NL · tax-scheme · Updated 2026-04-23
The 30% ruling — tax relief for inbound expat employees
A tax-free allowance for foreign employees with scarce expertise joining a Dutch employer. Much narrower since 2024 — check eligibility before you plan around it.
- Amount
- Up to 30% of gross salary tax-free (capped, phasing down)
What it is
The 30% ruling lets a Dutch employer pay up to 30% of an eligible inbound employee’s gross salary as a tax-free reimbursement for the extraterritorial costs of moving. In effect, a large chunk of the salary sidesteps income tax.
Not a subsidy. Not something you apply for yourself — the employer applies jointly with you.
Who qualifies
- You were recruited from abroad (or posted to the NL) by a Dutch employer.
- You have specific expertise that is scarce in the Dutch labour market — in practice, demonstrated by meeting the minimum salary threshold (2026: ~€46,660 taxable salary, lower for those under 30 with a Master’s).
- You lived >150km from the Dutch border for at least 16 of the 24 months before starting the role.
What you get
- 30% of gross salary treated as tax-free reimbursement — for the first period.
- Capped at the Balkenende norm (€233,000 in 2026) — above that, the 30% no longer applies.
- Phase-down in effect: 30% for first 20 months → 20% for next 20 months → 10% for final 20 months, over a 60-month total. Employees who entered the ruling before 2024 may have grandfathered terms.
- Option to be treated as a partial non-resident for Box 2/3 purposes — still useful for many.
How the process works
- Joint application by employer and employee, within 4 months of starting the role, via the Dutch Tax Office (Belastingdienst).
- Decision within ~10 weeks. If approved, applied retroactively from the start date.
- Annual re-check that salary still exceeds the threshold. Fall below mid-year → relief lapses for that year.
Why the rules have narrowed
The scheme was originally 30% for 8 years, then 30% for 5 years (2019 reform), then the current 30/20/10 phased structure (2024 reform). A parliamentary majority wanted it cut entirely; the phased version is the compromise.
Plan on current rules, not the old generous version.
Common traps
- Expats assuming the 8-year version still applies to new hires. It doesn’t.
- Startups offering salary packages that look competitive gross but fall just under the threshold — fixable, but needs catching early.
- Using the ruling to justify moves that would fail the 150km rule. Border regions (Belgium/Germany less than 150km away) are excluded.
Who to talk to
A Dutch employment tax advisor, ideally one who handles multiple expat applications a year. Ask specifically about interaction with stock-option taxation (Box 1 vs new Box 1 option scheme) — the interplay is where money gets lost.
Official sources
Indicative information only. This is not legal or tax advice. Always verify with the Belastingdienst or a licensed Dutch tax advisor.