Word order is the part of Dutch grammar that feels backwards to English speakers. But it follows clear rules — master these and 80% of your confusion disappears.
Dutch word order rests on two rules. Once they click, sentences fall into place. Here they are with clear examples.
Learn these and you're most of the way there.
The conjugated verb is always the 2nd element: 'Ik eet brood' / 'Vandaag eet ik brood'.
After omdat, dat, als… the verb moves to the end: '…omdat ik brood eet'.
Same idea, different structures.
| Sentence | Why |
|---|---|
| Ik eet vandaag brood. | Verb 2nd (subject first) |
| Vandaag eet ik brood. | Verb still 2nd (time first, subject moves) |
| …omdat ik vandaag brood eet. | Subordinate clause — verb to the end |
| Ik denk dat hij morgen komt. | ‘dat’ triggers verb-final |
Main clause = verb second. Subordinate clause = verb last. Words like omdat, dat, als, terwijl, hoewel, wanneer kick the verb to the end. And when you have two verbs, the second goes to the end too: ‘Ik wil vanavond pizza eten.’ Practise these patterns out loud and they become automatic within weeks.
Dutch Daily drills word order in real sentences with instant feedback from the writing coach. Free to start.
Main clauses follow verb-second (V2): the conjugated verb is always the second element. In subordinate clauses (after omdat, dat, als…), the verb moves to the end.
In subordinate clauses, Dutch (like German) sends the conjugated verb to the end of the clause. It feels backwards to English speakers but becomes automatic with practice.
Very similar — both use verb-second in main clauses and verb-final in subordinate clauses. If you know German word order, Dutch will feel familiar.