Study abroad in Netherlands
Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Netherlands.
Capital
Amsterdam (constitutional); The Hague (seat of government)
Languages
Dutch / Frisian (regional, in Friesland)
Academic Year
Semester 1: early September to late January. Semester 2: early February to early July. Exam weeks run end of each semester and resits in August.
Population
17,900,000
Typical Budget
EUR 1,000 - 1,600/month
Overview
One of Europe's most international study destinations: over 2,000 English-taught programmes, flat cycling-based student life, and an academic culture built on small-group tutorials, critical debate, and self-directed learning.
Country Overview
What student life feels like in Netherlands.
The Netherlands hosts more than 122,000 international students per year and is the most English-proficient non-English-speaking country in the world. Dutch research universities (Universiteit) and universities of applied sciences (Hogeschool / University of Applied Sciences) share one of the highest densities of English-taught bachelor's and master's programmes in Europe — more than 2,000 full English programmes. Academic culture is flat: professors are addressed by first name, classes favour small tutorials (werkcolleges), group projects, and critical discussion over lectures.
Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Utrecht, Delft, Leiden, Groningen, Eindhoven, and Maastricht all sit within 2 hours of each other by train, so students easily travel between campuses and internships. The student housing market is the single hardest aspect — start searching 4-6 months before arrival. Cycling is the default transport: most students buy a second-hand bike within their first week.
Healthcare is mandatory (either public Dutch insurance for working students or private student insurance for others), and the 30% ruling plus tax treaty benefits make part-time work financially attractive. EU students pay statutory tuition (around €2,601/year 2025-26); non-EU students typically pay €8,000-20,000/year for bachelor's programmes.
Country Framework
What shapes student life in Netherlands.
Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.
Safety Snapshot
The Netherlands ranks among Europe's safest countries for students. Bike theft is by far the main concern — always use two locks. Pickpocketing in Amsterdam central and main train stations is typical big-city risk. Violent crime is rare.
Before You Land
A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival
Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.
Arrival Connectivity
Sort an eSIM before you land
Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.
Coverage Check
Confirm your travel insurance
Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.
Public WiFi
Have a backup for shared networks
Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.
Safety & Cost Indices
Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Crime Index
Low
World avg: 44.7
Safety Index
Very safe
World avg: 55.3
Cost of Living
Expensive
EUR 1,000 - 1,600/month
Crime factors measured
Big Cities vs Small Towns
Big Cities
- Amsterdam is globally recognised — Erasmus University Rotterdam (business), UvA, and VU Amsterdam attract thousands of international students, and near-universal English fluency removes language barriers entirely.
- Rotterdam is the more dynamic and affordable alternative — modern architecture, Europe's busiest port, and a diverse, less touristy environment.
- Amsterdam is expensive for rent; many students live in smaller nearby cities (Leiden, Delft) and commute by train.
- The Netherlands has one of Europe's most developed cycling cultures — bike ownership is mandatory for student life.
Small Towns
- Leiden, Utrecht, Delft, and Groningen are world-class Dutch student cities — affordable, bike-friendly, and with universities of genuinely international standing (Leiden is among the oldest in Northern Europe).
- Groningen has one of the highest percentages of students-to-residents of any European city — the whole city is built around student life.
- Maastricht (UM) runs a problem-based learning model and is deeply Eurocentric — excellent for students interested in EU affairs and multilingual environments.
- Dutch student cities feel safer and more organised than Amsterdam; social life is still vibrant but less touristy.
Culture
Social Norms
- Directness is a virtue — Dutch feedback is blunt and not meant as rudeness. Soften your own if it helps, but expect straight answers.
- Agendas rule: social plans are scheduled days or weeks in advance. Showing up unannounced is unusual.
- Splitting the bill ('tikkie') is standard, often down to the cent. Use the Tikkie app.
- Birthdays are a ritual: you congratulate the birthday person AND their family members ('gefeliciteerd').
- Punctuality matters — being 5 minutes late is late. Trains and trams usually run within 1 minute of schedule.
- Cycling etiquette is serious: stay right, signal turns with your arm, do not block bike lanes as a pedestrian.
