The Netherlands has long welcomed international professionals with a clear and generous tool: the 30% ruling. Alongside it, a quieter but powerful feature existed for years, the partial non-resident tax status.
As of 1 January 2025, that chapter officially closes. The status is being phased out, and by 1 January 2027, it will no longer exist for anyone. If you are an expatriate employee or an employer supporting international staff, this change has real implications. This article is not about technicalities. It is about helping you plan, adjust, and lead responsibly.
What Was the Partial Non-Resident Status?
This status allowed employees benefiting from the 30% ruling to be treated as non-residents for tax purposes in Box 2 and Box 3.
- Box 2 covered income from substantial interests, such as shares in private or foreign companies.
- Box 3 covered income from savings and investments, including foreign bank accounts, property, and securities.
By choosing partial non-residency, many expatriates legally excluded these foreign sources of income from Dutch tax. For professionals with international holdings, this was not a loophole. It was a legitimate fiscal strategy.
What Has Changed?
Under the 2025 Tax Plan, this treatment is abolished. From 1 January 2025, new applicants will no longer be able to opt in. From 1 January 2027, even current beneficiaries will lose access.
However, there is a transitional period.
- Individuals with a valid 30% ruling on or before 31 December 2023 may continue to apply the partial non-resident status until 31 December 2026.
- From 1 January 2027, all individuals under the 30% ruling will be considered full Dutch tax residents for all categories, including Box 2 and Box 3.
Please note: If an employee changes jobs and does not begin work with the new employer within three months, the transitional rights are lost.
What Does This Mean for Expatriates?
You become fully taxable in the Netherlands. From 2027 onward, all global income, including foreign dividends, real estate, savings, and securities, will be subject to Dutch tax rules.
Your reporting obligations expand. As a full tax resident, you must declare all global income and assets. This requires documentation, transparency, and a proactive approach to tax compliance.
Your financial structure may no longer serve you. If your investment and savings strategy was built assuming partial non-residency, this is the time to reassess. That does not mean it was wrong. It means the context has changed.
What Does This Mean for Employers?
Expect rising costs for tax equalization. If you have employees under equalization agreements, your compensation budgets may need to grow to cover new tax burdens.
You must update your internal policies. Compensation packages, relocation terms, and tax guidance for international hires need to reflect this new framework.
Prepare your systems and your people. HR, payroll, and compliance teams must be aligned. Most importantly, international staff must be clearly informed. Uncertainty is more expensive than information.
What Do I Recommend?
Start with awareness. Then build a plan.
- For expatriates: Review your current tax position. Understand what becomes visible, taxable, or inefficient from 2027 onward. If needed, consult a tax advisor before the transition closes.
- For employers: Identify who is impacted. Document which employees fall under transitional protection and which do not. Anticipate changes in net compensation and update your cost models accordingly.
- For both: Do not wait until the transition expires. Use the next 18 months to act while options remain open. Strategy is not about predicting change. It is about being ready for it.
Final Reflection
This is not about loss. It is about evolution. The end of partial non-residency brings the Dutch tax system in line with broader principles of transparency. What made sense before may no longer apply. That is not a problem. It is an invitation to think clearly, early, and together.
If you are uncertain about your position or need help mapping next steps, our team is ready to assist. The W-Team at Xtroverso is already supporting clients through this transition with discretion, clarity, and technical accuracy.
Clarity is not an administrative virtue. It is a strategic advantage.
Co-Founder of Xtroverso | Head of Ledger and Tax Compliance
Linda Pavan aporta una precisión disciplinada a Xtroverso, consolidando su integridad financiera, fiscal y operativa. Como Auditora Certificada ZENTRIQ™, traduce la complejidad en claridad—asegurando que cada decisión sea trazable, conforme y estratégicamente sólida. Su rigor silencioso da a las empresas la confianza y la responsabilidad necesarias para actuar con seguridad.