You moved to the Netherlands, everyone speaks English, and learning Dutch keeps slipping down your to-do list. Sound familiar? This is the practical guide for busy expats — what level you actually need, how to fit it into a full life, and how to get past the “they just switch to English” problem.
Because English gets you by, but Dutch lets you belong. The coffee-machine conversations, the school WhatsApp group, the in-jokes at the borrel, the better job opportunities, the path to permanent residency — none of those happen in English. Dutch is the difference between living in the Netherlands and living among the Dutch.
The single biggest obstacle for expats: the moment Dutch people hear an accent, they switch to English to be helpful. Every switch costs you practice. The fix is a simple, polite phrase:
“Ik wil graag mijn Nederlands oefenen — mag het in het Nederlands?”
(I’d like to practise my Dutch — can we do it in Dutch?)
Almost everyone says yes, often warmly. The five-second awkwardness is worth hours of practice.
Good news: English speakers learn Dutch faster than almost anyone. The languages share a Germanic root, so hundreds of words feel familiar (water, boek, huis, winter), and Dutch grammar is simpler than German. The main work is pronunciation and word order.
Dutch Daily is made for busy newcomers — bite-sized AI lessons, real conversation practice, pronunciation training and inburgering prep. Free to start, learn on your schedule.
Start learning Dutch →For short stays (under a year), basic Dutch is enough for comfort. For longer stays, Dutch unlocks career growth, deeper friendships, and the residency/citizenship path. The longer you stay, the more it pays off.
With 30–60 minutes of daily practice, basic conversations (A2) come in about 6 months, and confident B1 conversation in around a year.
It’s one of the easier languages for English speakers — shared vocabulary, simpler grammar than German. The main challenges are pronunciation (the hard g, ui, eu) and subordinate-clause word order.