Dutch Daily

Dutch Vocabulary

Telling Time in Dutch

Telling time in Dutch has one famous trap: 'half tien' means 9:30, not 10:30. Here's how the Dutch clock works, explained clearly.

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24h+ 12h used
half= half BEFORE
1key trick
dailyessential

The Dutch clock

Most of telling time in Dutch is intuitive — except the 'half' rule, which catches every learner. Master that and you're set.

The basics

Hoe laat is het?

Dutch English
Hoe laat is het? What time is it?
Het is twee uur It’s two o’clock
kwart over twee quarter past two (2:15)
kwart voor drie quarter to three (2:45)
tien over twee ten past two (2:10)
tien voor drie ten to three (2:50)

The famous 'half' trap

This is the one that gets everyone: in Dutch, ‘half’ counts toward the NEXT hour. So ‘half tien’ = 9:30 (half-way to ten), not 10:30. ‘half drie’ = 2:30. Think of it as ‘half on the way to ten’. For minutes around the half: ‘vijf voor half tien’ = 9:25, ‘vijf over half tien’ = 9:35. It’s confusing at first, then becomes second nature.

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Frequently asked questions

How do you tell time in Dutch?

'Het is [number] uur' for o'clock. Use 'kwart over' (quarter past), 'kwart voor' (quarter to), and 'X over/voor' for minutes. The tricky part is 'half'.

Why does 'half tien' mean 9:30 in Dutch?

In Dutch, 'half' points to the next full hour — so 'half tien' is half-way to ten, i.e. 9:30. 'half drie' is 2:30. This trips up every learner at first.

How do you say half past in Dutch?

Dutch doesn't say 'half past'. Instead it counts toward the next hour: 9:30 is 'half tien' (half to ten), not 'half negen'.

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