Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Engineers on a construction site
Engineers on a construction site - Credit: AllaSerebrina / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
Business
Economic Institute for Construction
Economic Institute for Construction and Housing
Dutch mortgage market
additional housing
housing
Ministry of Housing
Monday, 20 October 2025 - 17:50

Share this article:

Dutch housing shortage could be cut in years, expert says

The Netherlands’ housing crisis could be significantly reduced within a few years with consistent, targeted policy, according to Taco van Hoek, director of the Economic Institute for Construction (EIB).

“The housing debate is marred by perceptions that obscure solutions to the housing crisis, which are not particularly difficult or unfeasible,” Van Hoek told De Telegraaf. “If we can maintain this pace for five years, the housing shortage can be resolved quickly.”

The EIB found that building 100,000 homes annually is feasible with the right policies. Van Hoek criticized political focus on long-term shortages, such as D66’s plan to build ten new cities, which would not start until at least 2040 and take decades to complete.

“Costly time, money, and construction capacity are being wasted that could be used for direct solutions,” he told the newspaper. “Small streets and neighborhoods at the edges of towns could contribute significantly to housing in the coming years. What is needed is some freedom to build higher-priced homes that also promote mobility within the market.”

Van Hoek rejected the idea that government involvement caused the shortage. “Government influence has increased sharply in recent years. Quotas, affordability rules, and stricter regulations have shaped the market. The free rental sector has nearly disappeared, yet some parties want to continue this approach.”

He also warned that cutting mortgage interest deductions for first-time buyers could harm them, that migration impacts housing demand more than assumed, and welcomed the raised nitrogen threshold as a positive step removing unnecessary building restrictions.

More like this

Image
Construction of a new high-rise apartment building in Amsterdam-Oost.
Rooftop housing could ease Dutch shortage with 100,000 homes, but few built: Study
Image
Housing construction
Housing Minister de Jonge urges rapid construction to tackle 391,000 home shortage
Image
Construction of a new high-rise apartment building in Amsterdam-Oost.
Housing construction is declining faster than expected, research shows
Image
ING Bank
ING becomes first major Dutch bank to use AI in nonstandard mortgage applications
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Social landlords raise rents 3.6%, citing need to expand housing supply
  • Video: Fire destroys Lelystad swingers club days after municipality bought property
  • Dutch worried about crumbling international legal order, Netherlands' resilience
  • Home buyers, on average, moving further away than decade ago: Land Registry
  • All five aldermen resign from Tiel council amid allegations of criminal activities

Top stories

  • Dutch worried about crumbling international legal order, Netherlands' resilience
  • Dutch State considering buying shares in shipbuilder Damen
  • Number of international students at Dutch universities falls for first time in 20 years
  • Backpacks on flagpoles: 182,000 secondary school students find out if they're graduating
  • Lightning strike halts train services between Amsterdam, Schiphol and Utrecht

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

Footer menu

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