Double Taxation Treaties: NL Overview
Netherlands double taxation treaties for expats. Withholding tax rates by country, treaty relief for income, pensions, dividends, and avoiding double tax.
What Are Tax Treaties?
Double taxation treaties (belastingverdragen) are bilateral agreements between the Netherlands and other countries. They prevent you from being taxed twice on the same income by:
- Allocating taxing rights โ Specifying which country can tax which type of income
- Reducing withholding taxes โ Lowering rates on dividends, interest, and royalties
- Providing relief methods โ Through exemptions or tax credits for foreign taxes paid
The Netherlands has over 90 tax treaties โ one of the most extensive networks in the world. For expats, the most important provisions cover employment income, pensions, and investment income.
Treaty Rate Overview (Top 20 Countries)
The following table shows withholding tax rates on cross-border payments between the Netherlands and the 20 most common expat origin countries:
| Country | Dividend WHT | Interest WHT | Royalty WHT | Pension Taxing Rights |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 15% | 0% | 0% | Source state (NL) |
| United Kingdom | 15% | 0% | 0% | Residence state |
| Germany | 15% | 0% | 0% | Source state (if >โฌ15k) |
| India | 10% | 10% | 10% | Source state |
| France | 15% | 0% | 0% | Source state |
| Italy | 15% | 10% | 5% | Residence state |
| Spain | 15% | 10% | 6% | Source state |
| Turkey | 15% | 10โ15% | 10% | Source state |
| China | 10% | 10% | 10% | Residence state |
| Japan | 10% | 0% | 0% | Residence state |
| South Korea | 15% | 10% | 10% | Residence state |
| Brazil | 15% | 15% | 15โ25% | Source state |
| Canada | 15% | 10% | 10% | Residence state |
| Australia | 15% | 10% | 10% | Residence state |
| Poland | 15% | 5% | 5% | Source state |
| Romania | 15% | 3% | 3% | Source state |
| South Africa | 10% | 0% | 0% | Source state |
| Mexico | 15% | 10% | 10% | Source state |
| Indonesia | 15% | 10% | 10% | Source state |
| Belgium | 15% | 0% | 0% | Source state |
WHT = withholding tax. Rates shown are the treaty-reduced rates. Without a treaty, Dutch dividend withholding tax is 15%. Actual rates may vary based on the type of entity and specific treaty provisions.
Common Expat Origin Countries
Here is how key treaty provisions affect the most common expat groups in the Netherlands:
| Country | Employment Income | Dutch Pension (after leaving) | Key Expat Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA | NL taxes (as resident) | NL may tax; US credits NL tax | US citizens must file worldwide; foreign tax credit applies. Totalization agreement for social security |
| UK | NL taxes (as resident) | UK taxes (as UK resident) | Post-Brexit: social security coordinated under TCA. State pension can be aggregated |
| India | NL taxes (as resident) | NL taxes (source state) | 10% dividend WHT (lower than standard 15%). No social security agreement โ double contributions possible |
| Germany | NL taxes (as resident) | NL taxes (if >โฌ15k/year) | EU social security coordination. 150km border rule: most German cities are outside the 30% ruling zone |
| China | NL taxes (as resident) | Country of residence taxes | 10% dividend WHT. Social security agreement since 2017 |
| Japan | NL taxes (as resident) | Country of residence taxes | 0% interest and royalty WHT. Social security agreement in place |
How Treaties Prevent Double Tax
Tax treaties use two main methods to prevent double taxation:
- Exemption method: The residence country exempts income that was taxed in the source country. The Netherlands commonly uses this for employment income earned abroad
- Credit method: The residence country taxes worldwide income but gives a credit for taxes paid in the source country. Common for dividends and interest
30% Ruling & Treaties
The 30% ruling interacts with tax treaties in these important ways:
- Partial non-resident status: With partial non-resident status, you are treated as a non-resident for Box 2 and Box 3. Foreign investment income may be exempt under both the ruling and the treaty
- Employment income: The 30% ruling applies to Dutch employment income. Treaties do not override this benefit โ it is a Dutch domestic provision
- Pension: If you leave NL and receive a Dutch pension, the treaty determines which country has taxing rights โ the 30% ruling no longer applies
How to Claim Treaty Relief
Steps to claim treaty benefits:
- Identify the relevant treaty โ Check the Belastingdienst website for the treaty with your country
- Determine the article โ Each income type (employment, pension, dividends, interest) has a specific treaty article
- File in both countries โ Report income in both tax returns; claim the credit or exemption as provided
- Submit forms if needed โ For reduced withholding tax, submit the appropriate form (e.g., IB 92 from the Belastingdienst) to the source country
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the Netherlands have a tax treaty with my country?
The Netherlands has over 90 tax treaties. Most major economies are covered, including the US, UK, all EU countries, India, China, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Australia, Brazil, and many more. Check the Belastingdienst treaty overview.
Do tax treaties eliminate all double taxation?
Not always. Treaties reduce or eliminate double taxation through credits, exemptions, or reduced withholding rates. However, some income types may still be partially taxed in both countries. Complex situations (e.g., dual citizens, income from multiple countries) may require professional advice.
Do I need to file taxes in both countries?
Often yes. Even with a treaty, you may need to file returns in both the Netherlands and your home country to properly claim treaty benefits. The treaty determines which country has primary taxing rights, and the other provides a credit or exemption.
How do I claim treaty benefits?
For employment income, treaty benefits are usually automatic if you are a Dutch tax resident. For withholding taxes on dividends, interest, or royalties from your home country, you may need to submit a claim form to the source country's tax authority to get the reduced treaty rate.