Daily Rhythm
Local pace07:30–09:00
Morning
Dutch mornings are practical. Breakfast at home — boterhammen (sliced bread) with hagelslag (chocolate sprinkles) or kaas (cheese). Coffee essential. Cycling to university in all weather.
12:00–13:00
Midday
Lunch is brief and simple — a broodje (roll) with cheese or meat, often eaten at the desk or in five minutes. Dutch work culture sees long lunches as inefficient.
13:00–17:00
Afternoon
Efficient afternoon block. Borrel (drinks after work) from 17:00 Friday is a weekly institution. Direct communication culture — meetings are short and decisive.
18:00–20:00
Evening
Dinner early — 18:00–18:30. Dutch home cooking is straightforward (stamppot, pasta, grilled meat). Eating out is reserved for weekends or special occasions.
21:00–03:00
Night
Amsterdam nightlife (Leidseplein, Rembrandtplein) runs to 04:00–05:00. Student cities like Utrecht and Groningen have active Thursday and Friday nights.
Food Culture
Broodje (sandwich) lunch
EUR 3.50-7Lunch is typically a simple sandwich with cheese, ham, or kroket eaten cold at the desk or canteen. Warm lunches are unusual.
University canteens (mensa / restaurant) sell a daily warm option for €5-7, cheaper than any café.
Stroopwafel from a market
EUR 1.50-2.50Fresh warm stroopwafels at city markets (Albert Cuyp, Haagse Markt, Rotterdam Markthal) beat supermarket versions.
Buy a full package (8-10 pcs) at Lidl or Albert Heijn for €2 — months of afternoon snacks.
Frites (fries) with sauce
EUR 3-5Dutch fries are thick-cut, double-fried, served in a paper cone with mayo, joppiesaus, or peanut sauce (patatje oorlog).
Look for 'snackbar' signs — local chains are always cheaper than tourist-area shops.

Supermarket basics (Albert Heijn, Lidl, Jumbo)
EUR 30-45/weekAH Basic and Lidl cover the cheap end; Jumbo runs strong weekly offers. Dutch supermarkets close 20:00-22:00 depending on city.
Use the AH Bonuskaart (free) and the Jumbo app for weekly €10-15 savings on top offers.
Bitterballen
EUR 5–10Deep-fried crispy balls with a creamy beef ragout filling — served with mustard at every Dutch café (kroeg) and one of the most beloved Dutch bar snacks.
Bitterballen come free with some happy hour drinks deals; look for borrelhapjes promotions at student bars.

Stamppot
EUR 8–16Mashed potato mixed with vegetables — kale (boerenkool), sauerkraut (zuurkool), or endive — served with smoked sausage (rookworst). The definitive Dutch winter comfort dish.
Make stamppot at home in winter — it takes 20 minutes and one pot, and a full meal for two costs under EUR 5.
Dos and Don'ts
Do
Buy a second-hand bike within your first week — Marktplaats, Facebook Marketplace, or local bike shops.
Always lock your bike with two locks (frame lock + chain/U-lock) and never to itself only.
Register at the Gemeente within 5 days of arrival if staying over 4 months.
Use OV-chipkaart or the OVpay bank-card tap-in system on all public transport.
Speak English confidently — 90%+ of Dutch people under 40 speak fluent English.
Learn basic Dutch greetings ('hallo', 'dank je wel', 'doei') — appreciated even though not required.
Get a DigiD as soon as you have a BSN — it is required for tax filings, zorgtoeslag (healthcare allowance), and most Dutch government portals.
Register with a local huisarts (GP) within your first week — you cannot see a specialist without a GP referral in the Netherlands, and registration queues fill quickly.
Start housing search 4–6 months before arrival for the Randstad (Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Utrecht) and 2–3 months for smaller cities — short-notice listings are rare and often fraudulent.
Don't
Do not leave a bike without a proper lock, even for 2 minutes — bike theft is endemic.
Do not walk in bike lanes (red asphalt) — you will get bells and shouts.
Do not expect shops open on Sundays outside city centres in smaller towns.
Do not ignore the Gemeente registration — you cannot get BSN, insurance, or bank account without it.
Do not delay housing search — Randstad rental supply disappears within hours of listing.
