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The Netherlands

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The Netherlands: Comprehensive VAT Country Guide (2026)

1. Country Overview

The Netherlands, a founding EU member, operates a Value Added Tax (VAT) system harmonized with EU VAT Directive rules. VAT (in Dutch Belasting over de Toegevoegde Waarde, or BTW) applies to most goods and services consumed in the Netherlands, as well as to imports and certain intra-EU transactions. The standard VAT rate is relatively high at 21%, with a reduced rate of 9% on select items and a zero rate for exports and intra-EU supplies. Dutch VAT is administered by the national Tax and Customs Administration (Belastingdienst), which ensures businesses register, charge, and remit VAT correctly. The Netherlands’ VAT framework is defined by the VAT Act of 1968 (Wet op de Omzetbelasting 1968) and accompanying decrees, aligned under EU law precedence. Being an EU country using the euro (€) as currency, the Netherlands does not impose currency-related barriers on trade – VAT is uniformly applied on transactions denominated in euros or converted to euros if invoiced in foreign currency. [tax-consul…tional.com] [kreston.com] [taxsummaries.pwc.com] [vatcalc.com] [belastingdienst.nl]
Note: The European part of the Netherlands is in the EU VAT territory. However, the Caribbean Netherlands (Bonaire, Saba, St. Eustatius) and other constituent countries (Aruba, Curaçao, Sint Maarten) are outside the EU VAT area and have separate local sales tax regimes, so this guide focuses on VAT in the European Netherlands. [kreston.com]

Standard VAT Rate: 21%

  • General rate on most goods and services.

Reduced VAT Rate: 9%

  • Lower rate for essentials (food, medicine, books, etc.).

Zero Rate & Exemptions: 0%

  • 0% for exports/intra-EU supplies; broad VAT exemptions in specific sectors (healthcare, finance, education).
2. Local VAT Term
In the Netherlands, VAT is locally referred to as “Belasting over de Toegevoegde Waarde (BTW)”, which literally means “tax on added value.” It is also commonly called “omzetbelasting” (turnover tax) in legislation. On invoices and official forms, the term btw is used to denote VAT, and the tax is known to businesses and consumers by this Dutch acronym. When dealing with Dutch counterparts or documentation, expect references to btw for VAT. [kreston.com]

 

3. VAT Rates

The Netherlands currently applies three VAT rates: a standard rate, a reduced rate, and a zero rate, plus a range of exempt activities with no VAT charged. [taxsummaries.pwc.com]

3.1 Standard Rate (21%)

The standard VAT rate in the Netherlands is 21%, applicable to the vast majority of products and services not qualifying for a lower rate or exemption. This 21% rate covers ordinary consumer goods, electronics, clothing, professional services, business consulting, and most other taxable supplies. The standard rate has been 21% since October 2012 (when it was raised from 19%). It remains one of the higher standard VAT rates in the EU, reflecting the country’s reliance on consumption tax for revenue. Businesses must charge 21% VAT on all domestic sales of non-exempt goods/services unless a reduced rate or zero rate specifically applies. [kreston.com] [taxsummaries.pwc.com]

3.2 Reduced Rates (9%)

A 9% reduced VAT rate (also called the “low tariff”) applies to a defined set of essential or meritorious goods and services in the Netherlands. This lower rate is meant to alleviate VAT burden on basic needs and certain labor-intensive services. Examples of supplies taxed at 9% include: [business.gov.nl]
  • Food and non-alcoholic beverages: Groceries, meats, dairy, fruits and vegetables, etc.. (Alcoholic beverages remain at 21%.) [business.gov.nl]
  • Medicines and medical aids: Most prescription medications and some medical devices for personal use. [business.gov.nl]
  • Books and periodicals: Printed books, newspapers, magazines, and also e-books and online publications. [business.gov.nl]
  • Culture and entertainment: Admission to museums, theaters, concerts, zoos, libraries, and certain cultural events. [grantthornton.global]
  • Certain labor on residential property: e.g. painting and plastering services on homes older than 2 years qualify for 9%. [business.gov.nl]
  • Passenger transport (domestic): Train, bus, tram, and taxi fares within the Netherlands typically carry 9%.
  • Some personal services: For instance, hairdressing and shoemaking services historically have had the reduced rate (as part of EU-allowed categories).
The 9% rate was introduced in 2019 (replacing a previous 6% rate) to simplify and slightly increase the reduced tariff. It ensures basic goods and socially important services are taxed more lightly. Businesses apply 9% on qualifying items and must distinguish these in their invoices and returns. The tax authority provides a detailed list (in Dutch) of goods and services eligible for the reduced rate. [vatcalc.com] [business.gov.nl]

3.3 Zero-Rated and Exempt Supplies

The 0% VAT rate (zero rate) applies to certain transactions that are taxable but not charged with positive VAT, typically to facilitate international commerce. Under the zero rate, the supplier does not levy VAT but retains the right to deduct input VAT related to the supply. Key zero-rated supplies include: [business.gov.nl]
  • Exports of goods to outside the EU: Goods shipped from the Netherlands to non-EU countries are zero-rated. Proof of export is required. [business.gov.nl]
  • Intra-Community supplies of goods (B2B sales to VAT-registered buyers in other EU countries): These are taxed at 0% in the Netherlands, with VAT accounted for in the destination country by the buyer. (The supplier must obtain the customer’s EU VAT ID and evidence of transport out of NL.) [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • International passenger transport by air or sea: Cross-border transport of passengers is often zero-rated. For example, international flights or ship travel from the Netherlands have 0% VAT. [business.gov.nl]
  • Services related to international trade: e.g. freight forwarding, handling services directly connected to exported goods, or services on goods in transit are zero-rated. [business.gov.nl]
Apart from zero-rated (taxable but 0%), the Dutch system also has VAT-exempt supplies, which are outside the scope of VAT taxation on output and do not allow input VAT recovery (input tax on related costs becomes a business expense). Exempt activities typically align with EU exemptions for social, financial, and other reasons. Main VAT exemptions in the Netherlands include: [kreston.com]
  • Health and medical services: Medical and paramedic care by licensed professionals (doctors, dentists, psychologists, etc.) is exempt. Hospital services and nursing care are VAT-free to keep healthcare affordable. [business.gov.nl]
  • Education: School and university tuitions, and vocational training provided by recognized institutions, are exempt from VAT. [business.gov.nl]
  • Financial and insurance services: Most banking services (e.g. loans, money transfers) and insurance premiums are exempt. These sectors don’t charge VAT to customers and in turn cannot deduct VAT on their purchases, which is a cost. [business.gov.nl]
  • Real estate (certain transactions): The sale of immovable property that has been used for more than 2 years, and the rental/lease of land or buildings (except short-term rentals) are exempt unless an option to tax is exercised. For example, leasing commercial property is generally exempt, but landlord and tenant can jointly opt for VAT on rent if the tenant uses ≥90% for VAT-taxable business purposes, allowing VAT deduction. Residential rent is always exempt (no option to tax for dwellings). [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Fundraising and public interest activities: Qualifying activities by non-profits (charitable fundraisers, certain cultural and sports club operations) may be exempt. [business.gov.nl], [business.gov.nl]
  • Postal services: Basic national postage by the designated universal postal operator is exempt (while courier services are taxed).
  • Lotteries, betting, and gambling are VAT-exempt, as in most EU countries.
If a business only makes exempt supplies, it is not obliged to register for VAT and cannot reclaim any VAT on its costs. Businesses with mixed activities (taxable and exempt) must apportion input VAT accordingly (see Section 15.1 on deduction limitations).

3.4 Recent or Upcoming Rate Changes

At the time of writing, the Dutch government has enacted one significant upcoming rate change: the VAT rate on accommodation services will increase from 9% to 21% as of 1 January 2026. This means hotels, vacation rentals, B&Bs, camping sites, and similar short-term lodging will no longer enjoy the reduced rate. From 2026, those services will be taxed at the standard rate, aligning the hospitality sector’s VAT with the general rate. Businesses in this sector need to prepare for the change (e.g. update pricing systems and inform customers for bookings that span 2025–2026). [business.gov.nl], [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
Aside from that, no other rate changes have been confirmed at present – the standard 21% and reduced 9% have been stable in recent years. The last major adjustment was the Jan 2019 hike of the reduced rate from 6% to 9%, aimed at simplifying the regime and increasing revenue; this is now well-established. The standard rate has held at 21% since 2012. [grantthornton.global]
The Dutch VAT rates remain within EU norms (EU law requires a minimum standard rate of 15%). Any future rate changes would typically be announced in the government’s Tax Plan and require parliamentary approval. Taxpayers should monitor official channels (e.g. the Ministry of Finance or Belastingdienst updates) for any proposals to alter VAT rates on other sectors or goods.

4. VAT Number Format

Every business registered for VAT in the Netherlands is issued a BTW identification number. The Dutch VAT number format consists of the country code “NL” followed by 12 characters: typically 9 digits, the letter B, and a 2-digit suffix. [kreston.com], [innovatetax.com]
For example, a standard Dutch VAT number might look like: NL123456789B01. In this structure:
  • “NL” denotes the Netherlands.
  • “123456789” is a unique 9-digit sequence (often derived from the business’s fiscal code).
  • “B” is a fixed letter in the 10th position for all VAT numbers. [innovatetax.com]
  • “01” is a suffix that usually is “01” for most taxpayers. This suffix can increment if a business holds multiple VAT registrations (for instance, B02 could indicate a second VAT number, such as for a VAT group – see below). [innovatetax.com]
Sole proprietors: Since 2020, Dutch sole traders receive two VAT-related numbers: a BTW ID (VAT identification number) in the format above for use on invoices and in EU VAT-VIES checks, and a separate VAT tax number for correspondence with the tax office. This change was made to enhance privacy because previously the sole trader’s personal citizen service number (BSN) was embedded in the VAT number. Now the VAT ID is a unique code not containing the BSN, which must be used on all invoices and public communications. The older format (the VAT tax number) is only used when logging into the tax authority system or filing returns. Businesses should ensure they use the correct VAT ID on invoices (the one starting with NL and ending with B01, etc.), as customers will validate that ID for EU transactions. [business.gov.nl]
VAT groups: If companies form a VAT fiscal unity (group) (see Section 6), the group is assigned its own VAT number, often distinguished by a B02 or higher suffix. Individual entities retain their original VAT numbers too, but for group reporting, the unified number is used. Usually intra-group transactions will be done under the group’s B02 number, while for some cross-border listings each entity might still use its own (as per guidance). [innovatetax.com] [crowe-peak.nl]
A Dutch VAT number is essential for conducting business. Domestic invoices must show the supplier’s VAT number. For intra-EU B2B sales, the buyer’s VAT ID in their respective country should also appear (with their country code). It’s good practice to verify EU VAT numbers via the EU’s VIES database to ensure validity. The Dutch Tax Administration provides an online VAT number verification tool to check if a BTW ID is valid and corresponds to a given business name/address. Using a correct VAT number format is also critical when filing EU Sales Listings and for cross-border VAT zero-rating: an incorrect format (wrong number of digits, etc.) will be rejected in filings or invalidate a zero-rated intra-EU supply. [business.gov.nl] [belastingdienst.nl]

5. Registration Requirements

Any person or entity performing business activities in the Netherlands may need to register for VAT (BTW). The Netherlands follows EU principles whereby making taxable supplies triggers an obligation to register, with some thresholds and exemptions for small businesses. The requirements differ for Dutch-established businesses vs. foreign businesses, and optional schemes exist for voluntary registration or using special Union schemes for e-commerce. Below, we break down key registration rules:

5.1 Registration Thresholds for Residents and Non-Residents

General rule: There is no general sales threshold for VAT registration in the Netherlands for businesses making taxable supplies – even a single euro of taxable turnover can create a VAT liability. All businesses “acting as entrepreneurs” must register for VAT unless a specific exemption or small business exception applies. This means Dutch-established companies or self-employed individuals are usually registered at business start-up. Indeed, when a new business signs up with the Chamber of Commerce (KvK), the KvK passes the details to the Tax Administration, which will automatically issue a VAT number if it deems the activity subject to VAT. [grantthornton.global] [business.gov.nl]
However, the Netherlands provides a Small Businesses Scheme (Kleineondernemersregeling, KOR) that effectively serves as a threshold-based exemption:
  • Small business VAT exemption: As of 1 January 2020, businesses (sole proprietorships, partnerships, or BVs) established in the Netherlands with annual turnover not exceeding €20,000 can opt to apply for an exemption from VAT. If approved, they do not charge VAT on their sales and do not file regular VAT returns, but consequently cannot reclaim input VAT either. Participation is voluntary and requires an application; if chosen, it must generally be applied for at least 3 years or until turnover exceeds €20,000. This €20k threshold is based on taxable turnover (excluding VAT) in a calendar year. Going over the limit terminates the scheme from that point. The KOR effectively means such small businesses do not need to register as active VAT payers (or are registered but “exempted”). It simplifies administration for very small outfits. (Note: €20k turnover corresponds to €~3,800 in VAT at 19% weighted average, previously a similar relief existed when annual VAT due was under €1,345, now replaced by this turnover-based approach.) [grantthornton.global]
  • Separately, there is an explicit micro exemption under domestic law for individuals: if a person’s annual turnover is under €1,800 and they are not required to register with the KvK, they do not have to register for VAT. This is a very low threshold essentially covering hobbyists or occasional small-scale suppliers who are not considered entrepreneurs under VAT rules. Above €1,800 income, one is typically considered to be “in business” and should register, unless covered by KOR or only making exempt supplies. [kreston.com]
For non-resident businesses (no establishment in NL): the Netherlands does not have any registration threshold at all – foreign companies must register as soon as they undertake taxable supplies in the Netherlands, regardless of value. Even a single euro of taxable turnover or one taxable event triggers the requirement if no Dutch entity is involved in accounting for that VAT. For example, a German company selling goods warehoused in the Netherlands to Dutch customers would need to register immediately (unless the reverse charge applies – see Section 15.3). The logic is that since foreign businesses aren’t subject to the small-business exemption (the KOR is only for domestic-established small businesses), they have no threshold and any activity means they should be in the VAT system. [grantthornton.global]
Distance selling & e-commerce threshold: A special threshold of €10,000 per year EU-wide applies for businesses selling goods or digital services cross-border to consumers in the EU, under the one-stop-shop scheme (see 5.3 below). If a Dutch business’s B2C sales to all other EU countries combined stays below €10k, it can opt to treat those as domestic sales (charging Dutch VAT) instead of foreign VAT. Once above €10k, it must switch to charging destination country VAT (via OSS). This is an EU-wide not national threshold and is mainly relevant to whether a business needs multiple VAT registrations or OSS, rather than a threshold for having a VAT number at all (the business would already be registered in its home country in any case). [business.gov.nl]
Summary: All Dutch businesses engaged in economic activities should be VAT-registered from the start unless using the KOR small business exemption (≤€20k). Non-established companies have no safe harbor threshold and must register if they have any taxable transactions in the Netherlands (except where the reverse charge shifts the tax to the customer, see Section 15.3).

