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Social housing in Ypenburg, The Hague
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Thursday, 8 May 2025 - 14:30

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Housing corporations plan legal action against Minister over rent freeze

Nearly 200 Dutch housing corporations, supported by umbrella organization Aedes, are preparing a lawsuit against Housing Minister Mona Keijzer (BBB) over the Cabinet’s recent decision to freeze rents for two years. The corporations say the move violates signed national housing agreements and jeopardizes 49 billion euros in planned investments in social housing.

Aedes confirmed on Wednesday that it had formally issued a written notice of default to Minister Keijzer. The organization demands that she reverse the rent freeze for 2025 and 2026 and honor the National Performance Agreements, which were signed last December by housing corporations, government agencies, and construction stakeholders.

“By removing the financing of those plans via rental income, the Cabinet is unilaterally breaking the agreement,” said Aedes chair Liesbeth Spies. She warned that the rent freeze undermines the financial foundation for expanding and renovating the country’s stock of social housing. Aedes calculates that one-third of housing corporations’ investment capacity — amounting to 49 billion euros — will be lost if the freeze remains in place.

Spies called the rent freeze “a raid on the cash reserves of corporations.” She added that the decision left housing associations across the country “angry, saddened, and disappointed.”

“But they are also determined to fulfill their social responsibility to current and future tenants,” she said. “To do that, they need the planned average rent increase of 4.5 percent.”

The rent freeze was introduced last month as part of the coalition’s spring budget negotiations. In exchange, the Cabinet pledged to allocate a total of 675 million euros for investment in social housing over 2025 and 2026.

However, the corporations argue that the promised government support does not compensate for the lost income. Aedes is giving the minister two weeks to reverse the policy. If no satisfactory response is received, the corporations will proceed with legal action demanding that the original rent plans be reinstated.

Spies emphasized that the conflict is not just with Minister Keijzer but also with the coalition parties — PVV, VVD, NSC, and BBB. “It is never too late to reverse a bad decision,” she said.

She also expressed concerns about the broader consequences for investor confidence. “When you make agreements, you want peace, clarity, and consistency. You want to get to work,” Spies said. “The investment climate for corporations is fragile. What lender will step in if agreements are broken after just four months?”

Reporting by ANP

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