Dutch Daily

Dutch Vocabulary

Dutch Numbers 1-100 and Beyond

Counting in Dutch is logical once you spot the pattern — including the famous quirk where 21 is literally 'one-and-twenty'. Here's everything you need.

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1-100and beyond
1clear pattern
unitsbefore tens
dailyessential

Counting made simple

Learn 1-20, the tens, and one rule for combining them — and you can count to a million.

Numbers 1-20

The foundation.

# Dutch # Dutch
1 een 11 elf
2 twee 12 twaalf
3 drie 13 dertien
4 vier 14 veertien
5 vijf 15 vijftien
6 zes 16 zestien
7 zeven 17 zeventien
8 acht 18 achttien
9 negen 19 negentien
10 tien 20 twintig

The tens

Multiples of ten.

# Dutch
30 dertig
40 veertig
50 vijftig
60 zestig
70 zeventig
80 tachtig
90 negentig
100 honderd

The famous quirk: units before tens

Here’s the trick that surprises everyone: in Dutch, the unit comes before the ten, joined by ‘en’. So 21 is ‘eenentwintig’ (one-and-twenty), 34 is ‘vierendertig’ (four-and-thirty), 99 is ‘negenennegentig’. It feels backwards at first but becomes automatic. For hundreds: ‘honderd’ (100), ‘tweehonderd’ (200); thousands: ‘duizend’ (1,000).

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Related guides

Frequently asked questions

How do you count to 10 in Dutch?

een (1), twee (2), drie (3), vier (4), vijf (5), zes (6), zeven (7), acht (8), negen (9), tien (10).

Why are Dutch numbers backwards?

For 21-99, Dutch puts the unit before the ten, joined by 'en': 21 = 'eenentwintig' (one-and-twenty). It's a feature shared with German and becomes automatic with practice.

How do you say 100 and 1000 in Dutch?

100 is 'honderd' and 1,000 is 'duizend'. 250 is 'tweehonderdvijftig', 1,500 is 'vijftienhonderd' or 'duizend vijfhonderd'.

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