Netherlands Highly Skilled Migrant Visa: 16 Frequently Asked Questions (2026)
Frequently asked questions about the Netherlands Highly Skilled Migrant (Kennismigrant) visa: salary thresholds, partner work rights, 30% tax ruling, job loss, side business, mortgage, and more — each with official IND and government sources.
What counts toward the salary threshold — are bonuses included?
Only your fixed, guaranteed monthly gross salary counts. The legally required 8% holiday allowance (vakantiegeld) is excluded from the threshold. Bonuses, overtime, tips, commissions, and variable components do not count. A 13th-month payment only counts if contractually guaranteed AND paid through monthly payroll. 2026 thresholds: €5,688/month (age 30+), €4,171/month (under 30), €3,122/month (reduced criterion for recent graduates). Source: ind.nl/en/required-amounts-income-requirements
Can my partner or spouse work freely in the Netherlands?
Yes — with no restrictions. Partners of highly skilled migrants receive a residence permit with free access to the Dutch labour market. No separate work permit (TWV) is needed. They can work for any employer, freelance, or start a business immediately after the permit is granted. This applies to spouses, registered partners, and unmarried partners. Source: iamsterdam.com — Conditions and benefits of the HSM permit
What happens if I lose my job — how long can I stay?
You get a 3-month search period starting from the termination date. Your employer must notify the IND within 4 weeks. During these 3 months you can stay legally and look for a new position, but the new employer must also be a recognised sponsor and the salary must meet the threshold. If you cannot find a new sponsor, there are eight alternative options including the Orientation Year (zoekjaar), self-employment permit, or switching to a student visa. Note: the search period only applies if the termination was not your fault. Source: ind.nl/en/residence-permits/work/highly-skilled-migrant
Can I start a side business or freelance while on the HSM permit?
Yes, since 2017. You may register at the KVK (Chamber of Commerce) and operate a side business alongside your primary employment. Your employment with the recognised sponsor must remain intact and continue meeting the salary threshold. Income from the side business does not count toward the HSM salary requirement. Switching to full-time self-employment requires a different permit. Source: business.gov.nl — Residence permit for highly skilled migrant
Am I eligible for the 30% tax ruling?
If you were recruited from abroad and lived more than 150 km from the Dutch border for at least 16 of the 24 months before starting employment, you may qualify. This means 30% of your gross salary is paid tax-free. Minimum taxable salary: €46,107/year (or €35,048 for under-30 with Master's). Duration: up to 5 years. The 30% rate applies through 2026 and drops to 27% from January 2027 for permits starting after January 2024. Source: business.gov.nl — The 30% ruling; belastingdienst.nl — 30% facility
What happens when the salary threshold changes mid-year?
The IND adjusts salary thresholds on 1 January each year. If you already hold an HSM permit, your salary must meet the new threshold after indexation. If it falls short, the employer has 2 months to adjust the salary and notify the IND — otherwise the permit risks revocation. If the under-30 threshold applied and you change employers after turning 30, the 30+ threshold applies at the new job. However, if you stay with the same employer, the reduced criterion continues even after you turn 30. Source: ind.nl/en/required-amounts-income-requirements
How do I register for a BSN and health insurance after arrival?
Within 5 days of arriving at your Dutch address, register with your municipality (gemeente) to receive your BSN (Citizen Service Number). Many cities offer one-stop appointments at International Centres (Amsterdam, The Hague, Rotterdam, Leiden) where you can collect your residence permit AND register in a single visit. Dutch health insurance is mandatory from day 1 of employment — the basic package costs approximately €140/month in 2026. You need your BSN to take out a policy, open a bank account, and start the 30% ruling application. Source: iamsterdam.com; thehagueinternationalcentre.nl
Do I need to pass a civic integration exam?
Not while on the HSM permit. Highly skilled migrants are exempt from the civic integration (inburgering) requirement during their temporary residence. However, if you later apply for permanent residence (after 5 years) or Dutch citizenship, you must pass the civic integration exam at B1 Dutch level (from 2025). The exam covers Dutch language, Knowledge of Dutch Society (KNM), and Orientation on the Dutch Labour Market (ONA). Source: ind.nl/en/residence-permits/work/highly-skilled-migrant; iamsterdam.com — Civic integration
Can I buy a house and get a mortgage?