5.2 Voluntary Registration

Voluntary VAT registration is possible and sometimes beneficial in the Netherlands in a couple of scenarios:
  • Small businesses below the threshold: If a Dutch business qualifies for the KOR exemption (turnover ≤ €20k) but finds it advantageous to charge VAT and reclaim input tax (e.g. they have high start-up costs or mainly B2B clients who expect to be charged VAT), they can choose not to apply for KOR. In that case, they remain fully VAT-registered and comply with normal VAT obligations despite being small. This is effectively a voluntary decision to stay in the VAT system. There is no penalty for not using KOR; it’s entirely optional. Likewise, a business that had opted into KOR can opt out (though generally only after 3 years or if turnover exceeds the limit). Opting out would restore their active VAT registration. [business.gov.nl]
  • Pre-business registration: A business preparing to make taxable supplies can register in advance to reclaim VAT on start-up costs. The Dutch tax authorities allow registration when you have the intention to commence taxable activities. For example, a new company incurring setup expenses (with VAT) might voluntarily register to get VAT refunds even before generating sales.
  • Exempt or non-business entities wanting to reclaim specific VAT: Sometimes charities, government entities, or holding companies that are not normally in VAT may undertake a one-off taxable transaction (e.g. selling assets with VAT) or want to recover VAT on costs by opting to become taxable for a segment of activity. Dutch law can allow partial registration or opting to tax certain otherwise exempt supplies (such as opting to charge VAT on property rent by agreement, enabling input VAT recovery). In such cases, an entity might “voluntarily” register for VAT for that part of its operations. [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Foreign businesses with only zero-rated exports: A non-resident company that only makes zero-rated supplies in NL (like exporting goods abroad from a Dutch warehouse) technically might not need to register since output VAT is zero, but they might want to register to reclaim Dutch input VAT (e.g. on warehouse costs). Dutch law permits foreign businesses to register and file VAT returns to get refunds of input tax instead of using the 13th Directive refund process. This can be more efficient if they prefer ongoing returns over annual refund claims. Such registration is effectively voluntary because there’s no output VAT due, but it’s allowed to facilitate input tax recovery.
Overall, the Dutch Tax Administration is open to registering any entity that can demonstrate business activities, even if no VAT is due (they will treat it as a nil/zero-rated filer). There is no fee for VAT registration; the process is part of tax administration services. Foreign businesses can register directly (without a local fiscal rep in many cases – see Section 8) if they prefer to handle Dutch VAT obligations themselves. [innovatetax.com]

5.3 EU OSS/IOSS Schemes

The Netherlands participates fully in the EU’s special VAT regimes for e-commerce: the One Stop Shop (OSS) and Import One Stop Shop (IOSS), which began 1 July 2021, simplifying VAT for cross-border B2C sales.
  • OSS (One Stop Shop): This is an EU-wide electronic portal to file a single VAT return for all B2C sales of services and intra-EU distance sales of goods to customers in other EU countries. There are two OSS schemes: [business.gov.nl]
    • Union OSS: For businesses established in the EU (like Dutch businesses) or those with an EU establishment. A Dutch business can register in the Netherlands for OSS and declare in one quarterly OSS return all the VAT due in other EU countries on its sales to consumers (e.g. a Dutch webshop selling to Germany, France, etc.). This eliminates the need to VAT-register separately in each of those countries once OSS is used. The €10,000 turnover threshold (covering EU distance sales and digital services combined) applies – below that, the business can opt to just charge Dutch VAT on all sales; once exceeded, OSS is the convenient way to account for foreign VAT. The OSS return includes a breakdown of sales by country and applies the respective VAT rates of each destination country. The Dutch tax authority then remits the VAT to the other countries. Union OSS covers intra-EU distance sales of goods and cross-border B2C services (e.g. a Dutch company selling consulting services to French consumers reports French VAT via OSS). [business.gov.nl]
    • Non-Union OSS: For businesses with no establishment in the EU, selling B2C services to EU customers. A non-EU business can choose any EU member state to register for OSS. If it chooses the Netherlands as its OSS country, it would file OSS returns with the Dutch tax office to cover VAT on services to EU consumers. (Non-EU businesses cannot use OSS for goods shipments within EU – those typically use IOSS or a local rep if warehousing goods in the EU.) [grantthornton.global]
    The OSS scheme means that for things like digital services (software downloads, streaming) or telecom/broadcast services to EU consumers, Dutch companies no longer need myriad foreign VAT registrations. Likewise, for online sellers dispatching goods from the Netherlands to consumers across Europe, OSS centralizes their compliance. Dutch businesses register for OSS through the Belastingdienst website (there is a specific form/portal). Importantly, OSS is optional – if a company prefers, it may still register in each country instead, but almost all choose OSS for simplicity. [business.gov.nl]
  • IOSS (Import One Stop Shop): The IOSS is a special scheme for distance selling of low-value goods (≤ €150 per shipment) imported from outside the EU to EU consumers. It allows the seller to collect VAT at the point of sale and report it via a single monthly IOSS return, avoiding import VAT procedures for the customer at customs. Non-EU sellers can register for IOSS in an EU member state (if not established in the EU, they must appoint an EU intermediary for IOSS registration). If a non-EU business chooses the Netherlands for IOSS, it will get an IOSS number (format starting “IM…NL”) and file returns to Dutch tax authorities covering all its EU import sales. For example, a US e-commerce company shipping small parcels to Dutch and other EU consumers can, via IOSS, charge the customer their local VAT at checkout and then remit all EU VAT through the Dutch IOSS portal. The Netherlands then distributes the VAT to the respective countries. Note: IOSS only covers shipments up to €150; above that, normal import VAT rules apply and often require the buyer to pay VAT at import (or the seller to register and pay via a local rep or use Delivered Duty Paid arrangements). [grantthornton.global] [business.gov.nl]
Using OSS/IOSS is beneficial but requires compliance: separate OSS/IOSS returns in addition to domestic VAT returns. The Netherlands has implemented these EU schemes fully, and support/info is available on the Tax Administration site. Businesses can opt into OSS or IOSS registration via the Dutch tax portal. Once in OSS, they no longer charge Dutch VAT on eligible foreign sales but must keep records of those sales for 10 years as required by OSS rules. [business.gov.nl]
Marketplaces and OSS/IOSS: Another key rule from 2021 is that if goods are sold via an online marketplace/platform (like Amazon, eBay), the platform can be deemed the supplier for VAT. For instance, goods under €150 imported via a marketplace or any goods already in the EU sold by a non-EU seller through a marketplace are treated as supplied by the marketplace – the marketplace will charge VAT to the consumer, and the third-party seller doesn’t have to account for that VAT. This means many non-EU sellers avoid needing IOSS if they use a marketplace that handles it, and they might not need a Dutch VAT registration if all sales are through such platforms. The Netherlands has adopted this rule: from the seller’s perspective, if Amazon “facilitates” the sale, Amazon charges Dutch VAT to the customer and remits it, so the non-EU seller doesn’t register for Dutch VAT. It’s still advisable for sellers to verify that the marketplace is indeed fulfilling the VAT obligations. [kreston.com]
In summary, OSS and IOSS provide one-stop compliance: a business can register once (in NL) and fulfill VAT obligations for B2C sales across all EU countries. The Netherlands as a member state of identification handles these special returns. This greatly simplifies registration requirements – many companies that would otherwise need multiple VAT numbers can just use their Dutch OSS/IOSS registration. If not using OSS/IOSS, however, the old rules apply: a foreign seller might have to register in every country where it sells above the threshold (which was typically €35k or €100k per country pre-2021). Those country-specific thresholds were abolished and replaced by the OSS threshold of €10k globally. [business.gov.nl] [grantthornton.global]
Practical tip: A Dutch business selling online to EU consumers should monitor its total cross-border consumer sales. If likely below €10k, it can either apply Dutch VAT on everything (Option 1) or proactively opt into OSS to charge destination VAT from the start (Option 2). If it crosses €10k, OSS becomes mandatory for destination VAT going forward (with a grace period to switch). The business.gov.nl site provides a Dutch form to notify the tax office if you decide not to use the threshold and go straight to OSS. [business.gov.nl]

6. VAT Grouping Rules

The Netherlands allows VAT grouping (fiscale eenheid), which lets closely related companies be treated as a single taxable entity for VAT purposes. This can simplify intra-group transactions and administration. Key points about Dutch VAT grouping: [crowe-peak.nl], [crowe-peak.nl]
  • Conditions: Two or more VAT-able persons (business entities or individuals engaged in business) established in the Netherlands can form a VAT group if they are “financially, organizationally, and economically” linked.* In practice, this means: [crowe-peak.nl], [crowe-peak.nl]
    • Financial link: One entity must have more than 50% control or shareholding in the others (directly or indirectly) or they have a common parent owning >50% of each. Essentially, the entities are under common control. [crowe-peak.nl]
    • Organizational link: They share common management or are run under a unified leadership structure. For example, same directors or one company’s management controls the others. [crowe-peak.nl]
    • Economic link: They conduct activities in a related or complementary field, or one mainly works for the other, or otherwise their operations are interdependent. For instance, a production company and its sales subsidiary serving the same market have economic unity. [crowe-peak.nl]
    All three types of links must be present. The group can include various legal forms – corporations (BVs), partnerships, foundations, even individuals as sole traders – so long as the links exist. However, at least one member must be a corporate entity (e.g. BV, NV, foundation, etc.); a VAT group cannot consist solely of natural persons. [crowe-peak.nl]
  • Territorial scope: VAT grouping is generally limited to entities established in the Netherlands (having their seat or a fixed establishment in NL). All members must be within NL for grouping. However, case law has allowed that if, say, a foreign company has a fixed establishment in the Netherlands, that Dutch establishment can join a VAT group with Dutch entities, which effectively brings the foreign company’s head office into the group for all its activities. Conversely, a Dutch parent with foreign subsidiaries cannot group the foreign subsidiary (the foreign entity has no NL establishment). As of 2024, cross-border head office/branch relationships are treated as taxable if only one side is in a VAT group (due to a law change), slightly limiting cross-border advantages. [crowe-peak.nl] [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Formation and approval: Uniquely, no formal application is strictly required to form a VAT group in the Netherlands. If the conditions are met in reality, a fiscal unity is deemed to exist and companies can start treating themselves as a group. In practice, though, businesses often notify or request a ruling from the tax authorities to confirm the VAT group, to avoid uncertainty. The tax office can also proactively determine a group exists (even without a request) if it finds companies meet the criteria. So a VAT group can exist de facto from the moment conditions are satisfied, but it’s wise to get official confirmation. [crowe-peak.nl]
  • Effects of VAT grouping:
    1. The group is regarded as a single taxable person for VAT. It receives one VAT identification number (often a new BTW with B01 or B02 suffix) and files one consolidated VAT return covering all members. The group’s activities are reported as a whole. [crowe-peak.nl] [crowe-peak.nl], [crowe-peak.nl]
    2. No VAT is charged on transactions between group members. Intra-group supplies of goods or services are disregarded for VAT – effectively treated as internal transfers. This is extremely useful if, for example, one member provides administrative services or rent to another; under a VAT group, these no longer trigger VAT (which might have been non-deductible if one member had exempt activities). [crowe-peak.nl], [crowe-peak.nl]
    3. All members are jointly and severally liable for any VAT debts of the group. If one group member fails to pay, the others can be held responsible by the tax authority. This ensures the tax office can recover VAT due from any part of the unity. [crowe-peak.nl], [crowe-peak.nl]
    4. Externally, the group acts under its unified VAT number. For domestic invoices, often the group’s name/VAT number is used. However, for intra-EU supplies, Dutch practice is that each member must still use its individual VAT number on EU invoices and EC Sales Listings for goods – to align with VIES validation – even though within NL they are one entity. (The group still files a combined ESL under the group number). This can be a bit complex administratively. [crowe-peak.nl]
  • Benefits: VAT grouping can eliminate cascading VAT on inter-company charges (especially important if any members have exempt sales and would lose VAT on costs). It cuts down the number of VAT returns (just one instead of many). Cash flow can improve because one member’s excess VAT credit can directly offset another’s VAT payable in the single return. Also, only one Intrastat report is needed per flow, etc.
  • Drawbacks: Joint liability is a risk – strong trust and control must exist among members. Also, if one member has primarily exempt supplies, joining a group could potentially contaminate others’ input VAT recovery proportion (because the group’s overall deduction is based on combined taxable vs exempt use of inputs). Groups need to monitor if an entity with exempt activities joins, as it can reduce input VAT recovery for the entire unity. Sometimes groups exclude an entity for that reason. The voluntary nature means businesses can structure the group to optimize VAT unless anti-abuse rules intervene. [tax-consul…tional.com], [tax-consul…tional.com]
  • Changes and dissolving: If circumstances change (e.g. ownership drops below 50%, or an entity is sold off), the VAT group status ends for those entities. The group status should be evaluated regularly. A group can be dissolved voluntarily by informing the tax office if conditions end or if they want to exit grouping (though typically must remain if conditions still objectively apply). The tax authority can also terminate a group status if conditions no longer hold or if abuse is suspected.
The Dutch VAT group regime is known to be relatively flexible. Importantly, holding companies can be tricky: pure holding companies (just holding shares with no economic activity) ordinarily are not “entrepreneurs” for VAT and couldn’t join a group. But Dutch policy provides leniency – if a holding actively manages subsidiaries (and thus is partially a VAT-taxable person), it can still be included in the VAT group for simplicity. Recent court rulings and policy changes (in 2024) have clarified how cross-border situations are treated: services between a head office and branch now become taxable if one of them is in a VAT group (shifting from previous practice where they might be ignored, per ECJ “Skandia” doctrine). [crowe-peak.nl] [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
Conclusion: Forming a VAT group in NL can significantly simplify VAT accounting for a cluster of companies under common control. Eligible businesses can essentially consolidate into one “VAT family,” eliminating VAT on internal flows and reducing compliance overhead. Companies should weigh the benefits against any limitations on VAT recovery. When in doubt, seeking a ruling from the Belastingdienst is recommended to confirm group status and effective date. Once established, the VAT group uses a single Dutch VAT number (often ending in B01 for the group) for most interactions with the tax authority. [crowe-peak.nl]

7. VAT Recovery for Foreign Businesses

Foreign businesses (i.e. not established or VAT-registered in the Netherlands) that incur Dutch VAT have mechanisms to recover that VAT, either by registering for Dutch VAT or via special refund claims. In general, VAT paid in the Netherlands by an overseas business can be reclaimed in certain circumstances, ensuring that VAT is not a final cost if the business was entitled to deduct it. [kreston.com]
There are two main pathways:
  • Through VAT registration: If a foreign company engages in taxable activities in the Netherlands (e.g. selling goods locally to Dutch customers) and thus registers for VAT, it will reclaim Dutch VAT on its costs on its periodic returns just like a local business. This is the straightforward method when the foreign company is obliged to register (or chooses to voluntarily register to recover input VAT). For instance, a German firm with a Dutch VAT registration will deduct Dutch input VAT in its Dutch VAT filings. [kreston.com]
  • Through VAT refund procedures (without registration): If a foreign company does not have to register in NL (because it has no taxable outputs or only purchases), it can still get a refund of Dutch VAT under EU Directive provisions:
    • EU businesses (8th Directive refunds): An EU-established business that paid VAT in the Netherlands (but isn’t NL-registered) can submit a refund claim electronically through its home country’s tax portal. This is per the EU 8th Directive refund mechanism. For example, a Belgian consulting firm attends a conference in Amsterdam and pays Dutch VAT on hotel bills – since it has no Dutch sales, it can claim that VAT back via the Belgian tax authority’s online system (which forwards the claim to NL). Such claims are typically filed for a calendar year (or quarterly) by 30 September of the following year and must meet minimum amounts (€50 for annual claims, €400 for quarterly). The Dutch tax authority (Heerlen office) processes the request and aims to refund within ~4 months. The EU business must be performing taxable activities in its home country and the expenses must be for its business purposes. The Netherlands will check that the claimed VAT relates to deductible inputs (e.g. not entertainment or other blocked items) and then authorize the refund, paid directly to the claimant’s account. [kreston.com] [tax-consul…tional.com], [tax-consul…tional.com] [tax-consul…tional.com]
    • Non-EU businesses (13th Directive refunds): Businesses from outside the EU can also reclaim Dutch VAT on purchases via a direct application to the Dutch Tax Authority (Belastingdienst). The Netherlands does not require reciprocity agreements for VAT refunds, meaning it will generally refund VAT to non-EU businesses even if that business’s country doesn’t similarly refund to EU companies. The non-EU claimant must appoint a Dutch fiscal representative if required by Dutch rules, but for refund claims this is typically not mandatory – they can apply themselves by using Form VAT Refund for Foreign Businesses. The claim is usually submitted by 30 June of the year following the year of the expenses. Original invoices and a certificate of business status from their home tax authority are required. The minimum claim amounts (€/€) are similarly €50 annually or €400 for shorter periods. After validation, the Dutch authorities issue a refund. Non-EU claimants must not have engaged in any taxable supplies in NL (if they did, they should have registered instead). If they had only zero-rated exports or reverse-charged services, they can still use the refund route. [tax-consul…tional.com] [vatcalc.com]
Important: The foreign business must satisfy that the VAT is on business expenses related to taxable (or zero-rated) activities. If the expenses relate to activities that would be exempt if done in NL (e.g. finance), the refund can be denied proportionally. Also, certain items of VAT are non-recoverable for anyone (like Dutch VAT on restaurant meals, lodging and car rental might be restricted for foreign refunds as they are for Dutch businesses, see Section 15.1 and 15.4). The Dutch tax authorities will apply the same rules to foreign claims as they do to resident deductions. [tax-consul…tional.com] [tax-consul…tional.com], [vatcalc.com]
In summary, foreign EU businesses use their home country portal by Sept 30 (8th Directive), while foreign non-EU businesses send a claim to the Dutch tax office by June 30 (13th Directive). The Netherlands is known for efficient processing – often refunds are issued within 3-4 months if all is in order. If a claim is incomplete or questioned, the tax office may ask for more info or can reject non-qualifying amounts, but there is a right of objection to any denied refund (they issue a formal decision letter). [tax-consul…tional.com]
Example: A UK company (post-Brexit, a non-EU entity) sends employees to a trade fair in Rotterdam in 2025 and pays €2100 of VAT on a booth rental and hotels. The UK company has no NL VAT registration. By June 30, 2026, it can mail a refund claim form to the Dutch tax authorities in Heerlen, with copies of invoices and a UK tax office certificate of VAT status. Because the UK is now eligible (NL doesn’t require reciprocity, and the UK has its own refund scheme), the Dutch authorities will verify the expenses (booth rental VAT is recoverable; hotel VAT might be partially blocked under Dutch rules for business travel). Let’s say €1800 is approved. The Dutch tax office will issue a refund (teruggaaf) of €1800, likely around Autumn 2026, directly to the UK company’s bank account, along with a decision letter. This way the UK firm isn’t stuck with Dutch VAT cost.
Tip: Non-EU businesses sometimes opt to register voluntarily in NL (get a VAT number) if they frequently incur Dutch VAT, as it can be easier to claim via normal returns. But this means taking on filing obligations. Many will just use the refund scheme annually.
In all cases, input VAT that is tied to taxable activities is refundable to foreign traders, preserving neutrality. The Netherlands has implemented the EU VAT refund processes and even allows some non-standard cases (no reciprocity required, as noted). The key is to meet deadlines and documentation requirements.

