Car part thefts drop 19%, but insurance claims surge by 50% to €3,000 per incident
Auto-part theft in the Netherlands has dropped, but the financial damage is climbing fast. While insurance claims for stolen car parts fell 19 percent in three years—from 13,000 in 2021 to 10,500 in 2023—the average claim surged 50 percent to 3,000 euros per incident, pushing the total cost to 30 million euros, according to De Telegraaf.
Luxury brands like BMW remain top targets, particularly for their high-value navigation systems. Criminals use sophisticated tools to dismantle parts quickly, often smuggling them to Eastern Europe. Entire stolen vehicles, however, are frequently shipped to West Africa.
A Dutch initiative to recover stolen cars from Ghana has seen success. In 2023, Dutch authorities—working with insurers, Interpol, and Ghanaian officials—retrieved 10 vehicles. Earlier this year, three Dutch officers traveled to Accra with Interpol documents to seize stolen cars and ship them back.
“Whether or not the buyer purchased in good faith, it’s still stolen property,” a spokesperson for Stichting Verzekeringsbureau Voertuigcriminaliteit (VbV) told De Telegraaf.
Ghana serves as a transit hub, with stolen Dutch cars often ending up in Nigeria, Ivory Coast, or Gabon. Investigators use telematics to track vehicles, identifying 126 stolen Dutch cars in Ghana last year alone. Many resurface on Nigerian resale platforms, still bearing Dutch dealership frames.
Car theft rings operate on order, often using shopping lists of desired models. Stolen cars are quickly packed into shipping containers, usually in Antwerp or German ports, and sent to Accra. Some are intercepted en route, including two recovered from a Hamburg-Amsterdam shipment flagged for suspiciously low container weight.
Recovered vehicles do not return to their original owners but are auctioned by insurers to recover losses. Buyers caught with stolen cars in Ghana often scramble to prove ownership. “When they immediately call lawyers, it’s usually a sign they’re involved,” VbV’s Rob Smitskamp told De Telegraaf.
Dutch authorities aim to expand the recovery program, but the number of stolen Dutch cars appearing in Africa is still rising. “Our goal is to shut down this pipeline,” VbV’s Roelof Muis said.
