Travel insurance
Travel insurance for Netherlands
Short-trip cover for visits to Netherlands: emergency medical, trip-cancellation, luggage, the usual travel-insurance stack. Designed for weeks-not-years stays.
The Netherlands has no dedicated digital nomad visa, but US citizens have a uniquely easy route through the Dutch-American Friendship Treaty (DAFT): register a business, park €4,500 in it, and get a two-year self-employment residence permit. The catch that trips people up is insurance: DAFT itself does not check your cover, yet once your permit takes effect you are legally obliged to buy Dutch basic health insurance within four months.
What travel insurance covers in Netherlands
Travel insurance is built for short trips (under 3 months), vacations, weekend trips, gig travel. The lines below are the base. Exact terms are carrier-specific, so always check the policy document for the Netherlands situation you care about.
What you get
- Emergency medical and dental
- Trip cancellation and interruption
- Lost or delayed baggage
- Travel-document theft
- Adventure-sport add-ons (some plans)
What it won't do
- Routine care, chronic-condition management
- Maternity, mental-health
- Trips longer than the policy's max (often 90 days)
Typical local costs in Netherlands
What insurance protects you from. Costs vary by region inside Netherlandsand between public and private facilities; these are the numbers we've seen most often in 2026.
| Basic health insurance (monthly, 2026) | around 159 EUR average premium |
|---|---|
| Annual insurance deductible (eigen risico) | 385 EUR per year |
| GP visit at a private/tourist clinic without Dutch cover | roughly 88 EUR weekday, 135 EUR weekend |
| Out-of-hours GP post consultation if uninsured | around 245 EUR (home visit ~368 EUR) |
Figures are in euros (EUR) and indicative for 2026. The standard insurer premium barely rose this year, but the gap between the cheapest and priciest policies keeps widening, so it pays to compare. Note the eigen risico: the first 385 EUR of most non-GP care each year comes out of your own pocket before insurance pays, and GP visits themselves are exempt from it. Costs quoted for uninsured care are clinic list prices and can be far higher than what an insured resident ever sees.
Healthcare in Netherlands: what you're dealing with
Dutch healthcare runs on regulated private insurers rather than a free public system. Everyone who lives or works in the country must buy a standardised basic policy (basisverzekering) from a private insurer, and the government sets what that policy must cover. Short-stay tourists do not buy into this system at all and rely on their own travel or international cover. Residents do: if you take the DAFT route or otherwise register at a Dutch town hall, you are required to take out a Dutch basic policy within four months, and it must be backdated to the day your residence permit took effect. Your first point of contact for almost everything is a huisarts (GP), who acts as gatekeeper to specialists and hospitals. You register with one near your home, and most in Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague speak excellent English.
For emergencies the number is 112, free from any phone, with operators who handle English and often German or French. For urgent but non-life-threatening problems outside office hours you call the local out-of-hours GP post (huisartsenpost) on 0900-8844 rather than going straight to a hospital. Nomads in the big cities lean on large teaching hospitals such as Amsterdam UMC and OLVG in Amsterdam, Erasmus MC in Rotterdam and Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), all of which have English-speaking staff. Several private and "tourist doctor" clinics in Amsterdam cater specifically to visitors without Dutch insurance and will issue receipts you can claim back. Because the Netherlands is compact and flat with no remote islands to speak of, there is no medical-evacuation problem here: a top hospital is rarely more than a short drive away.
What to watch out for in Netherlands
- Cycling is the real hazard. Cyclists are now the single largest group of road deaths in the Netherlands, so wear a helmet (rare among locals) and treat e-bikes and tram tracks with respect.
- The four-month insurance clock. Miss the deadline to buy Dutch basic cover after your permit starts and you face fines and backdated premiums, with no retroactive cover for the gap.
- Eigen risico bites. Even with insurance, the first 385 EUR of most hospital and specialist care each year is yours to pay before the policy kicks in.
- DAFT is US-only and self-employment-only. It is not open to UK, Canadian or Australian nomads, and you cannot take a salaried job with a Dutch employer on it.
- Housing, not healthcare, is the budget killer. A severe rental shortage means city-centre one-bedroom flats often run well above the official averages, especially in Amsterdam.
FAQ
Netherlands doesn't usually require visitors to carry travel insurance for short stays, but the moment something goes wrong it's cheaper to have it than to buy at the hospital. Check the visa-class requirements for your specific situation.
Premiums vary by age, plan and deductible far more than by country; the underwriting risk is priced, not the postal code. Use the "Typical local costs" table above to gauge what your insurance protects you from, then run a real quote to see your own number.
It depends on your situation: how long you're staying, your visa class, your age and health, and whether you want cashless treatment or are fine with reimbursement. Rather than push one plan, we match you against the options that actually fit a stay in Netherlands: answer a few honest questions and see only what's relevant.
No formal one. US citizens use the Dutch-American Friendship Treaty (DAFT) self-employment permit; others rely on the 90-day Schengen tourist allowance or other residence routes.
It is not legally required for visa-free short stays for US, UK, Canadian or Australian visitors, but travel medical cover is strongly advised because uninsured private-clinic care is expensive.
The application does not check it, but once your residence permit takes effect you must take out Dutch basic health insurance within four months. It is a separate legal obligation, not optional.
No. Once you are a registered resident or DAFT permit holder, a foreign or travel policy does not satisfy the requirement; you must buy a Dutch basisverzekering.
Dial 112 for emergencies anywhere in the country, free of charge, and operators handle English. For urgent out-of-hours but non-emergency care, call your local GP post on 0900-8844.
No. The country is compact with excellent hospitals throughout, so unlike small islands there is no need to be flown abroad for serious treatment.
Other insurance for Netherlands
Different stages of nomad life need different cover. Here's the full set we've mapped for Netherlands.
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