childcare subsidy): The government subsidizes childcare costs significantly based on income. Many families pay 30-70% less after subsidies.
School Costs
Public primary/secondary schools: Free tuition, but expect €300-500/year in fees for activities, materials, and trips.
International schools: €8,000-25,000/year depending on school and grade level.
Leisure and Entertainment
- Gym membership: €30-70/month
- Cinema ticket: €12-15
- Museum entry: €10-20
- Theater/concert: €25-100+
- Streaming services: €8-15/month each
- Sports club (children): €100-400/year
Taxes and Income
Income Tax (2026)
Progressive tax system with brackets around:
- Up to ~€38,000: 36.97%
- €38,000-€75,000: 36.97%-49.5%
- Above €75,000: 49.5%
Various deductions apply (mortgage interest, retirement savings, etc.). The 30% ruling reduces tax burden for qualifying international workers.
Net Salary Examples
- €30,000 gross → ~€24,000 net (€2,000/month)
- €45,000 gross → ~€33,000 net (€2,750/month)
- €60,000 gross → ~€41,000 net (€3,400/month)
- €80,000 gross → ~€51,000 net (€4,250/month)
Putting It Together: Sample Budgets
Single Professional in Amsterdam
Family of Four in Rotterdam
- Rent (3-bedroom): €2,000
- Utilities + internet: €300
- Groceries: €750
- Health insurance (2 adults): €280
- Transport: €200
- Childcare (1 child, after subsidy): €400
- School costs/activities: €100
- Phone (2 lines): €50
- Eating out/entertainment: €400
- Children's activities: €150
- Miscellaneous: €300
- Total: ~€4,930/month
The Bottom Line
The Netherlands is expensive, particularly for housing in major cities. However, salaries are generally high, and the social system (healthcare subsidies, childcare support, good public services) provides significant value.
Budget realistically before moving. Single professionals should target €40,000+ gross annual income for comfortable Amsterdam living; €30,000+ for smaller cities. Families need significantly more— at least €60,000-70,000 combined to live comfortably in major cities.
The biggest variable is housing. Once you know your housing cost, other expenses are fairly predictable and manageable with planning.