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Why Learn Dutch? Real Benefits for Work, Study and Life in the Netherlands

“But everyone speaks English” — the sentence every expat in the Netherlands has heard a hundred times. It’s almost true: 90%+ of Dutch people speak English well. So why bother learning Dutch at all? Because the doors that open when you do — at work, in friendships, and with the government — don’t open in English. Here’s the honest case for picking up Dutch, even when you don’t have to.

Work: Dutch is the difference between fitting in and standing out

In English-first companies in Amsterdam (Booking, Adyen, Mollie, ING International) you can build a career without Dutch — for a while. But here’s what English-only colleagues consistently miss:

  • The coffee-machine conversations. Where the actual decisions are made, where your manager hears about you, where promotions get sown.
  • Internal town halls and company-wide meetings. Many Dutch companies switch to Dutch when leadership speaks — even “international” ones.
  • Government, healthcare, school administration. All forms, calls and bureaucracy are in Dutch by default.
  • Dutch SME jobs. 95% of Dutch businesses have <50 employees and operate purely in Dutch. That's huge market access you're locked out of.
Salary impact Dutch-fluent expats earn on average 11–18% more than their English-only peers in the same roles, according to a 2024 Randstad study. The gap widens with seniority.

Study: most universities are bilingual, but the social life isn’t

Dutch universities offer plenty of English-taught Master’s programs — but undergraduate Dutch is still the language of friendships, student associations, and the city you live in. A few specific upsides for international students who learn Dutch:

  • Lower tuition if you qualify for the EU/EEA rate — many requirements include Dutch proficiency
  • Access to Dutch-language student associations (studentenverenigingen) — the social backbone of student life
  • Part-time jobs beyond bartending — tutoring, retail, hospitality management all require Dutch
  • Internships at Dutch SMEs — often impossible without Dutch but pay better than the English-language equivalents

Daily life: small things, big difference

Dutch friends, in-laws, neighbours, the GP’s secretary, the school playground — these are the people who shape your everyday emotional landscape. And most of them don’t enjoy switching to English for hours. You’ll sense the moment they stop including you in side jokes.

Once your Dutch reaches B1, the texture of life shifts. You start picking up:

  • Conversations at the borrel without lag
  • Headlines on commute screens — you stop feeling like a tourist
  • What people are saying about you (sometimes uncomfortable, but useful)
  • Children’s school notes, sports club updates, GP letters — without translation app
  • Customer service phone trees that don’t have an English option (most don’t)

Immigration: the legal benefits are concrete

If you’re on a long-term residency path, Dutch isn’t optional — it’s required. Here’s what depends on it:

GoalRequired Dutch level
Inburgering exam (civic integration)A2 (basic) or B1 (regular)
Permanent residencyA2 minimum (B1 from 2025)
Dutch citizenshipA2 + passing the civic integration test
Most professional certificationsB1–B2 depending on field

Culture: a language unlocks a personality

Dutch directness, Dutch humour, Dutch self-deprecation — none of these translate cleanly to English. Speak Dutch and Dutch people become measurably warmer, more candid, more themselves. Some words have no English equivalent that captures the same feeling:

  • Gezellig — that specific cosy-conviviality that English “cosy” doesn’t reach
  • Lekker — used for food, weather, naps, anything mildly satisfying
  • Borrel — a casual drinks-and-snacks gathering, the engine of Dutch social life
  • Uitbuiken — the act of resting after eating too much (yes, there’s a word for that)
The trap to avoid The “I’ll wait until my Dutch is good enough” trap. There’s never a perfect moment. Native speakers love hearing learners try — even rough Dutch earns goodwill that flawless English never will.

What’s actually realistic for a busy expat

You don’t need C2 mastery. You need enough Dutch to participate. Here’s what each level actually unlocks:

  • A1 (2–3 months) — order, greet, ask basic questions without panic
  • A2 (6 months) — small talk, simple emails, customer service calls in Dutch
  • B1 (12–14 months) — full meetings with effort, social fluency, Inburgering
  • B2 (2 years) — confident in 90% of work and life situations

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Frequently asked questions

Do I really need Dutch if I work in tech?

You can build a career in English at international tech firms in Amsterdam, but you’ll plateau around mid-senior level if you stay English-only. Dutch unlocks leadership tracks, Dutch government clients, and most local SMEs.

Is it rude not to learn Dutch as an expat?

No — Dutch people genuinely don’t expect you to. But they notice (and quietly appreciate) when you try. Effort matters more than fluency.

Is Dutch useful outside the Netherlands?

Limited but real. Flanders (northern Belgium, 6.5M speakers) uses Dutch. Suriname, Aruba and Curaçao have it as an official language. Afrikaans speakers (South Africa) often understand written Dutch.

What’s the minimum useful level?

A2 — that’s where you can handle daily situations confidently without falling back to English every time. B1 is where life genuinely changes.

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