8. Fiscal Representative Requirements

A fiscal representative is a local agent who can act on behalf of a foreign business for VAT matters. In the Netherlands, appointing a fiscal representative is not universally required for non-resident companies, but it is mandatory in certain situations (especially involving imports and certain e-commerce scenarios). Understanding when a fiscal rep is needed is crucial for foreign companies planning Dutch operations: [grantthornton.global], [belastingdienst.nl]
  • General rule for EU businesses: EU-established companies can register for Dutch VAT directly in their own name without a fiscal representative. The EU principle of one-stop registration allows an EU business to handle VAT in any member state. The Dutch tax authorities do not require a fiscal rep for EU companies performing standard activities like selling goods or services in NL – those companies can file and pay VAT themselves. For example, a German company selling and delivering goods in NL to Dutch customers can register with the Belastingdienst and comply on its own; no local agent is obligatory. [innovatetax.com]
  • Non-EU businesses: The Netherlands, unlike some EU countries, does not impose an across-the-board requirement that non-EU companies appoint a fiscal rep to register for VAT. A non-EU business may register itself directly with the Dutch tax office (via the International Office in Heerlen) and fulfill Dutch VAT obligations independently. However, in specific cases, Dutch law requires a fiscal representative: [vatcalc.com], [vatcalc.com]
    • Import VAT deferment (Article 23 license): If a non-EU business wants to import goods into the Netherlands and defer paying import VAT (using the Article 23 mechanism – see Section 15.6), it must appoint a Dutch fiscal representative to obtain that import VAT deferment license. The fiscal rep, established in NL, will be jointly liable and will handle reporting the import VAT on returns. In practice, many foreign traders use an indirect representative or logistics provider to manage Dutch imports under Article 23. Under Dutch rules, a foreign company cannot directly apply for an Article 23 permit – only a resident firm or a fiscal rep can do so for them. So for importers from outside the EU using NL as a gateway, a limited fiscal representative is typically engaged to deal specifically with imports and subsequent supplies. [grantthornton.global], [belastingdienst.nl] [belastingdienst.nl]
    • Non-EU distance sellers of goods within the EU (without OSS): If a non-EU business stores goods in the Netherlands and sells them to Dutch consumers (or EU consumers) without using a marketplace or OSS, it would need to register. While not strictly forced by law to have a rep, practically the tax authorities may require a fiscal rep as a condition in some cases, especially if the company wants to use simplifications like zero-rated intra-Community movements. However, since July 2021, most non-EU e-commerce sellers would use OSS/IOSS or have platforms handle VAT, reducing this scenario.
    • Selling goods from bonded warehouses or under limited license: The Netherlands has the concept of limited fiscal representation for non-EU traders who import into NL then immediately supply the goods (often to other EU countries). A “limited fiscal representative” (LFR) can be appointed – usually a customs broker or forwarding agent – who takes on the VAT obligations for the import and subsequent dispatch of goods on behalf of the non-EU company. This is common in logistics: e.g. a US company ships goods to Rotterdam port, and an LFR there handles import under 0% VAT (postponed accounting) and the onward intra-EU supply under the foreign company’s name. The non-EU company might not need its own VAT number; the rep uses its special VAT number with code “99”. This requires having that certified fiscal rep – the US company cannot do this on its own. [vatcalc.com]
    • Excise goods trading: If dealing in excise goods and using duty suspension, fiscal rep might be mandated.
    • OSS non-Union scheme: To use the Non-Union OSS (for non-EU companies providing e-services to EU consumers), a non-EU business does not strictly need a rep (they can register themselves in an EU country for OSS). But for IOSS, a non-EU business is required by EU law to appoint an EU-established intermediary (which is a type of fiscal rep) unless the non-EU country has a VAT mutual assistance agreement. The Netherlands has many companies offering IOSS intermediary services.
  • Types of fiscal reps in NL:
    • General fiscal representative: Can handle all VAT affairs of a foreign business in NL, including domestic sales, purchases, imports, etc., under full liability. This requires a permit from the tax authorities and often a bank guarantee.
    • Limited fiscal representative: Handles only specific activities (commonly imports + onward deliveries, or certain supply categories). Liability of the rep is limited to those transactions. It often uses a special sub-VAT number “NLxxxxxxB99”. This is frequent in import/export contexts.
Many foreign companies opt for a fiscal rep for convenience even if not obligatory – the rep navigates Dutch rules, files returns, corresponds in Dutch with the tax office, etc. For example, a US firm selling and installing equipment in NL might hire a fiscal rep firm to register and file its VAT rather than doing it remotely.
When is a fiscal rep not needed? A straightforward case: An EU company providing consulting services in NL to Dutch businesses likely has no NL VAT (services are B2B reverse-charged to the Dutch client) and no registration needed. If it did need to register (say making some B2C sales), it can do so directly with no rep. Even a non-EU company providing services where it must register (e.g. running an exhibition event in NL charging Dutch attendees) can register itself; Dutch law doesn’t force a rep for service providers. The need really centers on importation and certain goods flows where the Dutch authorities want a local entity to ensure compliance.
Joint Liability: If a fiscal rep is appointed, that representative is jointly liable for the foreign company’s VAT debts in NL for the transactions they handle. Hence representatives often require financial guarantees or indemnities from the foreign principal. [vatcalc.com]
Fiscal Rep and Article 23: One major benefit of using a fiscal rep is obtaining an Article 23 license for VAT deferment on imports. Many non-EU companies designate a rep specifically to utilize this, making NL a very attractive entry point (no upfront VAT on import – see Section 15.6). Without a rep, a foreign company can’t get this license on its own and would have to pay import VAT at customs and later refund it, causing cash flow leakage. So in practice, foreign importers almost always work with a Dutch fiscal rep. [belastingdienst.nl]
In summary, the Netherlands requires fiscal representation mainly in import and special-scheme contexts:
  • Non-EU importer wanting VAT deferment → Must have fiscal rep. [belastingdienst.nl]
  • Non-EU selling from NL stock to NL/EU customers (without OSS) → Usually needs a rep or at least to register; rep strongly encouraged if using simplifications.
  • EU companies generally do not need a rep (and seldom use one except for convenience or if using a warehouse simplification).
  • The Dutch tax authority provides information on authorized fiscal reps and the procedures. Often logistic providers at ports serve as limited fiscal reps for many clients.
When in doubt, a foreign business should consult a Dutch tax advisor to see if their planned operations trigger a rep requirement. If required, they must sign a contract with a Dutch fiscal representative company and obtain a VAT identification through that rep. Not doing so when it’s mandatory can result in inability to use certain VAT simplifications or even denial of registration.

9. Currency and FX Rules

The accounting currency for VAT in the Netherlands is the euro (EUR), since the country is part of the Eurozone. All VAT returns must be filed and paid in euros. When transactions are invoiced in a foreign currency, Dutch VAT law requires that the VAT amount be converted to euros for reporting and invoice purposes. [belastingdienst.nl], [vatcalc.com]
Key rules regarding currency and foreign exchange (FX) in Dutch VAT:
  • Invoicing currency: Businesses are free to issue invoices in any currency. It is common, for example, for a Dutch company to invoice a US client in USD. However, if VAT is charged on the invoice, the VAT amount must be stated in euros (or at least converted for the VAT portion) on the invoice. This ensures that the tax amount is clear in the local currency. For instance, an invoice might show a net amount of $1,000, and then “VAT 21% = €210” (after conversion), and total in both currencies or in euro equivalent. The law doesn’t mandate the net or gross in euro, but the VAT itself typically should be shown in EUR for domestic invoices. [vatcalc.com]
  • Conversion rate for VAT accounting: When reporting VAT on foreign-currency transactions, businesses must convert the taxable amount to EUR. The Dutch rules (aligned with EU rules) provide options for the conversion rate at the time VAT becomes chargeable: [belastingdienst.nl]
    • Use the exchange rate published by the European Central Bank (ECB), as of the day the VAT became due (usually the invoice date or tax point). The ECB daily rate is commonly used and easily accessible. [belastingdienst.nl]
    • Or use the latest selling rate listed on that date from other standard sources (such as a bank’s official rate). In practice, most use the ECB rate to ensure consistency. [belastingdienst.nl]
    The business should apply the chosen method consistently. Many opt for the official ECB rate (which the Dutch Tax Administration accepts and references). The Dutch Customs also provides monthly fixed rates for import declarations, but for VAT returns daily rates or periodic average rates are typically used. [belastingdienst.nl]
  • Import transactions: If goods are imported with an invoice in foreign currency, customs will convert the value to EUR for duty and VAT purposes. The Dutch Customs (Douane) publishes exchange rates (often a monthly rate based on ECB) on its website. For import VAT accounting (especially under Article 23 deferred import VAT), the import value in EUR (as per customs) is the base for VAT in the return. A tool is available to check customs exchange rates each month. [belastingdienst.nl]
  • Accounting and records: Companies must keep evidence of which exchange rate they applied. In practice, for each foreign-currency invoice, they record the Euro equivalent. Often accounting software will automatically apply a daily ECB rate. It’s important to use the rate of the VAT tax point (for example, if an advance invoice was issued when the rate was X, and final invoice when rate was Y, those use respective rates).
  • Functional currency for accounting: Some Dutch businesses maintain their books in a functional currency (e.g. USD). For corporate income tax, NL even allows using functional currency under conditions. But VAT returns must always be filed in EUR regardless of functional currency. So a company keeping accounts in USD must convert all figures to EUR for the BTW return. [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • FX gains/losses: Fluctuations in exchange rate after invoicing do not affect the VAT once it’s declared. VAT is fixed based on the EUR value at time of supply. If a customer pays later and the amount of EUR received differs due to exchange movement, that difference is a financial gain/loss but does not change the VAT declared. No VAT adjustment is needed for exchange differences (VAT is not a function of actual money received but of the invoice value in EUR).
  • Documentation: On cross-border invoices, it’s advisable to mention the exchange rate used if VAT is shown in EUR while invoice total is in another currency. This provides clarity to the customer and tax auditors on how the VAT was calculated.
In summary, VAT must ultimately be accounted in euros. Companies can invoice in foreign currencies to accommodate customers, but they bear the responsibility of correctly converting those amounts to EUR for VAT purposes. The Netherlands offers a straightforward method by accepting the ECB rate at the time VAT becomes due. The choice of the precise source (ECB vs another published rate) just needs to be consistent and auditable. There is no requirement to later adjust if the rate moves – one locks in the rate on the tax point day. [belastingdienst.nl]
Example: A Dutch company sells a machine for USD 10,000 to a buyer in the Netherlands. The sale is on June 1. On that date, assume 1 EUR = 1.10 USD (ECB rate). The company would calculate the VAT as follows: USD 10,000 / 1.10 = €9,090.91 net, VAT 21% = €1,909.09. The invoice could display: “Amount: $10,000; VAT 21%: €1,909.09 (converted at 1 EUR=1.10 USD); Total due: $10,000 (VAT included).” In their VAT return, they declare turnover €9,090.91 and VAT €1,909.09. If by payment time the euro strengthened or weakened, it doesn’t change the VAT due; any short difference in euro upon currency conversion is a FX result for them, not affecting VAT.
Lastly, note that the Euro is the currency for payment of VAT to the tax authority. A foreign business paying from abroad must ensure the remitted amount equals the euro amount of the liability (bank charges or FX must be covered so that the tax office receives the full EUR amount due). The use of euro also means uniform treatment in the EU context.

