Netherlands · Where to Live

Small country.
Big price spread.

Everything is within two hours by train, so you're choosing a personality, not a region. Amsterdam charges ~€28/m² in rent for its brand; Rotterdam charges €22 for more space. Here's the honest comparison — inside a national shortage where only 5 municipalities average under €300,000.

Figures verified 8 July 2026

The cities, priced

CityNew-lease rent (Q1 2026)Buying anchor (2026)The honest one-liner
Amsterdam€28.53/m²~€8,300/m² (sold)The full capital experience — at prices that now rival major US metros, with tourist pressure to match.
Utrecht€21.95/m²~€520k avg municipal priceAmsterdam's charm at four-fifths the price, 27 minutes away by train — and everyone knows it.
The Hague€21.52/m²below Amsterdam, above national avgGovernment city with the sea at Scheveningen and the country's oldest expat infrastructure.
Rotterdam€22.78/m²below national average per m²Modern architecture, real space for the money, and the least "postcard Holland" of the big four.
Eindhovenbelow Randstad levelsfamily homes €450–800k (Strijp, Meerhoven)The tech boomtown (ASML region) — newer housing stock, international by employment rather than by tourism.

Rents are Pararius new-lease figures, Q1 2026 (latest city-level split); the national average was €21.12/m² in Q1 2026. Buying anchors from CBS/Kadaster and NVM/MVA data, Q1 2026. New leases price far above what sitting tenants pay.

Match the city to the reader

Amsterdam

The full immersion

World-class museums, direct US flights, the deepest international scene. The trade: the country's highest prices (~€8,300/m² sold, Q1 2026), fierce housing competition, and a centre that can feel like a theme park in July. Look at Amsterdam-Noord or Amstelveen for relative value.

Utrecht

The connected middle

A canal-ringed medieval core, the national rail hub, and a big university keeping it lively. The trade: the secret is long out — average prices around €520k and rental competition nearly as sharp as Amsterdam's.

The Hague

The expat classic

Embassies, international courts, and decades of anglophone infrastructure — plus a proper beach. Statistically the easiest soft landing for 50–70 movers. The trade: quieter evenings; some find it staid.

Rotterdam

The space play

Bombed flat in 1940, rebuilt bold — high-rises, the Markthal, and the most house per euro among the big cities. The trade: it's a working port city; charm is architectural, not historic.

Eindhoven

The tech landing

If your route in is a highly-skilled-migrant job, odds are it's here. Newer family homes (€450–800k in Strijp and Meerhoven) and an international community built around work. The trade: less to do at 65 than in the Randstad.

Smaller cities

The value tier

Groningen, Maastricht, Haarlem, Leiden, Zwolle — university towns and Randstad satellites with real culture and lower prices. The trade: the shortage is national. Cheaper, not cheap — only 5 municipalities in the whole country average under €300,000.

The rule we repeat for every country: rent in your target city for a full year before buying — and here, visit in November before committing at all. A terrace that sells you in June is a wind tunnel in January. With trains this good, you can also live one stop cheaper and lose almost nothing.
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

The Hague for North Americans

Neighbourhood by neighbourhood: Statenkwartier, Benoordenhout, Scheveningen — priced and profiled.

Coming soon

Amsterdam alternatives, 30 minutes out

Haarlem, Amstelveen, Zaandam, Almere — what commuter-belt living saves and costs.

Coming soon

Retiring outside the Randstad

Groningen, Zwolle, Maastricht — the case for the quieter Netherlands, honestly assessed.

Sources

  1. City rents: Pararius quarterly rental reports — city split Q1 2026 (Amsterdam €28.53/m², Utrecht €21.95, Rotterdam €22.78, The Hague €21.52); national €21.12/m² Q1 2026
  2. Purchase prices: CBS/Kadaster series (CBS 83625ENG) — national average ~€493,000 Q1 2026; Amsterdam ~€8,300/m² sold (NVM/MVA, Q1 2026); Utrecht municipal average ~€520k; 5-municipalities-under-€300k figure, 2025: cbs.nl
  3. Eindhoven family-home range (€450–800k, Strijp/Meerhoven): market listing aggregates, 2026, indicative
  4. City characterisations reflect editorial judgment informed by the data above — trade-offs are real but subjective.
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