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The Dutch housing market is healing: investors buying up fewer homes

 


The Dutch housing market is healing: investors buying up fewer homes

NEWSECONOMYPOLITICS & SOCIETY

April 26, 2022

Sarah O'Leary 🇮🇪

https://dutchreview.com/news/dutch-housing-market-healing-fewer-investors-buying-up-homes/?fbclid=IwAR3-ye0O_-KX7nr19IK8OORS0tn0_8rNi4IvjROT2c9I4V70-YDMlNJuVCg

 

Here’s something we never thought we’d write — we have some good housing news! Last year, fewer homes were bought up by investors in the Netherlands. Instead, more houses were bought by first-time buyers. 🏠

 

Regular people? Buying more houses?? Yep. According to the land registry, 2021 saw investors take a slightly less sizeable chunk of Dutch real estate. This left room for more first-time buyers to have their chance.

 

We can thank the transfer tax

And who is the knight in shining armour that we can thank for this behaviour change? Sir transfer tax.

 

In the Netherlands, when buying a house you must pay a sizeable chunk of transfer tax when the deed of the home is passed to you. This is usually 2% of the value of the home for regular folks.

 

However, in 2021, the Dutch government introduced a higher transfer tax for those who were not going to live in the home that they bought — cough, cough — investors. This tax was raised to 8% of the value of the home.

 

A hopeful drop

One year in, it looks like it’s working. According to the NOS, in 2020, big investors in the Netherlands bought up a whopping 88,000 houses. However, in 2021, this dropped to 55,000 — still a scary number, but it’s something.

 

While it’s fun to shake our fists at the big investors, the largest competitors for first-time buyers are actually the smaller investors. However, this group also bought fewer homes last year, acquiring 6,500 houses.

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