10. VAT Law and Legal Framework

The Netherlands’ VAT system is grounded in both national legislation and EU law. The core legal framework consists of:
  • The Turnover Tax Act 1968 (Wet op de Omzetbelasting 1968) – this is the primary VAT law in the Netherlands, effective since the introduction of VAT on January 1, 1969. It sets out the scope of tax, definitions of supply of goods and services, place of supply rules, rates, exemptions, etc., in line with EU directives. Over the years it has been amended regularly to incorporate EU changes (e.g. the 1992 single market rules, the 2010 VAT Package for services, the 2020 Quick Fixes, etc.). [vatcalc.com]
  • The VAT Implementing Decree 1968 and VAT Implementing Regulations – these provide further detail and administrative rules under the Act. For example, rules on invoicing (Article 35a of the Act and further specified in a decree), record-keeping, and specific schemes (like travel agents margin scheme, agricultural scheme) are elaborated here. Recently amended decrees are also how new EU guidance (like quick fixes) get applied in Dutch practice. [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • EU VAT Directive (2006/112/EC) – As an EU member state (during all periods discussed), the Netherlands is bound by the Union’s VAT Directive which harmonizes VAT across members. The Dutch law is essentially an implementation of the EU rules, and in case of conflict, EU law prevails. For instance, the Directive defines what must be exempt (like financial services) and what is taxable, as well as requiring the standard rate be at least 15%. The Netherlands sets its own rates within EU parameters and chooses options (like which reduced rate items, or whether to allow VAT grouping, etc.) that the Directive permits. All major EU VAT legislation (the VAT Directive, Implementing Regulations, etc.) forms part of the Dutch framework. [tax-consul…tional.com]
  • EU Regulations and ECJ case law: Certain VAT rules come from EU regulations which are directly applicable. For example, Regulation 282/2011 provides uniform invoicing rules, place of supply clarifications, etc., which Dutch businesses must follow. European Court of Justice (ECJ) decisions are also crucial – Dutch tax authorities and courts must apply ECJ jurisprudence. A notable example is the ECJ’s Skandia ruling, which led the Dutch authorities to adjust how cross-border head-office/branch in a VAT group is taxed (effective 2024 as noted in Section 6). [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • National Tax Administration Guidance: The Belastingdienst (Tax Administration) issues public guidance, rulings, and policy decisions (often in the form of VAT decrees or letters from the State Secretary of Finance). These clarify interpretation of the law in practice. For instance, there are published decrees on the VAT treatment of holding companies, cost-sharing arrangements, the small business scheme, etc. While not “law,” these are part of the framework that taxpayers and auditors reference. [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Dutch courts decisions: The application of VAT law is also shaped by Dutch court decisions (Administrative Courts, and ultimately the Hoge Raad – Supreme Court). These, along with ECJ rulings, form jurisprudence filling in the grey areas. For example, Dutch courts have ruled on whether certain activities qualify as exempt education or how strict to be with invoice requirements for input deduction. Case law has confirmed, for instance, that a non-established company with a fixed establishment abroad cannot join a Dutch VAT group and so must treat head-branch transactions as taxable from 2024 (following ECJ law). [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Related laws: Netherlands also has a General Tax Act (AWR) which covers provisions like administrative obligations, interest and penalties across taxes, including VAT. For example, the statute of limitations for tax assessments or penalty regimes are partly in general laws (we discuss these in Sections 21 and 24). The Civil Code also intersects in areas like invoice requirements (ensuring what constitutes a valid invoice contractually) and consumer protection on pricing (prices to consumers must be shown VAT-inclusive).
The Tax Authorities (Belastingdienst) enforce VAT law. Compliance is monitored via audits and a cooperative compliance program (“horizontal monitoring”) where larger firms operate in close communication with the tax office on tax controls. The tax office issues regulations in practice, like listing particular forms for refunds or instructions for OSS users. [taxsummaries.pwc.com], [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
It’s worth noting the Netherlands often chooses to implement VAT rules in a business-friendly way. For example, it allows VAT grouping, import VAT deferment, a broad zero-rate for exports through easy proof requirements, etc. The legal framework enabling these is within EU allowances but leveraged fully by Dutch law to support commerce (hence Netherlands is a popular hub for distribution).
Recent developments: Netherlands implemented the EU “Quick Fixes” on call-off stock, chain transactions, and VAT ID requirements as of 2020 via amendments to the VAT Act and the Implementing Decree. In 2021, it transposed the E-commerce Directive changes (OSS/IOSS) into national law. As of 2024/2025, new rules affecting holding companies’ VAT deduction and cross-border internal services (from ECJ rulings) have been put into effect by withdrawing old decrees and issuing new ones. And Per 2026, the law will introduce a revision scheme for VAT on real estate services (5 or 10-year adjustment requirement), aligning with the capital goods scheme concept being extended to high-value services on property. [taxsummaries.pwc.com] [taxsummaries.pwc.com], [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
The Dutch government typically presents an annual Tax Plan (Belastingplan) on Prinsjesdag (Budget Day in September) where changes to VAT law may be proposed. For instance, the removal of reduced VAT on accommodation in 2026 was part of such a plan. Businesses should keep an eye on these proposals and subsequent legislation. [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
In conclusion, the Dutch VAT legal framework is a combination of national law (VAT Act 1968 and related decrees) and the overarching EU VAT system. It is relatively stable, with changes driven mostly by EU initiatives or policy shifts (like adjusting rates or tackling abuses). Taxpayers can rely on official guidance from the Belastingdienst website (which has a section for VAT including manuals and brochures), and professional advice for complex scenarios, to navigate the legal framework. Ultimately, compliance means following both the letter of Dutch law and the intent of EU rules that harmonize VAT across Europe. [business.gov.nl]

11. Tax Authorities

The Tax Authority responsible for VAT in the Netherlands is the Belastingdienst, which is part of the Ministry of Finance. Specifically, the Belastingdienst (Dutch Tax and Customs Administration) administers all state taxes including turnover tax (VAT). Key points about the authorities and administration: [kreston.com]
  • Organizational structure: The Belastingdienst has regional offices for domestic taxpayers and a special office for international matters. VAT for domestic businesses is generally handled by the regional tax office where the business is located or registered. Non-resident businesses are managed by the Tax office in Heerlen (Landelijk Kantoor Buitenland) which specializes in handling foreign VAT registrations, refund claims, etc.. So a foreign company’s correspondence (like getting a VAT number or filing by mail) often goes through Heerlen. [vatcalc.com], [vatcalc.com]
  • Functions: The tax authority issues VAT numbers, processes VAT returns and payments, carries out audits/investigations, and provides rulings/interpretations. They also manage special schemes (like OSS – coordinated centrally by the Dutch Tax authority digital portal, but OSS is part of a cross-EU network). The Customs arm of Belastingdienst handles import VAT at borders and works closely with the VAT administration on deferred accounting.
  • Online portal: The Netherlands has a digital portal “Mijn Belastingdienst Zakelijk” for businesses to file returns and correspondence. Companies (or their tax representatives) generally file VAT returns online. To log in, Dutch businesses use eHerkenning (an e-ID system) for companies, while foreign businesses are given login credentials. The portal also features pre-filled forms for returns (essentially just taxpayer info, not transactional data) and allows viewing assessments, making payments, etc. [business.gov.nl]
  • Guidance and Communication: Belastingdienst provides a lot of information on its website, both in Dutch and some in English (for example, sections on “VAT for foreign entrepreneurs” and English brochures). They publish explanatory notes to VAT returns, and specific sector guides. They also operate helpdesks; for example, a starter’s helpdesk chat is available for new entrepreneurs, and they maintain a call center. [business.gov.nl]
  • Enforcement: The tax authority monitors timely filing and payment. If a return isn’t filed, the Belastingdienst will issue an additional assessment (naheffingsaanslag) often based on an estimate. They will also levy penalties for late filing or payment (as detailed in Section 24). Audits are conducted based on risk analysis or random selection. Under the Horizontal Monitoring program, larger companies can enter into compliance agreements to disclose issues proactively in exchange for fewer traditional audits. This cooperative compliance approach has been a hallmark of the Dutch system in recent years, emphasizing trust and transparency between the tax authority and compliant taxpayers. Smaller businesses are still subject to conventional audits, which the Belastingdienst carries out by examining records, often at the company’s premises or remotely. [belastingdienst.nl] [taxsummaries.pwc.com], [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Tax rulings: For certain transactions or arrangements, businesses can request advance rulings or clearances from the tax authority. For VAT, this might include confirming a complex supply’s treatment (though formal VAT rulings are less common than in corporate tax). The tax office can issue binding rulings on specific questions (in practice these might come as a response from the regional inspector or via a published decree if it’s a common issue).
  • Interagency and EU cooperation: The Belastingdienst cooperates with other EU tax authorities for exchange of information – for example, verifying VAT numbers for cross-border sales (through VIES system), and participating in Eurofisc network to combat VAT fraud. They also implement new EU-wide systems, like the upcoming CESOP for payment data (mentioned in Section 10) – starting 2024, Dutch payment providers will send data to the tax authorities who share it EU-wide to track e-commerce. [belastingdienst.nl] [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Customs and Excise integration: The Belastingdienst also includes Dutch Customs (Douane). Customs authorities collect import VAT at entry points, but since NL has deferred import VAT, in practice a lot of import VAT accounting happens via the tax office on returns. Nevertheless, Customs and VAT are linked – for instance, a customs audit might flag issues that lead to VAT corrections.
The tax authority is known for efficiency and user-friendliness. They issue most VAT refunds within weeks (if all is correct). There is also a practice of sending reminders or assessments quickly if something is missed, to keep compliance tight. [tax-consul…tional.com]
For disputes, a taxpayer can file an objection (bezwaar) to the tax authority first. If not satisfied, they can appeal to the tax court. The initial point of contact is always the tax office itself.
Tax Authority Links & Resources: The official site (belastingdienst.nl) has dedicated pages for entrepreneurs (ondernemers) including how to register, how to file, what rates apply, etc., and forms for refunds or adjustments. There’s also business.gov.nl which is an English-language government portal summarizing tax obligations for foreign investors and businesses, referencing the Belastingdienst content. [business.gov.nl]
In summary, the Belastingdienst is the single government body handling VAT. Through clear guidance, modern online systems, and cooperation programs, it administers VAT in a pragmatic way. They emphasize compliance but also offer assistance to taxpayers for getting it right. For foreign businesses, the Heerlen office being a specialized center means queries and processing are handled by staff experienced in international VAT issues. Knowing the roles and available resources of the Dutch tax authority can greatly help businesses maintain compliance with confidence. [vatcalc.com]

12. Scope of VAT

The scope of VAT in the Netherlands delineates which transactions fall under VAT and which persons are considered taxable. Broadly, the Dutch VAT (omzetbelasting) mirrors the EU scope: it applies to all supplies of goods or services made for consideration by a taxable person in the Netherlands in the course of business, unless specifically exempt. Additionally, the import of goods and intra-EU acquisitions of goods are within scope. Let’s break this down: [kreston.com]
  • Taxable persons: The VAT Act covers entrepreneurs (ondernemers) defined as persons who independently carry out economic activities. This includes individuals, companies, partnerships, etc., engaged in the regular supply of goods or services for remuneration. It excludes employees (who are not independent) and activities in a private (non-business) capacity. In the Netherlands, even government bodies can be taxable persons if they engage in economic activities not in their public authority role. So any entity doing business can be a taxable person for VAT. [tax-consul…tional.com]
  • Taxable supplies of goods: A “supply of goods” is basically the transfer of ownership or the right to dispose of tangible property. If a business sells, transfers, or even uses goods for private purposes, it’s a supply. Dutch VAT applies to: [kreston.com]
    • Domestic sales of movable property (e.g. selling merchandise, raw materials, equipment).
    • The supply of electricity, gas, heat, etc., considered goods.
    • Deemed supplies: E.g. if a business takes goods out of the business for private use or gives them away (subject to exceptions), that can be treated as a supply to itself, so VAT might be due.
    • The transfer of goods from NL to another EU member state by a business (if to its own branch or for other purposes) is generally treated as an intra-Community supply (zero-rated) with a corresponding intra-Community acquisition in the other country.
    • Installations and assembly of goods if done in NL can count as supply in NL (see Section 15.8).
    • Real estate: the sale of new buildings (built <2 years ago) and building land is a taxable supply of goods (older real estate is exempt by default). [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
    Essentially any transfer of goods in NL by a business is within the scope and subject to VAT unless zero-rated or exempt.
  • Taxable supply of services: This is a broad residual category – any performance that is not a supply of goods is a service. It covers things like providing consultancy, leasing goods, transportation, restaurant service, digital services, etc. If done by a taxable person in NL for consideration, it’s within VAT scope. Also included are deemed services such as private use of business assets (e.g. using a company car for personal use, which requires an output VAT correction at year-end). The law lists certain special cases (like letting immovable property, which is exempt unless opted, as a supply of services). Nearly any economic activity that isn’t handing over goods will fall here. [taxsummaries.pwc.com] [business.gov.nl]
  • Place of supply – within Netherlands: For VAT to apply, the place of supply must be the Netherlands. The Dutch VAT Act uses EU place-of-supply rules:
    • Goods: Generally taxed where the good is located at time of sale (for domestic supplies) or where transport begins (for intra-EU). So if goods are in NL and sold, VAT scope = NL. If shipped from NL to outside, that’s export (still a supply in scope, albeit zero-rated).
    • Services: Many B2B services have place of supply where the customer is (which could be outside NL, meaning out of Dutch VAT scope). B2C services usually taxed where supplier is (NL) unless specific rule. Some services (related to real estate, events, etc.) have special place rules. The scope of Dutch VAT captures services considered supplied in NL under these rules.
    • For example, a German consultant giving advice to a Dutch company – place of supply = NL (because customer is in NL, by B2B rule), but that falls under reverse charge to the Dutch customer (the service itself is within NL’s tax scope, just the obligation is shifted). Conversely, a Dutch firm consulting for a German business – place of supply = Germany (customer location), so it’s outside NL scope (no Dutch VAT).
    In short, the Netherlands taxes transactions that EU rules allocate to NL.
  • Imports: Bringing goods from outside the EU into the Netherlands is subject to VAT at import (handled by Customs). This ensures imports face the same VAT as domestic goods. Import VAT is in scope no matter who imports (business or private), but recoverable only if by a VAT-registered business. (Import by private individual is final consumption VAT.) If goods immediately transit to another EU country, there are mechanisms to shift tax to destination (like customs transit or import 0% with subsequent ICS). But normally, an import into NL is a taxable event in NL. [kreston.com]
  • Intra-Community Acquisition: When a business in the Netherlands acquires goods from another EU member state, it must self-account for VAT in NL (the “IC acquisition” is taxed). So, a Dutch company buying inventory from Belgium will pay Dutch VAT via its return (often simultaneously taking deduction). This rule ensures equal treatment of EU purchases and local purchases. The threshold for ICA for small non-business acquisitions is €10k (for private individuals or exempt persons beyond which they too get taxed in NL). [belastingdienst.nl]
  • Outside scope scenarios: Some activities are simply not taxed because they aren’t economic supplies:
    • Non-business, non-economic activities (a hobby sale by someone not in business).
    • True donations or grants (no direct quid pro quo service/good).
    • Compensation for damages, or statutory fines, which aren’t payment for a service.
    • Dividends and pure financial investments (not a supply of service, though financial services like brokerage are exempt, which is different).
  • Public bodies: Government entities acting in their sovereign capacity (like issuing passports, collecting taxes) are not taxed on those activities. But if they engage in competition with private enterprises (e.g. a municipality selling advertising space, renting out parking), they may be considered taxable to avoid market distortion.
  • Exempt vs. zero vs. outside scope:
    • Outside scope means VAT law doesn’t apply at all (no need to report the activity in VAT returns).
    • Exempt means it’s within scope (a supply by a business) but legislatively exempted (reporting often still required in returns but no VAT charged, and no input recovery).
    • Zero-rated means within scope, taxable at 0% (so reported as a taxable supply but with 0% VAT; input VAT recoverable).
Thus, the scope of Dutch VAT is very broad – it covers most commercial transactions. There are of course numerous exemptions (discussed in Section 3.3) for particular activities like health, education, finance, real estate (after 2 years), culture, etc. Those are still supplies under the scope, just relieved from VAT charge. The key demarcation is that private (non-business) activities and employee-to-employer services are not taxable.
To illustrate scope:
  • A bakery sells bread in NL -> taxable supply of goods (9% VAT, in scope).
  • A software company in NL sells a license to a Dutch consumer -> taxable service, place in NL, standard 21%.
  • That software company sells to a German consumer -> taxable service, place in DE (B2C, supplier in NL, but digital service has special rule: actually for digital B2C, place is consumer’s country, i.e. Germany, so NL has no VAT; company likely uses OSS to pay German VAT).
  • A Dutch hospital provides medical treatment -> supply of service by a taxable person but exempt by law (still within VAT scope conceptually, but no VAT due).
  • A hobby painter (not registered as business) sells a painting -> outside scope (not “entrepreneurial” activity as isolated sale, no VAT).
  • A UK firm imports goods into Rotterdam -> import VAT due (scope: importation in NL).
  • A French firm ships goods to NL and the Dutch buyer is B2B -> Dutch buyer does an intra-community acquisition and accounts for Dutch VAT (even if seller’s supply was zero-rated in France).
In conclusion, if you are doing business in the Netherlands, assume your sales are subject to VAT unless a specific exemption covers them. The scope of VAT is meant to capture all consumption in the economy. The few carve-outs are carefully defined in law. The Dutch VAT Act’s first articles lay out that entrepreneurs are subject to VAT on their supplies of goods/services in the Netherlands – which is as broad as it sounds. One should then check if an exemption applies to that supply. If not, it’s taxable. [tax-consul…tional.com]

13. Time of Supply Rules

The “time of supply” (tax point) rules determine when VAT becomes chargeable on a transaction. In the Netherlands, as in the EU, these rules ensure VAT is accounted for at the correct time. Generally, VAT is due at the moment of the actual supply (delivery of goods or completion of service) or when an invoice is issued or payment received if earlier. The Dutch term often used is “belastingmoment” or “tijdstip van levering/dienst”. Let’s detail by category: [innovatetax.com]

13.1 Goods

For one-time supplies of goods, the basic rule is that VAT is due when the goods are delivered (i.e. when the right to dispose of the goods is transferred to the buyer). In practice, that usually means the date the goods are handed over or shipped per the sales agreement. If an invoice is issued or payment made before delivery, that earlier event can create the tax point to that extent: [innovatetax.com]
  • If the seller issues an invoice in advance of delivery (which is common if billing early), Dutch law (following EU Dir. art 67) says VAT becomes chargeable at invoice issuance for the invoiced amount. So an early invoice accelerates the tax point to the invoice date.
  • If the buyer pays in advance (down-payment), VAT on that amount becomes due upon receipt of payment (advance payments trigger VAT immediately) – the seller should issue an invoice for the advance within a timely manner.
If neither invoice nor payment has occurred yet, then the moment of delivery/passage of title is the time of supply. [innovatetax.com]
For example, a company sells machinery on 15 March and issues the invoice on 20 March: the VAT is due by 15 March (delivery date), though practically the company will include it in the March VAT return. If instead it invoiced on 1 March (before delivery), VAT is due 1 March on that invoice (even if delivery happened later in March).
Special cases for goods:
  • Continuous or periodic supply of goods: If goods (like electricity, gas, water, etc.) are supplied on an ongoing basis, often invoiced periodically, the time of supply is by each billing period or at least yearly. For utilities, each meter reading or invoice period ends a tax point. If continuous with no fixed end, the law says at least once a year you must create a tax point (EU rule). [vatcalc.com]
  • Hire-purchase or leasing goods: If it’s effectively a sale on installment, often treated as a supply of goods at start (VAT on total at start), but if it’s an operational lease, it’s a service with periodic tax points.
  • Transfer of own goods cross-border: If a Dutch business moves its stock to another EU country (without a sale yet, e.g. consignment stock), since 2020 the “quick fix” call-off stock rules might allow deferring tax until the actual call-off (see 15.2). Otherwise, the transfer itself is an intra-Community supply at time goods arrive in the other country, requiring a deemed sale at that time with 0% in NL and acquisition tax abroad.
  • Installations (supply with assembly): If a good is supplied with installation in another country, the time of supply might be completion of installation. Within NL, if a foreign supplier installs here, likely time of supply is when installation finished (since that’s when delivery to customer occurs).
  • Goods on consignment/approval: See 13.5 below – time of supply is when customer takes title/approval, or after a set period.

