Updated guidance for Dutch zzp'ers working abroad says Dutch clients do not, by themselves, keep a business in the Dutch Handelsregister. The file now turns on where the work is done, which Dutch address is still valid, and which tax or AOW links remain. Invoices and contracts need to match that record.
Why this matters
A move abroad can split one business into several records. The municipality, KVK, tax file, VAT setup, bank profile, and pension record may move on different dates. Small mismatches can cost time, cash, and trust.
Example
A webshop owner moves to Spain and keeps selling to Dutch consumers. The business can become Spanish, but VAT still needs a close check. Once EU consumer sales pass €10,000, consumer-country VAT can apply. If prices already include VAT, the wrong rate cuts margin fast.
XTROVERSO tips
- Map the work, not the client list. Start with where you write, pack, treat, install, invoice, and store records. If the paid work leaves the Netherlands, the Dutch file should not pretend otherwise.
- Put every change date in one transition file. Note the municipality departure date, last Dutch workday, KVK change, foreign registration, invoice switch, contract notice, insurance update, and bookkeeping cut-off.
- Keep a real Dutch visiting address on file. A PO box is not enough. If the address belongs to someone else, keep the lease, ownership proof, or written consent with the file.
- Review invoices before the next billing run. Check the business name, address, VAT number, reverse-charge text, foreign registration details, and payment terms. Customers and banks see that version first.
- Do not treat KVK deregistration as the end. An emigration year can still need an M-form. Dutch-source income, Dutch real estate, Dutch VAT supplies, or a remaining VAT registration can still trigger Dutch duties. Each uninsured AOW year can cut future AOW by 2 percent.
If your move abroad changes invoices, tax, contracts, or client records, have the transition file checked before the next billing run
The data, sourcing, and analysis behind this article were conducted by Paolo Maria Pavan. AI was not used to identify sources, build the factual basis, or produce the analytical judgment contained here. AI was used only as a drafting aid. The final English text was personally reviewed, edited, and approved by Paolo Maria Pavan before publication.
References
- Zzp'en in het buitenland: wel/niet in het handelsregister? | KVK
- Rijksoverheid - BRP exit threshold and switch to non-resident (RNI)
- KVK - Keep or end Business Register entry after emigration
- KVK - Temporary inactivity and forced deregistration
- KVK - Requirements for a valid Dutch visiting address
- KVK - Consent to register at someone’s residential address
- Belastingdienst - Migration-year tax return (M-form)


