Netherlands Lease Requirements: Mandatory Clauses and Contract Types
Complete guide to Dutch lease requirements: written obligation, mandatory clauses, contract types, and the Fixed Rental Contracts Act.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Dutch rental law sets specific requirements for residential lease agreements. These have been further tightened with the Good Landlordship Act (July 1, 2023) and the Fixed Rental Contracts Act (July 1, 2024).
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a specialized attorney in the Netherlands for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.
Written Requirement
While an oral rental agreement can be legally valid, since July 1, 2023:
- The landlord is required to put the lease in writing
- For oral agreements, the landlord must confirm them in writing
- The contract must be signed by both parties
- Digital contracts (email, online platforms) are acceptable
Mandatory Content
The lease must contain at minimum:
Parties and Property
- Full names of landlord and tenant
- Address and description of the property
- Contact details of the landlord or property manager
Financial Terms
- Base rent — listed separately
- Service charges — specified per cost item
- Total monthly costs — sum of rent and service charges
- Payment method and due date — bank details and payment date
- Security deposit — amount (max 2 months' base rent) and return conditions
Duration and Termination
- Start date of the lease
- Term — indefinite or fixed
- Notice period — for both tenant and landlord
- Minimum rental period — if applicable
Maintenance and Use
- Maintenance responsibilities — division of major/minor maintenance
- House rules — if applicable
- Intended use — the property may only be used as residential
- Subletting — whether permitted and under what conditions
Types of Lease Agreements
Indefinite-Term (default since July 1, 2024)
- Standard for all new rental contracts
- Tenant has full rental protection
- Landlord can only terminate on statutory grounds
- Tenant can terminate with a notice period of maximum 1 month
Fixed-Term (exceptions only)
Since the Fixed Rental Contracts Act (July 1, 2024), temporary contracts are only permitted for:
| Target Group | Maximum Duration |
|---|---|
| Students | Duration of studies |
| Urgent housing seekers | 2 years |
| Tenants during own home renovation | Duration of renovation |
| Interim rental (target group contract) | Depends on situation |
Hospitality Contract (room rental)
- Renting a room from the main occupant
- First 9 months: trial period without full rental protection
- After 9 months: full rental protection
Prohibited Clauses
The following lease provisions are void (legally invalid):
- ❌ Security deposit exceeding 2 months' base rent
- ❌ Waiver of rental protection
- ❌ "All-in" rent without specification
- ❌ Unreasonable penalty clauses
- ❌ Charging tenants agency fees (when the agent also works for the landlord)
Diplomatic Clause
For expats and international staff, a diplomatic clause may be included:
- Allows early termination upon relocation
- Minimum rental period typically 12 months
- 1–2 months' notice after the minimum period
- Must be explicitly included in the contract
Best Practices for Landlords
- Use a standard model contract — available from industry organizations
- Specify all costs — avoid "all-in" structures
- Define maintenance division — prevent disputes later
- Consider the Fixed Rental Contracts Act — verify if a temporary contract is permitted
- Have the contract legally reviewed — small errors can have major consequences
How Landager Helps
Landager offers lease templates that comply with Dutch legislation, including automatic checks for prohibited clauses and mandatory content.
Sources & Official References
Ready to simplify your rental business?
Join thousands of independent landlords who have streamlined their business with Landager.