13.2 Services

For one-off services, VAT becomes chargeable at the time the service is completed or performed. If an invoice is issued earlier or payment received earlier, that creates the tax point for that portion just like goods:
  • If you invoice a service before finishing it, VAT is due on invoice date for the amount invoiced.
  • If you receive prepayment for a service, VAT on that amount is due at receipt (commonly for event tickets, subscriptions, etc., VAT is paid when money comes in).
If services are provided continuously or over a period, see next section (13.3). But for typical services like a consulting project or a repair job, the tax point is when the work is finished and thus the service is delivered to the customer.
Services often also have the rule (in EU law) that if the invoice is issued late, VAT is anyway due by the 15th of the month following the supply. The Netherlands requires that invoices for B2B transactions must be issued by the 15th of the month after supply. So effectively, by that time VAT must be accounted at the latest even if no invoice. [business.gov.nl]
Example: A freelancer completes a project on April 10 but doesn’t invoice until May 20. Officially, VAT became due by May 15 (15th of month after completion) even without invoice. The late invoice doesn’t delay VAT beyond that.

13.3 Continuous Services

For ongoing or continuous services (where no definite completion point or they extend over long periods), Dutch VAT law follows EU rules:
  • If a service is provided continuously over an extended period (longer than a year) without interim billing or payment, then a tax point is triggered at least at the end of each calendar year. This prevents indefinite delay of VAT. So by Dec 31 each year, the service is deemed supplied to that extent and VAT becomes due. [vatcalc.com]
  • If periodic invoices or payments are made (e.g. monthly subscription, quarterly consulting retainer), each period’s invoice/payment is the time of supply for that portion. Essentially it’s treated as a series of separate supplies per period.
  • For services like leases, subscriptions, maintenance contracts, etc., it’s common to invoice in advance per period. VAT is then due per invoice as issued (advance invoicing allowed because continuous service – the invoice date triggers tax).
Example: A 2-year consulting engagement with no clear end date but monthly payments – each monthly payment is a tax point when received/invoiced. If somehow nothing was invoiced or paid for over a year of work, then on Dec 31 a deemed supply for that year’s worth would require VAT.
Special continuous services: Telecommunication, broadcasting, and electronic services (TBE) provided to consumers could be continuous. Usually, telcos bill monthly, so it’s periodic. If not, one-year rule applies.
  • Also hire of equipment in continuous manner (like rent of a machine for 6 months) – if one payment at end, the service is completed at end (then it’s not exactly continuous beyond a year threshold; it ends at 6 months, so tax at completion or at invoice if earlier).
The big picture: continuous services should be taxed at least yearly or at intervals of payment – you cannot postpone VAT indefinitely.

13.4 Imports

For imports of goods, the time of supply (import) is when the goods enter the EU (are cleared into free circulation in the Netherlands). Specifically, VAT on imports becomes due at the moment of importation as defined by customs law – typically when the customs declaration is accepted and goods are released. In practice: [belastingdienst.nl]
  • If paying at the border, VAT is due then (often simultaneously with duties).
  • If you have Article 23 deferment, the import VAT is due in the periodic return covering that import. But the import itself is conceptually the tax point. The return for that period accounts for it (the return due date could be weeks later, but the liability arises at import time).
  • If goods are under customs warehousing and later released, the time of import is when they exit the warehouse into free circulation.
  • For import, there’s no invoice to wait for; it’s purely based on customs event.
For sequence: an import on (say) July 8 with Article 23 means that import VAT is reported in the July (monthly) or Q3 (quarterly) VAT return. If no deferment, the importer pays VAT on July 8 at customs.

13.5 Goods on Approval/Return

When goods are supplied on a “sale or return” basis or consignment stock – i.e. the customer only takes ownership if they decide to keep the goods after a trial period, or goods are sent to an agent who sells to third parties:
  • The time of supply is when the customer’s approval or purchase occurs (the moment the goods are definitively taken). Until then, the transfer of title hasn’t happened, so VAT can be deferred.
  • Dutch law historically had specific arrangements for consignment stock, but with the 2020 EU simplification for call-off stock (goods shipped to a known buyer under call-off arrangement to be taken within 12 months) – if conditions are met, the initial transfer to consignment is not taxed and the time of supply is when the customer removes the goods from stock for use. If after 12 months the goods haven’t been taken, then at that 12-month point a deemed supply occurs (tax point). [globalvatc…liance.com]
  • For goods sent on approval to a private customer (like try at home and return if not satisfied), the supplier should charge VAT only when it’s certain the sale is finalized (when the approval period ends and the customer keeps the item). If the customer returns the item within the allowed time, no sale took place (usually a credit).
  • If goods are delivered to an intermediary (consignee) with instructions to sell to third parties, VAT to final customer arises at each sale. The initial transfer to the consignee might not be a supply if certain conditions (consignment stock rules) – if not, Dutch VAT might consider it a supply to the consignee at some point. Under older rules (pre-2020), the transfer to a consignment warehouse for an unknown customer was a deemed supply after 3 months if not sold (the Netherlands had a simplification which it withdrew effective 2020 due to EU quick fix changes). Now quick fix standardized it for known customers. [vatcalc.com]
Summary for sale-or-return: The VAT tax point is when it’s clear a sale has occurred. If the arrangement is formalized (like documented trial period), the supplier will typically issue the invoice only after that period or issue a provisional invoice with no VAT and then final invoice with VAT once confirmed. The tax authority permits deferral in such arrangements because if the customer returns the goods, there’s no supply.
Important: if the approval period is too long or indefinite, the authorities might impose a maximum (the EU says 12 months for known call-off stock). If unknown buyer, the moment goods are assigned to an actual buyer triggers it.
Thus, companies using consignment should keep clear records of when goods are actually sold or returned, to determine the correct tax point and not overshoot allowed time.

Administrative rules: The Netherlands aligns with the EU requirement that a VAT invoice must be issued at the latest by the 15th of the month following the month of supply. This effectively sets an outer limit for the tax point recognition in practice (for invoice-based accounting). Businesses often simply use invoice date as tax point (as long as they invoice promptly). However, if they delay invoicing beyond that limit, the tax law would treat it as if an invoice were issued by that deadline. So it’s wise to invoice timely to not accidentally miss reporting VAT. [business.gov.nl]
Summary:
  • For a typical sale of goods, time of supply is delivery (or invoice/pay if earlier).
  • For a typical service, time of completion (or invoice/pay if earlier).
  • Continuous supplies: periodic or at least annual.
  • Imports: at import entry.
  • Sale on approval: when approved or period lapses.
These rules ensure VAT is accounted in the correct period. They are important for determining in which VAT return to include a transaction. For example, if goods delivered on Dec 29 but invoiced Jan 2, technically VAT belongs to December period because delivery happened then (and an invoice should have been by Jan 15). Many businesses would accrue it in December return even if invoiced in January (or some might date the invoice Dec 31 to simplify).
The Dutch VAT Act (per EU) tries to align tax point with invoice timing to keep things practical, but if not invoiced timely, the legal supply date governs.
Finally, note special cases:
  • Intra-EU supplies: Time of supply is when goods depart NL (or invoice if earlier). If departure straddles period end, one must be careful. The threshold of 15th next month also applies – you should issue invoice by then for an intra-EU dispatch.
The above ensures all businesses in the chain account for VAT at roughly the same point (so one’s output is other’s input in same period typically).

14. VAT Invoicing Requirements

Proper invoicing is fundamental in the VAT system: an invoice serves as the evidence for output tax due and input tax deduction. The Netherlands follows the EU Directive’s invoicing rules, with a few national specifics. Key invoicing requirements include when to issue invoices, what details must be on them, allowances for electronic invoices, rules for simplified invoices, self-billing, record retention, and corrections.

14.1 Invoice Issuance Deadlines

Dutch VAT law requires that a VAT invoice must be issued for any taxable supply of goods or services to another business or legal entity. In B2B and cross-border scenarios, invoices are obligatory. For B2C sales, an invoice is generally not required except in special cases (such as distance selling of new vehicles to EU customers, or if a private customer requests one, or for certain sectors). Retail sales to consumers typically use receipts without full VAT invoice info and that’s acceptable. [business.gov.nl]
The deadline for issuing a VAT invoice is the 15th day of the month following the month in which the supply took place. This aligns with EU rules. For example, if you delivered goods on July 20, you must issue the invoice by August 15 at latest. In practice, most businesses invoice immediately or within a few days of supply. [business.gov.nl], [avalara.com]
For continuous supplies or ongoing services that are invoiced periodically, each invoice covers supplies in that period and must abide by the same rule (likely invoice at period end or soon after).
If an invoice is not issued timely, aside from breaching admin requirements, the tax point is still enforced as if it were (the buyer could still deduct if they have other proof, but usually both sides want a timely invoice).
Also, if a down payment is received, an invoice for that advance should be issued upon receipt of payment (failing that, by the 15th of next month after payment). For final or balance payments, invoice by 15th of next month after supply completion.
Self-billing arrangements (customer issues invoice on supplier’s behalf) must also follow these timelines – the customer must issue the self-billed invoice by the 15th of month after supply.
Invoices for intra-EU supplies (0% VAT) and exports should also be issued by this deadline, as they need to appear in the same period’s EC Sales List or export documentation timeline.

14.2 Required Contents

Every VAT invoice in the Netherlands must contain specific details mandated by Article 35a of the VAT Act (implementing the EU list). The essential information includes: [business.gov.nl], [avalara.com]
  • Invoice date (issue date). [business.gov.nl]
  • Sequential invoice number that uniquely identifies the invoice (usually sequential series). Invoices must be numbered in sequence with no gaps; if not, corrections needed because customers can’t deduct without a proper number ref. [business.gov.nl]
  • Supplier’s full name and address. [business.gov.nl]
  • Customer’s full name and address. [business.gov.nl]
  • Supplier’s VAT identification number (BTW-id). [business.gov.nl]
  • Customer’s VAT numberrequired if the customer is liable for VAT (e.g. in an intra-EU supply or a reverse-charged service). So for B2B domestic with normal VAT, customer VAT number is not mandatory on invoice (though often included). But if it’s an intra-Community supply (0% VAT), listing the buyer’s foreign VAT ID is required to justify 0%. Also in any reverse charge situation, customer VAT must be there and a notation that VAT reversed. [business.gov.nl]
  • Description of goods or services supplied. This should be clear enough to identify the nature of the supply. [business.gov.nl]
  • Quantity of goods / extent of services supplied. E.g., number of units, hours of service, etc., or “lump sum consultancy for July 2026”. [business.gov.nl]
  • Date of supply (or period of supply) if different from invoice date. Often the delivery date or service completion date is included, especially if it falls in a different month than the invoice. [business.gov.nl]
  • Net amount per rate or exemption: the taxable amount for the supply, broken down by VAT rate category. If multiple VAT rates apply on one invoice (e.g. some goods at 21%, some at 9%), they should be listed separately with their own net amounts. [avalara.com]
  • Applied VAT rate(s) – e.g. 21% or 9%. If an exemption or 0% applies, it should be indicated (with a note like “0% (intra-Community supply)” or “VAT exempt (Article xxx)”). [avalara.com]
  • VAT amount payable, in euros. As noted in Section 9, if the invoice currency is non-euro, the VAT amount must be shown in EUR. The total VAT for each VAT rate must be stated. [business.gov.nl], [avalara.com]
  • Total gross amount (optional but customary to give total including VAT for clarity).
  • Reason for VAT exemption or reverse charge if applicable. For instance, if 0%, mention “0% VAT (export outside EU)” or if reverse charged, mention “VAT reverse-charged, Article 12(3) Dutch VAT Act” or simply “BTW verlegd”. [avalara.com]
  • If a fiscal representative was involved for a foreign supplier, the rep’s VAT number should appear.
  • For simplified invoices (see 14.4), fewer details suffice (see below).
These requirements ensure the invoice provides all information needed for both seller and buyer to handle VAT. The buyer needs a valid invoice with these details to claim input VAT. If something vital is missing (like supplier VAT number or invoice number), the tax office can deny the deduction until corrected. [business.gov.nl]
Dutch law basically matches the EU list, so nothing too unusual: one must include address (PO box alone is not enough, usually need a physical address affiliated), show VAT amounts, etc.
One notable item: KvK number – The Dutch Chamber of Commerce (KvK) number of the supplier is also required on invoices by separate regulation (for general business identification). Business.gov explicitly lists to include the Dutch Business Register number (KvK-nummer) if you have one, as per national law. So an invoice from a Dutch company typically shows: KvK number, BTW-ID, and address. [business.gov.nl]
Language/Currency: Invoices can be in any language, but if a foreign language might hinder audit, the tax office could request translation. Usually English, Dutch, German are fine. Currency can be any, but VAT in EUR (discussed in Section 9).

14.3 E-Invoicing and Digital Signature Rules

Electronic invoicing (e-invoicing) is allowed in the Netherlands and treated equally to paper invoicing as long as certain conditions of authenticity and integrity are met. Key points: [business.gov.nl]
  • No mandate for B2B e-invoicing (except B2G, see below), but the Netherlands encourages digital invoices to reduce costs.
  • Authenticity of origin and integrity of content must be guaranteed from issuing to end of retention period. Dutch companies can achieve this by using methods such as:
    • Advanced electronic signature on e-invoice,
    • Exchange via Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) with agreed security,
    • Or any business controls that create a reliable audit trail linking invoices to actual supply. The EU allows businesses to ensure via internal controls that an invoice is valid – NL accepts that approach. This means you don’t have to sign or EDI an invoice, you can send a PDF by email and rely on your normal accounting controls to ensure it’s legit. [jbfiscalco…ulting.com]
  • Consent: The customer must accept electronic invoicing. Using e-invoices is only allowed if the buyer agrees to receive them electronically. Agreement can be implicit (if the customer pays from the e-invoice without objection, etc., that’s considered acceptance). [business.gov.nl]
  • Formats: Netherlands has embraced the EU Peppol network and UBL format for e-invoices, especially for government procurement. For B2B, PDF by email is extremely common and accepted.
  • Digital signature: Not mandatory on e-invoices, but if used, it should be an advanced electronic signature or similar to meet authenticity requirement. Many companies simply rely on emailing PDFs from their official system (no signature, but trust built by sending from known email and cross-checking purchase orders). [jbfiscalco…ulting.com]
  • Government e-invoicing: As of 2019, suppliers to the Dutch central government must send invoices electronically via a specified format (either Peppol BIS format or a web portal). This B2G e-invoicing requirement stems from EU Directive 2014/55/EU. So, if you supply a ministry or a central government agency, you cannot send paper/PDF, you must e-invoice through their platform (often in UBL format). [business.gov.nl], [business.gov.nl]
  • Digital signatures on paper invoices are not typically used; they apply only to e-invoices for authenticity.
In summary, electronic invoices are allowed and widely used in NL. There is no requirement to print paper. Provided the data is the same required content, an invoice may be sent as PDF or XML, etc. Companies must ensure the data’s integrity; tax auditors will want to see that the e-invoices stored match what was originally sent/received.

