Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
The crowded Damrak shopping street in Amsterdam
The crowded Damrak shopping street in Amsterdam - Credit: Arena73 / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
Business
Vereniging van Nederlandse Gemeenten
FNV
Salvation Army
SP leader Emile Roemer
labor migrants
Monday, 23 March 2026 - 15:20

Share this article:

Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window

Employment agencies block migrant registration, leaving thousands vulnerable

Hundreds of thousands of labor migrants in the Netherlands remain unregistered in the national population registry, leaving them highly vulnerable, according to a new investigation by the trade union FNV. Reports show that employment agencies sometimes actively discourage registration or even terminate workers who attempt to register.

FNV found that some agencies withhold information about registration in the Basisregistratie Personen (BRP), the national population database, allowing them to house large numbers of migrant workers in a single residence without the legal protections that registration provides.

Currently, an estimated one million labor migrants live in the Netherlands, with hundreds of thousands unregistered. Those without registration are harder to trace, more susceptible to exploitative housing, and often face eviction when losing employment. Studies suggest that three out of five homeless people in the country are labor migrants.

“We have seen cases where a Polish man who had worked in the Netherlands for sixteen years faced eviction from his home while undergoing daily morphine treatment for cancer, simply because he was not registered,” Aik van den Boogaard, FNV labor migration consultant, told NRC. “He could easily lose his housing because he had not built up rental rights.”

Organizations such as FairWork, which supports victims of labor exploitation, and the Salvation Army confirm FNV’s findings. FairWork social worker Alina Bejan told the newspaper, “I recently saw a rental contract where an appendix explicitly stated, ‘Tenants are not allowed to register in BRP.’”

Agnes Pioro, a social worker, described additional tactics used by agencies to block registration: “Coordinators respond dismissively or claim they will handle it without following through. Intimidation also occurs, including threats of dismissal if someone tries to register. Sometimes the threats are carried out.”

Some agencies also charge migrants for assistance with registration. Pioro recounted, “One migrant had to pay 250 euros for help registering. Shortly afterward, he was dismissed.”

Local municipalities sometimes delay or deny registration. Merve Yikilmaz, national coordinator for homeless EU citizens at the Salvation Army, explained, “Registration gives access to social services, which can be a burden municipalities are reluctant to take on. Without registration, proving continuous work in the Netherlands and eligibility for emergency shelter can take months, leaving migrants exposed to homelessness.”

The Dutch government plans to require employers, including temporary staffing agencies, to assist migrants with registration starting January 1, 2027. A Ministry of Social Affairs spokesperson said, “The current practice contradicts how registration should work. Employers will be obliged to provide support at the start of employment.”

Without BRP registration, migrants also struggle to access general practitioners and health insurance, sometimes returning to their home countries for medical care, Bejan said.

The Vereniging van Nederlandse Gemeenten (VNG) noted that while municipalities occasionally ask additional questions when migrants attempt to register at addresses without legal residence, they have no evidence of systemic delays. A VNG spokesperson said, “We do not see this as a structural problem, but we cannot monitor all 342 municipalities directly.”

More like this

Image
Construction workers in Rotterdam
Interest groups plead for Minister to maintain measures to protect migrant workers
Image
Backpacks hanging on the backs of chairs in a primary school classroom
Children of migrants largely close education gap with Dutch peers in one generation
Image
An Arriva bus waiting for an Arriva train to pass at station Lichtenvoorde-Groenlo
New public transport strikes looming as contract talks stall
Image
Haagse Hogeschool, The Hague University of Applied Sciences
"Toxic" work culture at Haagse Hogeschool; Over 100 reports of bullying, abuse of power
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Big differences in municipal support for low-incomes; €85 in Amsterdam, €1,050 in Diemen
  • Video: Police chase ends apparent kidnapping in Amsterdam-Oost; 3 arrested
  • Dutch binned 449 kilograms of garbage per person last year, 6 kg less than in 2024
  • Children of migrants largely close education gap with Dutch peers in one generation
  • Seven Dutch provinces join forces to strengthen cybersecurity under new EU rules

Top stories

  • Big differences in municipal support for low-incomes; €85 in Amsterdam, €1,050 in Diemen
  • Video: Police chase ends apparent kidnapping in Amsterdam-Oost; 3 arrested
  • Dutch binned 449 kilograms of garbage per person last year, 6 kg less than in 2024
  • At least 911 more people died than usual during code red heatwave: RIVM
  • ASML hikes outlook for 2026 as AI keeps driving chip demand; €2.9 billion profit in Q2

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content