Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Sex worker on a bed
A sex worker on a bed - Credit: AndrewLozovyi / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
sex work
unlicensed sex work
illegal prostitution
The Hague
WODC
National Rapporteur on Human Trafficking and Sexual Violence against children
Thursday, 7 December 2023 - 10:33

Share this article:

Sharp increase in illegal sex work in the Netherlands

Illegal sex work is increasing massively in the Netherlands as more and more sex workers offer their services in homes, hotels, and massage parlors, AD reports. Authorities are concerned about exploitation.

According to the Scientific Research and Documentation Center (WODC), some 27,000 unique sex work advertisements were posted online in 2021. Only “a very small proportion” showed indications that the sex workers involved had a permit to offer the services. No older figures are available. However, the number of licensed sex businesses decreased by almost half between 2000 and 2014, indicating a shift, according to the newspaper.

The shift makes supervision and enforcement incredibly challenging, if not impossible. Sex workers offer services on many different platforms, and there are many duplicate advertisements, making it nearly impossible to keep track of exactly how many sex workers are working without a permit. And that increases the risk of exploitation, according to the National Rapporteur on Human Trafficking.

The municipality of The Hauge has seen enormous growth in the unlicensed sex industry in the city for a few years now, especially since the pandemic, when sex work was severely restricted to prevent the coronavirus spreading.

The Hague has plans to phase out window brothels in the city. However, several local politicians are worried that this will only create more illegal sex work. “Because more and more safe workplaces are disappearing, sex workers are forced to work in the unlicensed sector,” Kim Vrolijk of the local party Haagse Stadspartij told the newspaper.

Vrolijk herself works as a sex worker. “And the chance is minimal that sex workers will stop working when the windows are closed. That means there is mainly a shift taking place. And this also means that sex workers disappear from the picture of aid and interest groups. There is more insecurity: licensed places have good access to emergency services in case of any problems.”

More like this

Image
The streets of the Red Light District in Amsterdam packed with tourists on a Thursday night in July 2017
Window brothels slowly disappearing from Dutch streets; One in three closed in 15 years
Image
A police officer with an ambulance in the background
Video: Paramedics assaulted in The Hague two days in a row
Image
Court gavel with a statue of Lady Justice in the background
Dutch courts give harsher punishments to poorer people, study finds
Image
A notice warning passengers not to board a train at Amsterdam Centraal Station. 5 September 2024
Major train disruption hits Dutch cities after fire in Woerden; 1,300 stuck in NS cars
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Most Dutch municipalities back asylum distribution law but resist implementation
  • Dutch government weighs cuts to infrastructure spending amid multibillion-euro shortfall
  • Drag queen attacked again in Amsterdam
  • Four members quit Schiphol advisory council amid internal conflict over representation
  • Man arrested in Middelburg after 35-year-old found fatally injured on street

Top stories

  • Netherlands records second official heat wave of 2026 on Saturday as Ell hits 30.1°C
  • Police release photos, ask for help identifying man who assaulted two women in Utrecht
  • Hundreds of venues prepare to host fans for Netherlands vs Sweden World Cup match
  • Video: Severe storms kill woman after tree crushes car; Fires sparked nationwide
  • 15-year-old girl suspected of murdering parents in Groningen remains in custody

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

Footer menu

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