Do not tip 15-20% as in the US — service is included; rounding up or 5-10% for excellent service is plenty.
Do not go directly to hospital A&E for non-emergencies — always call the Huisartsenpost (GP out-of-hours, 112 for emergencies) first; going without referral means longer wait and higher cost.
Do not start part-time work without switching to Dutch Zorgverzekering — working even one paid hour per week legally requires Dutch public insurance; fines for late enrollment reach EUR 400+.
Do not pay housing deposits to landlords without a verified rental contract — Amsterdam and Rotterdam housing scams targeting international students are common on social media and WhatsApp groups.
Lifestyle & Travel
Amsterdam canal cycling
Amsterdam has 800,000 bikes and more cycle paths than any city in Europe. Rent for EUR 12/day. Vondelpark is free. Cycling is how students navigate Amsterdam — no other transport needed.
Learn moreKeukenhof tulip gardens
The largest flower garden in the world — 7 million bulbs in bloom. Student entry EUR 19. Open only 8 weeks/year. Combined with Leiden or The Hague day trip.
Learn moreRijksmuseum and Anne Frank House
Rijksmuseum student entry EUR 12.50 — Rembrandt, Vermeer, Delft collection. Anne Frank House EUR 14 — must book months in advance online. Both are world-class cultural experiences.
Learn more
Delft blue pottery and city visit
Vermeer birthplace with stunning canal city centre. Royal Delft pottery factory tour EUR 15. Accessible by train from Amsterdam in 1h. Far fewer crowds than Amsterdam.
Learn more
Kinderdijk windmills visit
UNESCO 19 original windmills in a polder landscape. Entry EUR 10 student. Water bus from Rotterdam EUR 4. Best at golden hour. Symbolic Dutch landscape.
Learn moreRotterdam architecture tour
Rotterdam was bombed flat in WWII and rebuilt as Europe architectural laboratory. Markthal free to enter, Cube Houses EUR 3 student. Stunning contrast to historic Dutch cities.
Learn moreHoge Veluwe National Park cycling
Largest national park in Netherlands with 40km of free white bike trails (free bikes provided inside park). Student park entry EUR 10. Kroller-Muller Museum (Van Gogh collection) included.
Learn more
Maastricht food and culture weekend
Netherlands oldest city with French-influenced food culture and famous Vrijthof square. TEFAF (March, free weekend) and great student nightlife scene. Cheaper than Amsterdam.
Learn moreFestival Calendar
Travel Tips
- NS domestic trains are fast and frequent. Dal Voordeel (€5.95/month) unlocks 40% off off-peak travel after 09:00 weekdays and all weekend.
- FlixBus and BlaBlaCar cover international routes cheaply — Amsterdam to Paris, Berlin, or Brussels from €10-25.
- The OVpay system lets you tap in/out with a contactless bank or phone card on all trains, metros, trams, and buses — no OV-chipkaart needed for occasional users.
- Always check NS app or 9292.nl for real-time disruptions before travel — Dutch works because it's punctual, but strikes and engineering works do happen.
- A second-hand bike (~€80-150 from Marktplaats) pays for itself within 2 months in saved tram fares.
Benefits & Scholarships
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Useful either way
Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.
Holland Scholarship
€5,000 one-time grant for non-EEA bachelor's or master's students at participating Dutch institutions. Paid in the first year of study.
Dutch Ministry of Education + participating universities
Official sourceErasmus+ grant (for EU students on exchange)
€300-670/month depending on home country income bracket for EU students doing an Erasmus+ exchange in the Netherlands. Paid by the home university.
European Commission via Nuffic and home universities
Official sourceStudent public transport discount (NS Weekend Vrij / Dal Voordeel)
Dutch students get 40% off off-peak trains with NS Dal Voordeel (€5.95/month). Weekend Vrij offers unlimited weekend travel (€40-50/month). Dutch citizens get full free public transport via OV-studentenkaart; international students do not qualify automatically.
Nederlandse Spoorwegen (NS)
Official sourceZorgtoeslag (healthcare allowance)
Up to €127/month subsidy for Dutch public health insurance costs for low-income residents, including working students with Dutch Zorgverzekering.