14.4 Simplified Invoices

The Netherlands permits simplified VAT invoices (vereenvoudigde factuur) in certain circumstances. A simplified invoice requires only minimal details and can be used when: [business.gov.nl]
  • The invoice total (including VAT) does not exceed €100, or [business.gov.nl]
  • It is a credit note correcting a previous full invoice (the credit note can refer to the original invoice rather than restating all details). [business.gov.nl]
For such small amounts or credit adjustments, an invoice needs to contain only:
  • Issue date
  • Supplier’s name and address
  • Identification of goods/services
  • VAT amount
  • A reference if it’s a credit to a previous invoice (invoice number of original). [business.gov.nl]
Customer name and address and VAT number aren’t required on a simplified invoice. This is typically used for cash sale receipts or till receipts under €100 which can serve as simplified invoices. [business.gov.nl]
However, simplified invoices cannot be used for certain transactions despite low value:
  • Intra-Community supplies of goods (even €50 sale to a French business must have a full invoice if zero-rated). [business.gov.nl]
  • Distance sales or other cross-border B2C where the customer country’s VAT applies via reverse-charge etc.
  • Supplies where reverse charge is applied to the customer. So basically, if the situation demands showing a VAT number or special notation, you can’t use a simplified format. [business.gov.nl]
For example, a taxi ride under €100 can be with a simplified invoice (many taxi receipts don’t list the passenger info). But a sale of €80 of goods to a German customer as an intra-Community supply cannot be simplified because it’s cross-border 0% and needs the formal invoice with both VAT IDs.
Cash register receipts in retail: The Netherlands does not require issuing a full VAT invoice to consumers at checkout. A till receipt acts as a simplified invoice; it typically shows the VAT amount or rate for each item. If a consumer later needs a full invoice (e.g. a sole proprietor buys something and wants to deduct VAT), they can request one.

14.5 Self-Billing

Self-billing is when the customer prepares the invoice on behalf of the supplier. This is allowed in the Netherlands under certain conditions: [business.gov.nl]
  • There must be a prior agreement between supplier and customer that the customer will issue the invoices for the supplies. [business.gov.nl]
  • The self-billed invoice must still contain all required info (including both parties’ details and “self-billing” mention or such).
  • The supplier must accept each invoice – typically the agreement covers that they will accept these invoices issued by the customer.
  • The invoice should state e.g. “Self-billing invoice” to clarify it’s issued by the buyer.
  • The numbering can follow the buyer’s sequence or agreed sequence, but it should not conflict with supplier’s own sequences.
  • The invoice is then treated as if issued by supplier – the supplier must account for output VAT as per the self-bill, and the customer deducts input VAT.
Self-billing is common in some industries (e.g. agriculture, where buyers issue statements to many small farmers, or construction sub-contracting). It reduces admin for the supplier.
In NL, self-billing follows EU rules (Art. 224 of Directive). As long as there’s a mutual arrangement and an acceptance procedure, it’s allowed. The supplier remains responsible to ensure VAT is correct on that invoice.

14.6 Retention Period

Invoice records are part of the required VAT administration. In the Netherlands, businesses must keep all books, records, and invoices for at least 7 years. This is the standard retention period for tax records (the fiscal period). However, invoices relating to immovable property (real estate) must be kept for 10 years, likely because capital goods adjustment can last 10 years on property and long-term lease/opt-out track records. [business.gov.nl]
The retention period clock starts from end of the calendar year in which the invoice was issued. So an invoice from March 2026 should be kept until end of 2033 (7 full years after 2026). For property-related invoices (like large building renovations etc.), until end of 2036 (10 years).
Records can be kept in electronic form – scanning paper invoices and storing electronically is fine (no need to keep hardcopies) as long as the content remains identical and readable and can be reproduced if needed. If originally electronic, must keep electronically. The integrity must remain (no alteration). [business.gov.nl]
Also due to GDPR, companies can’t keep personal data longer than necessary. Business.gov notes if you want to keep data beyond mandatory retention, you need a reason and must inform customers. [business.gov.nl]
So practically:
  • Keep purchase and sales invoices, credit notes, import and export documents, etc. for 7/10 years in an accessible archive. Tax auditors will request these in case of audit.
  • Also recommended to keep bank statements, contracts, etc., but the law specifically mentions invoices and “records” (which include general ledgers, etc.).

14.7 Invoice Correction Methods

If an invoice is found to be incorrect or changes are needed (e.g. wrong amount, pricing adjustment, goods returned), how to correct it?
  • The usual method is by issuing a credit note (credit invoice) referencing the original invoice. The credit note should contain a reference like “Credit for invoice #1234 dated X” and show negative amounts (or positive in case raising an extra charge, sometimes called a debit note). As per Business.gov, a simplified invoice (credit note) must refer to the initial invoice if rectifying it. [business.gov.nl]
  • The credit note effectively cancels or adjusts the VAT from the original. The supplier will reduce output VAT accordingly in the period it issues the credit, and the customer reduces their input VAT claim.
  • Alternatively, one can issue an adjustment invoice (debit or credit) with incremental amounts. But typically it’s done as credit for full reversal then new invoice if needed.
  • If an invoice simply had a minor clerical error (like typo in address), it’s usually not critical for VAT but could be corrected by reissuing the invoice or noting the error.
  • If an invoice was completely wrong (e.g. should have been zero-rated but VAT charged), the solution is to issue a credit for the full wrong invoice and then issue a correct new invoice.
Important that the correction invoice itself meets requirements (like sequential number in the series, date, etc.). If it’s a credit specifically, it can be a simplified invoice if it clearly references the original invoice details and where needed shows original invoice’s number/date. [business.gov.nl]
The Netherlands, like other EU countries, uses the term “credit nota” or “creditfactuur” for credit note. There is no special form; a normal invoice format but negative values suffices, or label “credit”.
Self-billing credit notes: If the customer had self-billed originally and now goods returned, typically the customer would also self-bill a credit (or supplier might issue an official credit note – depends on agreement).
There is no requirement to get tax office approval for crediting VAT. One just needs to ensure the adjustment is linked to an original accounted VAT so that no misuse (like claiming credit for something not paid in the first place). The administrative decree says an invoice that lacks numbering must be rectified because otherwise input VAT might be denied. [business.gov.nl]
Bad debt relief (unpaid invoices) is not handled by credit note to customer (since you’re not actually crediting the customer, you’re just writing off, see Section 15.5), that’s done via adjustment in VAT return after conditions, not an invoice correction per se.
Summary: To correct an invoice:
  • For price reductions, returns: issue a credit invoice referencing the original.
  • For undercharges: either issue a supplemental invoice for the extra amount or cancel & reissue fully.
  • Keep cross-reference in records so audit trail is clear (which invoice is being adjusted by which credit).
One should never simply alter an invoice after sending (like do not white-out or edit an already issued invoice number and resend) – instead, issue a proper credit or new invoice so sequence and audit trail remain intact. [business.gov.nl]
In conclusion, Dutch VAT invoicing rules align with common EU practice: timely issuance, mandatory content (to ensure both parties know how much VAT and at what rate), allowances for small transactions and modern electronic forms, requirement to keep them for years, and use of credit notes for corrections. Adhering to these rules is critical as mistakes can lead to input VAT rejections or penalties. The Belastingdienst actively checks proper invoicing during audits because fraudulent invoices are a main mechanism of VAT fraud; hence, compliance is enforced to maintain system integrity. [avalara.com]

15. Compliance and Deductions

This section covers various compliance obligations and specific rules affecting the right to deduct VAT and how VAT is accounted in special scenarios. The Netherlands, under EU law, grants businesses the right to deduct input VAT on costs used for their taxable activities, but with notable exceptions and adjustments. It also has implemented numerous specific schemes (reverse charge mechanisms, stock arrangements, reliefs, etc.) to streamline compliance or prevent abuse. Below, we detail key points:

15.1 Right to Deduct Input VAT and Key Exceptions

General rule: A VAT-registered business in the Netherlands can deduct (recover) the VAT paid on purchases of goods and services to the extent these are used for making taxable supplies (standard, reduced, or zero-rated). Input tax is normally credited in the VAT return of the period in which the supplier’s invoice date lies (provided one holds a valid invoice with VAT stated). If a company only makes VAT-able sales, it can reclaim all VAT on costs incurred for the business. However, there are important exceptions and limitations: [kreston.com] [business.gov.nl]
  • Exempt activities: No deduction is allowed for VAT on inputs used for exempt supplies. If a business has mixed activities (taxable and exempt outputs), it must apportion input VAT. Typically, a pro-rata percentage based on turnover is used, unless a more precise method is required. For example, a company providing both taxable consulting and exempt insurance brokerage would recover only the proportion of VAT corresponding to its taxable turnover share (with some adjustments if certain inputs are directly attributable). The Dutch tax authorities often insist on attribution wherever possible and using a pro-rata for common overhead. [kreston.com]
  • Private or non-business use: Input VAT on purchases that are not for business purposes (or not for the business’s economic activity) is not deductible. E.g., VAT on buying a personal car not used for the business is not claimable. Similarly, any identified private portion must be excluded from deduction. Netherlands requires year-end adjustments for private use of goods (like company cars, see below) which effectively claw back VAT for that private portion. [tax-consul…tional.com] [business.gov.nl]
  • Blocked expenditures: Dutch law (following EU options) explicitly disallows deduction on certain expenses even if used in a business:
    • Business entertainment and representation costs: VAT on expenses like taking clients to dinner, providing entertainment (food, drink, accommodation, amusement) is not deductible in NL (common across EU; these are considered consumption, not strictly necessary for making supplies). There is often a small exception if the entertainment is very low value or for staff consumption (but Netherlands specifically lists “food and drinks in the hospitality industry” as no deduction unless onward charged). [tax-consul…tional.com]
    • Gifts: VAT on business gifts above a certain small value is not deductible. The threshold is €227 per recipient per year. If you give gifts to a client exceeding that, you cannot deduct the VAT on those gifts (or you must output VAT on them as deemed supply). Under that limit, gifts are minor and you can deduct or ignore output VAT. [tax-consul…tional.com]
    • Passenger cars (personal use portion): While leasing or buying company cars for business is deductible, the private use of company cars triggers an adjustment (see below) effectively reducing the net deduction to account for personal use. Alternatively, some countries block 50% of car VAT by default if any private use (Netherlands does not flat-out block but uses an output tax on private use approach).
    • Goods/services used to make exempt financial or insurance supplies: those are not deductible (as per exempt rule).
    • Some specific taxable but still blocked items: e.g., VAT on tobacco or luxuries given to staff might be non-deductible if considered gifts.
  • Staff benefits: VAT on certain employee benefits that are not strictly business use can be limited. For example, free meals for staff – if it’s beyond a trivial amount, that input VAT might not be fully deductible (some companies treat it as partially for employee’s private consumption). The gift rule of €227 per person/year covers e.g. non-business gifts to employees or business relations beyond which no full deduction. [tax-consul…tional.com]
Essentially, NL follows that VAT on costs related to fully taxable outputs is recoverable, but VAT on costs related to VAT-exempt outputs or to final consumption (entertainment, gifts, personal use) is not. If mixed use, one calculates a fair portion.
Examples:
  • A company sells consultancy (21% VAT) and also makes some exempt educational courses (no VAT). If 80% of turnover is consultancy, it can reclaim ~80% of its overhead input VAT; any inputs solely for the exempt courses (e.g. specific trainer fees for the courses) are non-deductible.
  • VAT on the office rent (21%) is recoverable if the company’s output is mostly taxable consulting – yes for pro-rata portion. If the company were entirely exempt (e.g. a bank’s office rent), the landlord would likely opt to tax or else the bank couldn’t recover that rent VAT.
  • VAT on coffee machine or office lunch catering: often considered not deductible as it’s consumption by staff (some companies handle small things differently but by rule it’s nondeductible).
  • Buying a van 100% for deliveries – deductible. Buying a sedan that the director also uses weekends – deductible on business portion; then adjust for private kilometers at year-end (see 15.9).
Administration: To exercise deduction, one must have a valid VAT invoice from the supplier (with their VAT number, etc.). If invoice is missing required info, deduction can be challenged until corrected. [business.gov.nl]
Also, the VAT must be properly charged by the supplier to be deductible. If the supplier incorrectly charged VAT (where it should have been exempt or reverse-charged), the buyer might not legally deduct it.
Partial exemption calculations: The Netherlands historically allowed some input VAT allocation methods like the “actual use” method if appropriate. Pro-rata is default: e.g. if a bank has 10% taxable (like advisory services to businesses where it opts to tax or zero-rated exports outside EU) and 90% exempt (domestic financial services), it can only deduct 10% of its common input VAT. There’s also often a sectoral agreement on certain overhead.
Capital goods adjustment: further detail in 15.10 – big assets’ input VAT is adjusted if use changes over years.
Conclusion: Dutch companies should segregate input VAT in their accounting as:
  • Deductible (business/taxable),
  • Non-deductible (exempt or entertainment),
  • or partially deductible (apply ratio).

15.2 Call-Off Stock Arrangements

“Call-off stock” refers to a scenario where a supplier transfers goods to a warehouse near or at the customer’s location in another country, and the customer draws down (calls off) stock as needed, taking ownership at that point. Before 2020, this often required the supplier to VAT-register in the customer’s country. As part of EU “Quick Fixes” from Jan 2020, a uniform simplification for call-off stock was implemented, and the Netherlands adopted it (and simultaneously withdrew its older national consignment stock rules). [globalvatc…liance.com]
Under the EU call-off stock simplification (Article 17a of EU Directive, implemented in NL Article 3b VAT Act):
  • When an EU supplier moves goods from their country (say NL) to stock at a known customer in another member state, no VAT is due upon arrival of goods in the customer’s country. It’s not treated as a taxable transfer or local supply, provided certain conditions are met: [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • The goods are shipped with the intention of later supplying them to a known buyer (that buyer’s VAT number in the destination country is known at dispatch). [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • The supplier has no fixed establishment in the destination country.
    • The goods must be taken by the intended buyer within 12 months of arrival. [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • The supplier records the movement in a special call-off stock register and reports it in the EC Sales List (indicating it’s call-off stock). [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • If goods aren’t called off within 12 months, or are taken by a different buyer than intended, the simplification breaks and a taxable transfer is deemed (meaning the supplier likely has to register retroactively). [globalvatc…liance.com]
If conditions are met, the transaction is treated as:
  • At the moment the customer calls off (withdraws) the goods from stock and thereby the title transfers, the supplier makes an intra-Community supply (ICS) from NL to that customer, zero-rated with NL, and the customer effect an intra-Community acquisition (ICA) in their country, accounting for VAT. [globalvatc…liance.com]
  • No intermediary VAT registration is needed by supplier in customer’s country.
Effectively, it defers the intra-EU supply moment until the actual drawn supply, while still treating it as a direct cross-border sale supplier->customer.
The Netherlands implemented this exactly. So:
  • Compliance: A Dutch supplier using call-off stock must keep a register of goods shipped under this rule, listing details like quantity, description, shipment date, intended acquirer’s VAT ID, arrival date in other country, and eventual call-off date or return date. This register can be requested in audit. [globalvatc…liance.com]
  • The Dutch EC Sales List (ICP opgaaf) has fields to note call-off stock. The supplier also likely marks the movement on its ESL when goods first transferred (some EU guidance says report when moving stock with special code, and also then normal ICS when actual sale).
  • If the goods are not taken within 12 months, on day 1 after 12 months, the supplier must treat it as a deemed intra-Community supply to themselves (i.e. they would need to register in that country and do an ICA themselves). The quick fix says 12 months is max period goods can remain under the simplification. [globalvatc…liance.com]
  • If the intended buyer is replaced by another (say original can’t take them but another in that country does), if the replacement is identified, some states require the supplier to account for a transfer and immediate supply to new buyer. Actually, per EU, if a different VAT registered buyer takes them, then original conditions failed (since “intended acquirer” changed), so it’s treated as a transfer at the time of substitution and a local supply to new buyer – requiring registration.
The benefit for compliance is significant: neither supplier nor customer suffer immediate VAT on moving stock across the border (which normally would have been an ICA for supplier requiring foreign VAT).
The Netherlands had previously a consignment stock simplification (with 3-month rule and requirement to list on EC Sales List after 3 months if not sold). That was removed to align with new EU rule.
Example: A Dutch company sends 100 machines to a depôt in Germany for one specific German client’s use over the year. The Dutch company does not register in Germany. It records the shipment as call-off stock to Customer X’s VAT in Germany. Initially, no VAT event in Germany (just recordkeeping). Each time the German client takes machines (say 20 machines in March, 30 in June, etc.), the Dutch supplier issues an invoice for an intra-Community supply of 20 or 30 machines at those times, zero-rating them in NL, and the German client does a domestic acquisition accounting 19% VAT and deducts it. By March and June those become official supplies. The remaining stock if any not taken by next year triggers adjustment.
This arrangement must be clearly arranged between parties (the client likely gives its VAT ID to the supplier for call-off registration and agrees to call-off within 12 months).
The Netherlands also requires the supplier to mention the relevant transactions on their VAT return and EU sales listings. The buyer will mention acquisitions once they take title.