Yes. Highly skilled migrants can purchase property and apply for a Dutch mortgage. Many specialist lenders offer up to 100% loan-to-value for HSM permit holders with stable employment. You need a BSN number and a valid residence permit. Be prepared for additional costs (notary fees, transfer tax at 2%, valuation) of approximately 5–6% of the purchase price, which usually require own funds. Source: government.nl — Highly skilled migrants
How long can I stay outside the Netherlands without losing my permit?
You may stay outside the Netherlands for a maximum of 8 consecutive months in any 12-month period, but only for work-related reasons (e.g., secondment by your Dutch employer). For non-work absences, you must maintain your main residence (hoofdverblijf) in the Netherlands. If seconded to another EU country by the same employer, longer absences may be possible with IND notification. Source: ind.nl/en/living-in-the-netherlands-with-a-residence-permit/main-residency
Can I work remotely from abroad for my Dutch employer?
Be very careful. The HSM permit is tied to working in the Netherlands. Short business trips are fine, but extended remote work from abroad is risky — you may lose your main residence status (8-month rule), and it can create tax and social security complications in the other country. Working for a foreign employer without a Dutch entity does not qualify for the HSM scheme at all. Source: ind.nl — Main residency; government.nl — HSM overview
How do I switch from a student or zoekjaar visa to an HSM permit?
If you graduated from a Dutch or qualifying institution, you can apply for the Orientation Year (zoekjaar) — a 1-year permit to find work. Once you secure a job with a recognised sponsor, you switch to an HSM permit at a reduced salary threshold of €3,122/month (vs. the standard €4,171 for under-30). This reduced rate applies within 3 years of graduation. The reduced criterion continues even if you turn 30, as long as you stay with the same employer. The zoekjaar itself cannot be extended. Source: government.nl — Orientation year; ind.nl — HSM scheme background
What is the difference between the HSM permit and the EU Blue Card?
Both allow non-EU nationals to work in the Netherlands. HSM has lower salary thresholds (especially for under-30 and graduates) and faster processing (~2 weeks via recognised sponsor). The EU Blue Card offers intra-EU mobility — after 12 months you can move to another EU country. The Blue Card requires a higher salary and does not offer an under-30 or graduate reduction. Both lead to permanent residence after 5 years, but the Blue Card can combine residence periods across EU member states. Source: ind.nl — HSM; iamsterdam.com — HSM conditions
Can I bring my parents to the Netherlands?
This is very difficult. Family reunification under the HSM scheme covers only your core family: partner and minor children (under 18). Parents can only join if there are 'more than normal emotional ties involving additional elements of dependency' — typically severe medical conditions creating extreme dependency. Simply being elderly or wanting to be near family does not qualify. In practice, very few parent applications succeed. Source: ind.nl — Family and partner; everaert.nl — Bringing your parent to the Netherlands
Do I need to get my documents legalised or apostilled?
Yes, in most cases. Foreign documents (diplomas, birth certificates, marriage certificates) must be legalised. For Hague Convention countries: an apostille stamp from your country's competent authority. For non-Hague countries: full legalisation chain (local authorities → Ministry of Foreign Affairs → Dutch embassy). Documents not in Dutch, English, French, or German generally need a certified translation by a sworn translator. Source: government.nl — Document legalisation; ind.nl — HSM application form
How long does the HSM application take to process?
The IND aims to decide within 2 weeks for applications from recognised sponsors (the TEV fast-track procedure). The full timeline including MVV visa collection at the embassy and travel is typically 4–8 weeks. If additional documents are requested, processing time extends. The MVV visa sticker must be collected within 3 months of approval, and you must travel to the Netherlands within 90 days of the MVV being issued. Source: ind.nl — HSM Process and costs; business.gov.nl — HSM residence permit
Official sources
VisaField is not affiliated with any government agency. We provide informational guides only. All visa decisions are made solely by the respective government immigration authorities.
Key takeaways
- Partner/spouse gets free labour market access — no separate work permit needed
- Only fixed monthly salary counts toward the threshold — bonuses and vakantiegeld are excluded
- You can start a side business since 2017 but primary employment must continue
- 30% tax ruling drops to 27% from January 2027 for permits starting after Jan 2024
- 3-month search period after job loss — 8 alternative options if you cannot find a new sponsor
Sources
- IND — Highly Skilled Migrant
- IND — Required Amounts Income Requirements
- IND — Fees: Costs of an Application
- IND — Decision Periods
- IND — Checklist Documents Highly Skilled Migrant
- IND — Provisional Residence Permit (MVV)
- IND — Apply for Recognition as Sponsor
- Business.gov.nl — Residence Permit for Highly Skilled Migrant
- Business.gov.nl — Work Permit in the Netherlands