Belastingdienst (Dutch tax office)
Official sourceVisa Requirements
Difficulty: EasyNational ID card or passport
EU, EEA, and Swiss students do not need a visa or residence permit. Register at the local Gemeente (municipality) within 5 days of arrival if staying over 4 months to receive a BSN (citizen service number) — mandatory for bank accounts, insurance, and part-time work.
MVV entry visa + residence permit (VVR) for study
Non-EU students must apply through their Dutch host institution (universities are IND-recognised sponsors). Financial proof: approx. €1,244/month (2025-26 IND norm, updated annually). Work authorisation: up to 16 hours/week during term or full-time in June-August.
Spanish DNI or passport
Spanish students travel visa-free under EU rules. Register at the Gemeente within 5 days to obtain BSN. Apply for a DigiD (digital ID) to access government services online. Erasmus+ grants are paid by the Spanish home university.
Application Checklist
8 steps-
1
Confirm whether you are EU/EEA/Swiss (no visa) or non-EU (MVV + VVR required).
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2
Get official admission letter from a Dutch IND-recognised institution — the university handles the IND application on your behalf for non-EU students.
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3
Prepare financial proof (~€1,244/month in 2025-26) — bank statement or scholarship letter.
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4
Arrange mandatory health insurance: EU students use EHIC; non-EU need private student insurance or Dutch public Zorgverzekering if working.
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5
On arrival, book an appointment with the Gemeente within 5 days to register and get your BSN (citizen service number).
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6
Apply for a DigiD online to access government portals (tax, healthcare allowance, housing benefit).
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7
Open a Dutch bank account (ING, ABN AMRO, bunq, Rabobank) — you need BSN and often a rental contract.
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8
Non-EU students: collect your residence permit (VVR) card at the IND desk specified in your approval letter.
Regional Variations
Randstad (Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, Utrecht)
Highest housing demand and tightest rental market. International offices often strongly recommend accepting any housing contract immediately, even sight unseen. Rents in Amsterdam easily hit €800-1,100 for a shared room.
No additional visa requirements.
Standard Zorgverzekering rules apply.
Health & Healthcare
How It Works
Dutch healthcare is universal but based on mandatory private basic insurance (basisverzekering). Working students (any paid job, even 1 hour/week) MUST take Dutch public insurance (~€140-160/month) and can apply for zorgtoeslag (healthcare allowance, up to ~€127/month). Non-working international students typically use private student insurance (AON, ISIS/CareOn, Aetna) at ~€50-60/month or EHIC (EU students for medically necessary care).
Student Needs
On arrival: register at Gemeente → get BSN → register with a local huisarts (GP). The huisarts is the gatekeeper for all specialist care and prescriptions. Get health insurance sorted before starting any paid work — fines for late Dutch insurance enrolment can reach €400+.
Emergency vs Clinic
Call 112 for emergencies. For non-urgent evening/weekend care, call the Huisartsenpost (GP out-of-hours service) — do NOT go straight to hospital A&E without a referral unless it is a real emergency.
Public Coverage Notes
Basisverzekering covers GP visits (free after registration), hospital care, prescriptions, and basic mental health. Annual own-risk (eigen risico) is €385 in 2025.
Dental care is covered only for under-18s; adults pay out of pocket or via supplementary insurance (aanvullend).
Private Coverage
AON Student Insurance and ISIS/CareOn are the two most common options for non-working international students (~€50-60/month, accepted for IND visa requirements).
Private policies must cover: hospitalisation, emergency care, GP visits, and repatriation. Check IND and home-university requirements before purchasing.
Emergency
112 (EU universal)Cities to Explore
Amsterdam
The Netherlands' biggest international student magnet: beautiful, intense, English-friendly, expensive, and only worth it if you solve housing early.
Open City Guide
Rotterdam
The Netherlands' sharper, cheaper-feeling alternative to Amsterdam: modern, international, practical, and strong for business, design, logistics, architecture, and city life.
Open City Guide
Utrecht
A compact, beautiful, highly student-heavy Dutch city: easier to love than Amsterdam, but not much easier for housing.
Open City Guide