15.3 Domestic and Cross-Border Reverse Charge Mechanisms

Reverse charge means shifting the VAT liability from the supplier to the customer. Netherlands applies reverse-charge in a few situations:
  • Cross-border B2B services (general rule): For most services provided by a non-resident to a Dutch VAT-registered business, the place of supply is the Netherlands (because customer is in NL) and the Dutch customer must reverse charge the VAT. The foreign supplier does not charge NL VAT. The Dutch buyer accounts for VAT (output and input simultaneously if fully taxable) in its return. This is the EU standard B2B rule, not a special mechanism, but effectively a reverse charge. No registration of foreign supplier needed. Example: A US consultancy firm gives advice to a Dutch company – the Dutch company must self-assess 21% VAT on the fee, though often no net payable if it can deduct it. [globalvatc…liance.com]
  • Non-established suppliers of goods in NL (domestic reverse charge): Article 12(3) of Dutch VAT Act provides that if a foreign business (with no NL establishment) supplies goods or services in the Netherlands to a Dutch VAT-registered customer, the VAT can be reverse-charged to the customer. This relieves the foreign supplier from having to register and charge VAT in many cases. For example, a German company installs equipment in NL for a Dutch factory – this is a Dutch local supply of goods+services, but since supplier has no NL establishment, the invoice can say “VAT reverse-charged.” The Dutch client then accounts for the VAT (and deducts it). The conditions: the supplier has no NL VAT registration/permanent base and the Dutch recipient is VAT-registered and has agreed to reverse charge. (If the Dutch customer is not VAT-registered or an exempt business that cannot reverse-charge, the foreign supplier might have to register and charge VAT instead.) [globalvatc…liance.com]
  • Specific domestic sectors (Article 12(5) VAT Act): Netherlands mandates reverse charge for certain high-risk or special sectors to combat fraud:
    • Construction work and labor supply in construction: If a subcontractor provides construction services to a contractor (who is a VAT entrepreneur), the VAT is reverse-charged to the contractor. This covers building work, hiring out personnel for construction, etc. The subcontractor’s invoice states “BTW verlegd” (VAT reversed) and 0% on it. The main contractor accounts for the VAT. This was introduced to prevent missing trader fraud among subcontractors. [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • Supply of specific goods like scrap metal, waste, and recyclable materials: Reverse charge applies on domestic supplies of scrap metals, old materials, and industrial waste to VAT entrepreneurs. The buyer of scrap accounts for VAT (common to prevent fraud in scrap sector). [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • Sale of used materials like semiconductors and phones above threshold: The Netherlands, per EU allowance, applies reverse charge on domestic sales of certain electronics (mobile phones, computer chips, laptops, game consoles) if the invoice amount for those goods is ≥ €10,000. The rule aims to counter VAT carousel fraud in electronics. If one business sells €15,000 of smartphones to another business, they don’t charge VAT – buyer reverses it. If under €10k, normal VAT. [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • Emission trading allowances: Reverse charge for supply of greenhouse gas emission rights to taxable businesses (another high-fraud area). [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • Real estate – opted taxable property supplies: In some cases where normally property sale is exempt but parties opt to tax (like commercial property transfer), the VAT may be reverse-charged to the buyer (particularly if buyer is a property investor with full VAT recovery). The snippet suggests foreclosures of real property also under reverse charge. [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • Telecommunication services by wholesaler: If telecom services are supplied to resellers in NL, reverse charge can apply to avoid fraud with phone card trading. [globalvatc…liance.com]
    • Gas/Electricity certificates trade: likely included in that list of Article 12(5) items. [globalvatc…liance.com]
These domestic reverse-charge rules mean the invoice from supplier says no VAT charged, cite legal basis, and the buyer must account for it. They are intended to remove the weak link where the supplier might disappear without remitting VAT.
  • Intra-EU acquisitions of goods: Not exactly “reverse charge,” but similarly the Dutch business receiving goods from EU accounts for VAT on its VAT return (which it normally deducts same return). So it’s a self-charge mechanism indeed.
The customer’s obligations under reverse charge: They must calculate VAT on the net amount of the purchase at the applicable rate, report it as output VAT (usually box 2 or 4 of NL VAT return depending on EU or domestic reverse charge), and simultaneously claim it as input VAT (if entitled), so often net effect zero. If partially exempt, they can only deduct corresponding portion, meaning reverse charge can create some VAT due if the customer cannot fully deduct.
Invoice wording: The invoice by supplier should include “VAT reverse-charged” (in Dutch “BTW verlegd”) and reference to the article or category. For example: “BTW verlegd volgens art. 12(3) Wet OB – afnemer voldoet de omzetbelasting.”
Notable: If a reverse charge situation is incorrectly handled (supplier charges VAT when it should have reversed), the customer might not be allowed to deduct it because legally the supplier should not have charged it. Correction or credit note needed in such case.
Cross-border purchases of services, as noted, the Dutch buyer must self-assess if it receives any service from abroad under general B2B rule. Similarly, a Dutch company receiving goods installation from foreign entity or intangible purchases.
Summary: Reverse charge simplifies compliance:
  • It spares foreign suppliers from needing NL VAT numbers for one-off projects or bulky sectors.
  • It prevents VAT fraud in selected industries (construction, scrap, electronics, etc.) by eliminating the stage where seller collects VAT.
  • The Netherlands presumably has an official list of which goods/services fall under domestic reverse charge, referenced by the Implementing Decree (Art 24b/ba/bb as seen in snippet). [globalvatc…liance.com]

15.4 Treatment of Cash Discounts

Cash discounts (e.g. “2% off if paid within 10 days”) affect the taxable amount. The Dutch VAT Act stipulates that VAT is due on the actual amount paid for the supply – so if a cash discount is taken, the supplier should not end up paying VAT on the portion discounted. Key points:
  • If at the time of invoicing the cash discount is offered but not yet certain if the customer will take it, the usual approach is invoice the full amount, then if the customer pays early and deducts the discount, the supplier must adjust the VAT accordingly.
  • In practice, a supplier might:
    • Either invoice the full amount and later issue a credit note for the discount’s VAT portion once the customer pays early, or
    • Upfront show both amounts: invoices often say “Total €1000, 2% discount (€20) if payment within X days”. If the customer pays €980, the supplier can treat €980 as the taxable base.
  • The supplier then should reduce output VAT by the VAT on the €20 discount. This is usually done via a credit note: credit €20 net + €4.20 VAT = €24.20 credit to nullify that part (if originally invoiced and recognized VAT on €1000, they’d credited the difference).
  • The customer, if they took the discount, can only deduct VAT on what they actually paid (so they’d likely deduct only on €980 net).
  • If the discount is known at issuance (like trade discount), one can invoice net of discount directly.
In Netherlands, this is standard EU practice: the taxable amount is the final amount after any discounts granted at the time of supply. Article 80 of EU directive and Dutch rules allow reduction of taxable amount for prompt payment discounts.
No specific separate mention in sources, but business.gov implies “you do not always have to state VAT if you do not have to charge VAT to customers (exempt) or small businesses scheme,” but nothing directly about discounts. However, logically: If the buyer qualifies and takes discount, the supplier must ensure not to pay undue VAT. Usually by credit note.
Accounting: The supplier when preparing VAT return for that period will include the net after discount if known or adjust next period if credit issued next period. The tax authorities accept adjustment as long as documentation supports that discount was actually earned by payment terms.
If a discount is not taken (customer pays late), then no adjustment, full VAT stands.
Settlement discounts or bonus (year-end volume rebates): these are often handled by issuing a bonus credit note at year-end with VAT. E.g., if total purchases get 5% rebate, supplier issues a credit note for 5% of year’s purchases plus VAT. That reduces their output VAT for that period and the buyer reduces their input accordingly (or claim if they hadn’t, depending).
Conclusion: Cash discounts reduce the taxable base. The compliance point is ensuring a credit note or adjustment to reflect the actual consideration.

15.5 Bad Debt Relief Conditions

If a customer fails to pay an invoice, the supplier in the Netherlands can claim bad debt relief – a refund of the output VAT that had been declared on a sale that turned out uncollectible. Under Dutch rules:
  • A supplier becomes entitled to adjust (reclaim) the VAT on a receivable that is definitively uncollectible (bad debt) once a certain time passes or bankruptcy is confirmed. Specifically, if an invoice remains unpaid 12 months after its due date, it is considered a bad debt for VAT purposes in NL. [vatupdate.com]
  • The supplier can then reduce their output VAT by the VAT on that invoice (effectively get a refund from tax authority for VAT they paid but never received from buyer). [vatupdate.com]
  • This typically is done through the VAT return: by filling a supplementary return (suppletie) or adjusting the current return with a negative output entry to claim back that VAT. [vatupdate.com]
  • The deadline to claim is generally up to one year after the due date (as per that source), meaning you should claim it promptly after the 12 months have passed. [vatupdate.com]
  • If subsequently the customer pays (even partially), then the VAT on the amount paid must be re-accounted (or the earlier relief partially reversed).
In 2023, the Netherlands updated the procedure: As of 1 Jan 2025, they require submission of a supplementary return within 8 weeks of discovering an error including uncollectible debt (but specifically, a news suggests a formal procedure: but 2024 news said they aim to simplify that one can adjust in regular return now). Possibly now they allow to adjust in current return after 1 year instead of separate claim.
Anyway, conditions:
  • Supplier must demonstrate that efforts to collect were made and the debt is indeed doubtful or written off.
  • A formal bankruptcy or court declaration of uncollectibility is strong evidence, but not strictly needed if >1 year overdue.
The VATupdate snippet confirms after 12 months aging, can reclaim via regular return automatically. And the claim must typically be within 1 year after the payment due date (but likely they can claim even later via suppletie if missed timeline, as EU Court decisions allow that up to maybe 5 years in some cases, but NL might limit by requiring timely claim). [vatupdate.com]
For the customer (buyer) side, if the buyer had deducted VAT on an invoice they didn’t end up paying, after 1 year they are supposed to adjust and repay that input VAT. The snippet implies “excess VAT deducted must be repaid if invoice not paid“. Netherlands introduced a rule: if a business doesn’t pay their supplier’s invoice within one year, they must output the VAT they claimed (so they cannot benefit from deduction if they never paid the tax to supplier). This symmetric measure was introduced to align with EU law changes around 2017. [vatupdate.com]
So:
  • Supplier: Output VAT can be reclaimed after 1 year of non-payment.
  • Customer: Input VAT must be corrected (paid back) if not paid after 1 year. If they later pay, they can reclaim then.
This ensures VAT isn’t a tool for financing or fraud (someone takes input credit and never pays vendor, now they must give it back after a year).
Process: Historically, a supplier would fill form “VAT refund for bad debt” or just net it on the return line. Now likely they can adjust in the periodic return of the period when 12 months passed, showing negative output VAT.
Example: Supplier A sold goods in Jan 2025, €121 incl VAT (€21 VAT). Customer never pays. By Feb 2026 (1 year after due), Supplier A includes -€21 in its Q1 2026 VAT return to reclaim that €21. Meanwhile, if Customer had taken a €21 input credit in Jan 2025 but still hasn’t paid by Jan 2026, Customer must add €21 to its output VAT in Jan 2026 (effectively nullifying the earlier deduction). If the customer eventually pays in mid-2026, then in that period, Supplier A would then re-declare €21 output VAT (because they finally got paid) and Customer reclaims €21 input.
Important: The relief is only for B2B or B2C credit sales where VAT was accounted. If it was an exempt or zero-rated sale, no VAT to relieve. And if partial payment came, relieve proportionally only the unpaid part.
Conclusion: The Netherlands provides bad debt relief after one year, making VAT not a burden on the supplier in case of non-payment, and also closes the loop so buyers can’t keep deductions on unpaid bills. This policy was streamlined in 2017 by making it automatic after one year (previously needed demonstration of efforts or official write-off, but now age triggers presumption of uncollectible).

15.6 Import VAT Deferment Schemes

The Netherlands offers a well-known import VAT deferment called the Article 23 permit (Art. 23 Wet OB). This scheme allows importers to postpone paying import VAT at the border and instead report it on their periodic VAT return (where it can be simultaneously deducted if they have right). Key points: [belastingdienst.nl]
  • Without Article 23: normally when goods are imported from outside the EU into NL, 21% (or 9% etc) VAT is charged by Customs at import. The importer must pay it immediately, then later recover it via their VAT return if eligible – causing a cash flow issue.
  • With Article 23 license: no VAT is paid at customs. Instead, the importer declares the import VAT in Box 4 of its VAT return (as both output and input tax in the same return usually). Thus, it’s a pure paper transaction with no actual cash outlay, as long as they can reclaim. [belastingdienst.nl]
  • Who can get it: Only resident businesses or foreign businesses with a fiscal representative can obtain Article 23. Non-EU companies must appoint a general fiscal rep to use it. [belastingdienst.nl]
  • Many international companies choose to route goods via NL precisely because of this – it offers a significant cash flow advantage, effectively making import VAT naught in practice.
  • The permit is applied for at the tax office (Heerlen intl. office typically). The importer must file regular (usually monthly) VAT returns to handle the volumes.
  • Compliance: Import should be declared with customs code indicating Article 23 usage (so no payment needed). The importer then lists the total VAT on imports in their VAT return. If all imports are for taxable supplies, that same amount is fully deductible – result, nil net.
  • If an importer uses Article 23 but the goods imported will be used for exempt activities (like a hospital importing equipment – they can’t deduct), they still benefit by not pre-financing VAT, but they will owe the VAT on return (since no deduction).
  • Requirements can include providing a guarantee possibly, or being known as a compliant taxpayer.
  • Use is often connected with limited fiscal representation in shipping – a forwarding agent acts as limited rep to import goods on behalf of foreign sellers and uses their Art. 23 license to defer VAT.
Comparison: Many EU states require immediate payment and later refund (taking months). Netherlands’ approach is highly business-friendly and aids its logistics hub status.
VAT warehouse or bonded warehouses (discussed in 15.7) can also defer VAT until goods leave the warehouse.
But Article 23 addresses regular imports for free circulation.
Example: A Dutch trading company imports $1 million of goods from China. At 21% VAT, normally ~€210k VAT would be due at port. With Art. 23, they pay €0 at port, but on their monthly VAT return they list €210k under “VAT to be paid on imports”, and concurrently if they intend to resell those goods taxed, they list €210k under input VAT. Those cancel. They just have to properly record these.
Note: The existence of Article 23 means that statistically, Netherlands may have high “VAT due on imports” but equally high “deductible VAT”, often offset.

