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Mona Keijzer
Mona Keijzer - Credit: Martijn Beekman / Rijksoverheid - License: All Rights Reserved
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Ministry of Housing and Spatial Planning
Mona Keijzer
Social housing
housing shortage
refugee
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Aedes
Marjolein Faber
Ministry of Asylum and Migration
asylum
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housing priority
Monday, 17 February 2025 - 10:10

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Dutch gov't scraps refugee priority for social housing

Housing Minister Mona Keijzer (BBB) is ready to submit her bill that would ban municipalities from giving refugees priority for social housing, insiders told the Telegraaf. Keijzer says she wants to give everyone an equal chance for social housing. The bill will likely have dire consequences for the already structurally overcrowded asylum centers in the Netherlands.

Municipalities are currently allowed to give refugees priority on the waiting lists for social housing. The priority is meant to relieve pressure from the Central Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers (COA), which has had more asylum seekers needing shelter than beds for many years. Part of the problem is the housing shortage in the Netherlands. Refugees - asylum seekers whose application was approved and received a residency permit - are stuck staying in asylum centers because there is nowhere else for them to go, meaning their beds can’t be used for new asylum seekers.

The waiting lists for social housing in the Netherlands are very long. On average, home seekers who qualify wait seven years for a home, research from 2023 showed. In cities, the waiting period is often longer. According to the PVV, VVD, NSC, and BBB coalition, municipalities giving priority to refugees contribute to the waiting lists. Keijzer’s bill will, therefore, ban the practice.

Municipalities will remain responsible for housing refugees. Though, according to the Telegraaf’s sources, Keijzer is also working on a bill to scrap that responsibility. Refugees can still register for social housing, they’ll just end up on the waiting list with everyone else.

The Association of Dutch Municipalities (VNG) is concerned about this move. “By abolishing priority, the flow to follow-up housing will become virtually impossible. This seems to stagnate the flow, which means chaos in the [asylum] chain is lurking,” the VNG warned in a letter to the Cabinet last month.

Aedes, the umbrella organization for housing corporations, is also critical. In a letter to parliament last week, Aedes warned that not giving refugees quick access to a home will hinder their naturalization and integration. They will struggle for longer to build their lives, which means they will be less able to contribute to society.

While Keijzer is taking measures that will stagnate the outflow from asylum shelters, her colleague, Asylum Minister Marjolein Faber, is trying to entice municipalities to house more refugees. On Friday, Faber announced that she was prepared to pay municipalities 30,000 euros if they take in a refugee who is currently waiting for a home in a COA shelter. She is also pushing municipalities to set up “transition locations” where refugees can start their lives in the Netherlands while waiting for more permanent housing. She will pay 60 euros per day per person in such a transition location.

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Red Cross workers setting up stretchers in a sports hall that will be an emergency shelter for asylum seekers
Plan to scrap refugees’ priority for social housing will cost gov’t millions
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Undated photo of the emergency asylum center on Baanstee-Noord in Purmerend
Hardly any homes available for single refugees
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Social housing in Ypenburg, The Hague
Nearly 8% of social housing units allocated to refugees in 2023
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Asylum Minister Marjolein Faber after a debate in Parliament on a vote of no-confidence against her. 2 April 2025
Asylum distribution law will likely only be scrapped at the end of 2026
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