Netherlands Rent Increase Rules: Limits, Procedures, and the WWS System

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Complete guide to rent increases in the Netherlands: the WWS point system, maximum increase percentages for social, mid-range, and free sector housing.

3 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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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.

The Netherlands has an extensive rent regulation system with different rules for social housing, mid-range housing, and the free sector. The Affordable Rent Act (Wet betaalbare huur), effective July 1, 2024, significantly tightened regulation.

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.

The Housing Valuation System (WWS)

The WWS is a point-based system that determines the maximum rent of a property based on characteristics such as:

  • Surface area
  • Number of rooms
  • Kitchen and bathroom quality
  • Energy label
  • WOZ value (property tax assessment)
  • Outdoor space (balcony, garden)
  • Location and amenities

Housing Segments (2025)

SegmentWWS PointsMax Rent (approx.)Max Increase 2025
Social housingUp to 143~€900/month5% (or €25 for rents below €350)
Mid-range144–186~€1,158/month7.7%
Free sector187+No maximum4.1%

Rules by Segment

Social Housing

  • Maximum rent determined by WWS point total
  • Annual increase maximum 5% (for rents above €350)
  • Or a fixed increase of €25 (for rents below €350)
  • Tenants can request a rent reduction if rent exceeds the WWS maximum
  • The Rent Tribunal can review and reduce the rent

Mid-Range Housing (new since 2024)

  • Maximum rent determined by WWS point total
  • Maximum increase of 7.7% per year (2025), linked to collective labor agreement wage growth + 1%
  • Landlords must provide the WWS point calculation with new contracts
  • Municipalities can enforce compliance against excessive rents

Free Sector

  • No maximum starting rent
  • Annual increase limited to 4.1% (2025), calculated as CPI inflation + 1%
  • No income-dependent rent increase permitted
  • Landlord must provide WWS point calculation (since 2025)

Rent Increase Procedure

Annual Increase

  1. Written proposal — at least 2 months before the effective date
  2. Statement of the percentage and the new rent amount
  3. Effective date — typically July 1
  4. Right to object — the tenant can raise objections

If the Tenant Objects

  • The tenant can engage the Rent Tribunal (social and mid-range)
  • Or the subdistrict court (free sector)
  • The increase is suspended pending a decision

Income-Dependent Rent Increases

For social housing, a higher rent increase may apply for households with income above the social housing thresholds:

  • Above the social housing income limit: additional increase of up to €50 or €100 per month
  • Set annually by the Minister
  • Tenants must be informed in writing

Rent Reductions

Tenants have the right to request a rent reduction if:

  • The rent exceeds the WWS maximum
  • The household income has decreased
  • The property has defects (via the Rent Tribunal)

Best Practices for Landlords

  1. Know your WWS point total — this determines the maximum rent segment
  2. Provide the point calculation — mandatory for new contracts since 2025
  3. Track annual maximums — these change every year
  4. Send increase proposals on time — at least 2 months in advance
  5. Check the energy label — this significantly affects WWS points

How Landager Helps

Landager automatically calculates WWS points for your property, monitors maximum rent per segment, and generates rent increase proposals that comply with legal requirements.

Back to Netherlands Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

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