 

15.7 VAT Warehousing

The Netherlands allows certain VAT warehouse arrangements: A VAT warehouse is a regime where goods can be stored without triggering VAT until they exit to local market. It’s distinct from a customs warehouse (for non-EU goods to suspend import duties/VAT), though conceptually similar for EU goods or duty-paid goods.

Examples of VAT warehouse use in NL:
  • There is a specific concept of ‘Entreposito’ for VAT. EU law (Art. 16 Dir. 2006/112) allows member states to have VAT warehouses for goods like oil, cereals, etc.
  • Under Dutch law, certain goods placed in a designated VAT warehouse can be supplied while in warehouse without VAT (VAT is deferred until final withdrawal).
  • Supplies of goods under warehousing arrangements are often zero-rated by Article 38 of VAT Act if conditions met (like plus certificate).
  • Often used for commodities trading or for goods destined for export: you can store them and even transfer ownership inside a VAT warehouse without incurring VAT.
However, specifics are complex. It’s not widely used beyond specialized industries because Article 23 is easier for imports.
But NL does have:
  • Excise warehouses (for excisable goods like alcohol, fuel) – not paying excise or VAT until release.
  • Bonded warehouses (Douane entrepot) – for non-EU goods, no import VAT or duty until leaving to free circulation.
  • Fiscal warehouses for VAT – possibly used e.g. for international trade in goods like certain metals or for specific goods pending re-export. For example, there’s a regime for stockpiling non-EU goods which are already customs cleared to move them into VAT warehouse to avoid VAT if they will be sold abroad.
One public mention: “VAT warehouses (BTW-entrepot) exist to facilitate transit and international trade: goods stored under a VAT warehouse permit can be purchased or sold VAT-free as long as they remain under the regime. VAT only applies when goods are taken for local use.”
The Netherlands strictly defines which goods can use the VAT warehouse: e.g. mineral oils, bulk raw agricultural products, metals – typically high-value items with volatile trade.
Fiscal rep in warehousing: Non-EU companies often use a limited fiscal rep with an Article 23 license and possibly combined with warehouse usage to avoid any VAT until goods actually sold in EU consumption.
So the bottom line: Netherlands does have a VAT warehousing scheme as allowed by EU law, enabling VAT suspension on certain domestic supplies of warehoused goods (the Vatcalc snippet line 65-67 confirms “exemption for location-based and administrative VAT warehousing” and mentions “Bonded customs warehouses also extensively used”). [vatcalc.com]

 

15.8 Supply-and-Install Rules

When goods are supplied and installed or assembled by the supplier in another country, the EU VAT Directive treats it as a supply of goods in the country of installation (if assembly is significant). For Netherlands:

  • If a foreign supplier (no NL establishment) supplies goods with installation in NL to a Dutch business, the transaction is considered a local Dutch supply of goods performed by a non-resident. Under NL law, this will typically fall under the reverse charge mechanism (non-established supplier supplying goods/services to VAT entrepreneur) as discussed in 15.3. That means the Dutch customer self-accounts for VAT. [globalvatc…liance.com]
  • If the customer is a private individual or non-VAT entity in NL, the foreign supplier might have to register and charge Dutch VAT because reverse charge wouldn’t apply.
  • Conversely, if a Dutch company supplies goods with installation in another EU country to a business, it might be taxed in that country (the Dutch company likely would need to VAT register there or use simplification if available).
  • The phrase “not clearly defined” in vatcalc line 67-69 suggests there might not be special national deviating rules beyond EU general ones. So they follow EU: place of supply = where installation happens. [vatcalc.com]
If a domestic supply and install (both supplier and location in NL), it’s a normal taxable supply as goods. If supplier and location in NL but customer is EU business, it might actually be considered ICS if assembly not significant? But likely not – if supply plus install in NL, it’s just a domestic supply.
In practise: Netherlands likely instructs: for a foreign company installing goods in NL for a VAT-registered client, put “BTW verlegd” and no VAT (customer reverses). For a Dutch company installing goods in NL for a VAT reg. client, charge 21% (no special reverse, because supplier is established).
For B2C: If, say, a German kitchen company installs a kitchen in a Dutch consumer’s home – place of supply is NL, they cannot reverse charge because consumer isn’t VAT reg, so the German company would have to register in NL and charge Dutch VAT on the full amount (kitchen + installation).
Take-away: Supply with installation ensures VAT goes to the country of use. It’s either handled via supplier registering or via reverse-charge if possible
15.9 Use-and-Enjoyment Provisions
“Use and enjoyment” rules allow a country to shift the place of taxation for certain services to or from outside the EU to avoid double non-taxation or double taxation. Many EU states apply these for telecom, broadcasting, and services hiring movable goods.
As found earlier, the Netherlands stated no use and enjoyment rule is applicable to telecom, broadcasting, e-services (the link said they do not apply article 59a for those). That implies:
  • If a Dutch company provides telecom services to a non-EU consumer, normally by EU rules no EU VAT (because normally B2C telco would be taxed where supplier is – in NL – but if used outside EU, an optional use & enjoyment could make it out of scope to not tax if consumed abroad; NL apparently doesn’t apply, so Dutch VAT would apply if supplier in NL giving to outside EU consumer? But a contradiction in EU rule: B2C telecom is place of supplier if supplier in EU (makes it NL), they could zero if used outside EU by 59a but they do not, meaning they’d charge Dutch VAT even if consumer overseas? Actually, might not be relevant often).
  • If a foreign service consumed in NL but by general rule not taxed, Netherlands could impose if used here. But apparently they largely do not use those overrides.
However, a snippet from vatcalc line 68-69 suggests: “Use and enjoyment services: The Netherlands imposes VAT registration obligations on non-EU suppliers of certain services to non-VAT persons: consulting; transport rental; etc.”. That reads like possibly NL does have a use & enjoyment measure requiring non-EU suppliers to register for services like hiring movable property used in NL by private individuals, etc. That might be outdated or misinterpreted: Actually, “VAT registration obligations on non-EU suppliers of certain B2C services” might refer to digital OSS for e-services or perhaps saying if a non-EU does consulting to Dutch private, they require them to register (because normally B2C consulting is place of supplier outside EU – not subject – but if used in NL, NL might use use&enjoyment to tax it and force reg). [vatcalc.com]
So maybe:
  • For some services to non-taxable persons, Netherlands apparently uses effective use and enjoyment to tax them if consumed in NL, although official doc said not for TBE. Possibly for hiring out means of transport: e.g. short-term hire of car is inherently where used (that’s base rule).
  • Or for long-term hire of vehicles to non-VAT persons, base rule is supplier’s country, but NL might override if used in NL (some have that).
  • Possibly for “intermediary or intellectual services to non-EU non-taxable persons”, maybe not.
Given official info: Telecom/E-services: no U&E rule in NL, meaning they don’t tax beyond directive or relieve beyond it for those services. Likely none for others, but vatcalc suggests some maybe.
Could be some legacy rules: Before 2015, B2C e-services had supplier’s place – some countries including NL might have had use&enjoyment to shift to consumer location if outside EU (pain moot after 2015 because rule changed to always consumer location). For finance or insurance to outside EU, EU allows if consumed outside EU, treat as outside scope to allow input deduction. NL might have some: Actually it does: “If you offer exempt financial services or insurances to customers outside the EU, you can deduct VAT as pre-tax”. That implies a use & enjoyment: financial services normally exempt (no input deduct) but if recipient is outside EU (meaning effectively used outside), NL allows input deduction – essentially zero-rating them. That is indeed a permitted measure (treat exempt services as taxed with 0% if non-EU to not disadvantage domestic providers abroad). So yes: [business.gov.nl]
  • Netherlands effectively treats certain exempt services as zero-rated when supplied to non-EU customers (like exported financial services, insurance). That is a form of use & enjoyment to extend deduction for use abroad. [business.gov.nl]
So:
  • NL uses no special U&E for telecom/electronic,
  • Possibly uses for finance: giving them right to deduct if customer outside EU (like UK also does).
  • Possibly none others notable.

15.10 Capital Goods Adjustment Period

Under EU rules, input VAT on capital goods is not fixed at initial deduction but can be adjusted over time if the use (taxable vs exempt) changes during an adjustment period (to ensure fair apportionment over the asset’s life).
  • The Netherlands defines capital goods likely as certain high-value assets (especially immovable property and perhaps expensive equipment).
  • The adjustment period in NL is typically 5 years for movable capital assets and 10 years for immovable property (real estate). (Vatcalc said 4 and 9, but likely means excluding the year of first use or something). More standard is 5 and 10 including the year of first use or plus those many intervals after. [vatcalc.com]
  • If a business deducted full VAT on e.g. a machine and then in subsequent year starts using it partly for exempt activity, they must adjust (repay) some portion of the VAT for each remaining year in the adjustment period.
  • Conversely, if they originally couldn’t deduct all but later their taxable use increases, they can adjust to claim more.
  • For real estate (10-year period), Netherlands used to exclude some services from adjustment but that is ending from 2026 as per tax plan updates: as of 2026, even large renovation services for property will have a 5 or 10-year revision period like goods. [taxsummaries.pwc.com]
  • Example: Company buys an office building in 2025, €1m + €210k VAT, and opts to tax rent (so fully deductible). After 3 years, a floor is leased to an exempt entity (no option possible) quarter of building now exempt use. Then for remaining adjustment years (year 4-10, or do year by year) they must pay back 1/10 of 1/4 of VAT per year of changed use. Standard formula: difference in pro-rata * initial VAT / number of years left.
In NL, if under threshold of low amount differences, may skip, but likely not.
Records: capital goods register should be kept so one can do these calculations each year in the last VAT return of year. We saw business.gov note “report private use at end of year for car, etc.” – similar concept.
So:
  • Movable capital assets (like expensive machinery or vehicles) – 5-year adjustment (years counted often including acquisition year).
  • Immovable (property) – 10-year.
  • Possibly intangible assets (like purchased patents)? Many states treat them as 5-year as well.
Given vatcalc says “Movable: four years. Immovable: 9 years”, maybe they exclude the year of acquisition in count. Because many MS do that: if bought in 2025, adjustments for 2026-2029 (4 subsequent years) for movable, making effectively 5 including purchase year. [vatcalc.com]
Yes, that could be the case: Therefore: likely Dutch capital goods scheme aligns with EU’s minimum (5/10 including first year effectively meaning adjustments over 4/9 subsequent years). So any change in the portion of taxable use triggers adjustment = initial VAT * (change in use) / period.
Notably: if a business sells the capital item within adjustment period, often final adjustment needed. E.g. sell building to exempt user – might have to adjust as if exempt use the remaining years (makes them pay back residual VAT not ‘earned’ by taxable use). But since building sales often exempt after 2 years, they often plan an Option or sale to someone who can handle it etc.
Conclusion: Dutch businesses must maintain capital goods in records and adjust annually if needed.

This completes the compliance and deduction items asked for.

16. VAT Recovery for Non-Residents

(This was partly covered in 7, but here focusing on EU 8th, 13th directive refunds, reciprocity, fiscal rep for refund.)
16.1 EU 8th Directive Refunds: Businesses established in another EU Member State (or UK for 2019 refunds etc) who incur Dutch VAT but are not registered in NL can reclaim that VAT via the electronic EU refund portal (the “8th Directive” procedure). Key points:
  • The foreign EU business must not have performed taxable supplies in NL (or only ones that were reverse-charged or zero-rated) during the period – basically not have to be NL VAT-registered. [kreston.com]
  • They submit a claim through their home country’s tax portal by 30 September of the following year for the previous calendar year’s VAT. The claim is forwarded to NL electronically. [kreston.com]
  • Minimum amounts: €400 for quarterly claims, €50 for full-year claims (same EU standard).
  • The Dutch tax authority (International Office) will process the claim and aims to respond/pay within ~4 months. If they approve, they issue a decision (beschikking) and pay out the refund to the applicant’s bank. [tax-consul…tional.com]
  • The claimant must provide copies of large invoices (over €1000, or €250 for fuel receipts).
  • The applicant must show they would be entitled to deduct if they were registered – e.g. if the expenses would have been deductible for a NL business, and the claimant has taxable activities at home.
  • If the company has partially exempt business, NL may only refund the portion applicable (they often ask the home country’s pro-rata).
  • NL doesn’t require a fiscal rep for this process; it’s direct via the EU portal.
16.2 Non-EU 13th Directive Refunds: Businesses from outside the EU (e.g. US, Switzerland, etc) can also reclaim Dutch VAT on expenses via a paper-based 13th Directive refund:
  • These are filed directly to the Dutch tax authority (Heerlen) because no EU portal for them.
  • The Netherlands generously does not require reciprocity agreements for refunding non-EU businesses (they answered “No” to needing reciprocity). So non-EU claimants from any country can apply, which is not the case everywhere (some EU only refund if mutual).
  • A Certificate of Business Status from their home tax authority (proving they’re a taxable business abroad) must accompany the first claim in a year.
  • Deadline: Usually 30 June of the following year for the previous year’s claims (some sources say by July 1). [tax-consul…tional.com]
  • Minimum amounts similar (€50 annual, €400 shorter periods).
  • They also cannot have a NL VAT registration or have made supplies requiring one.
  • If the country lacks reciprocity with NL, NL still refunds (since they said no agreements needed).
  • Possibly some exceptions: maybe they won’t refund to public bodies or so, but in general fairly open.
  • If approved, refund is made. If they disagree, they issue a refusal which can be contested.
16.3 Reciprocity Requirements: As above, Netherlands does not demand reciprocity agreements for non-EU refunds. They refund to any foreign business meeting criteria. Many countries require reciprocity (like only refund to e.g. US if US refunds to their nationals; NL did away with that). So no reciprocity requirement is a plus – e.g. they refund to US, even though US has no sales tax refund for EU. (The EU list confirms Netherlands has no reciprocity rule).
16.4 Need for Fiscal Rep:
  • For EU 8th Dir, no fiscal rep – done via home country portal.
  • For 13th Dir, no official fiscal rep is needed; the foreign company can communicate with Dutch tax authority on its own or through an agent but not mandatory to appoint an indemnified rep just to get a refund. They likely correspond in Dutch or maybe English if asked.
  • However, the forms might be in Dutch (the digital PDF form “Verzoek om teruggaaf van OB voor in het buitenland gevestigde ondernemers” or such). Some foreigners hire a local advisor to handle the paperwork, but not an official rep needed.
  • If a non-EU business frequently incurs Dutch VAT or finds refunds burdensome, it might voluntarily register (with or without rep) to handle via returns, but that’s only if they have occasional zero-rated supplies or want an easier recurring refund.
So, the process is straightforward:
  • Non-residents file periodic claims for VAT they’ve been charged on Dutch hotel bills, fair exhibitions, consultants fees, etc. if those relate to their business (and would be deductible if they were Dutch).
  • NL processes and typically pays within the standard 4-month window (for EU claimants at least). Possibly slower for paper claims.
Summarizing: EU businesses: use electronic portal by Sept 30, get refund ~ by January next year if all fine. Non-EU businesses: file to NL by June 30, need certificate, no extra rep, get refund a bit later but within maybe 6 months. [tax-consul…tional.com]
Note: they will not refund VAT on non-deductible items (like if the foreign business was doing exempt finance, they’d reject those costs, or if the cost was an entertainment expense not allowed by NL). Also no refund if <€50.
We should note that tourist (non-business) VAT refunds (for visitors) is separate (Tax-free shopping, section 4 reference etc). That’s not under Directive, it’s a retail scheme at border. But here focusing on business claims.
Hence, Netherlands provides a very accessible refund environment to non-residents, encouraging them to not consider Dutch VAT a cost if they’re legitimate businesses abroad – as long as they apply timely.


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