Understand everyday life in the Netherlands.
Why Dutch people are so direct. Why everything is planned. Why a Tikkie for €2.50 is normal. Short, warm lessons — no stereotypes, no homework, just life as it is here.
Did you know?
Niksen — the art of doing nothing
Sitting in a park, staring out the window, walking with no goal — it's a respected way to recharge, not laziness.
Social life
Friends, neighbors, birthdays and Dutch humor.
Why Dutch people are so direct
It is not rude — it is meant as honesty and respect for your time.
4 min read
Birthday circles, explained
Why everyone congratulates everyone — including the cousin you just met.
3 min read
Making Dutch friends takes patience
Friendliness is quick. Friendship is slow — and that's okay.
4 min read
Splitting the bill, every time
At dinner, almost everyone pays for their own. It is not stingy — it is the default.
3 min read
Why people leave parties at 23:00
Early goodbyes are not rude — most people have an early start.
2 min read
Small talk is short — and that's fine
The cashier won't ask how your day was. Quiet is comfortable here.
2 min read
Saying no without a long excuse
A clear no, gently said, is more respected than a vague maybe.
2 min read
Saying hi to your new neighbors
A small "kennismaking" — a knock and a hello — sets the tone for years.
2 min read
When "interesting" doesn't mean interesting
The polite Dutch "interesting" often means "I disagree, but politely".
2 min read
Gezelligheid: the warm word with no translation
Cosy, friendly, easy — small lights, small talk, big comfort.
2 min read
Work culture
Feedback, lunch, meetings and work–life balance.
Direct feedback at work
Short, honest and aimed at the work — not at you.
3 min read
Lunch at work: bread, cheese, done
Quick, simple and usually together — not a long ceremony.
2 min read
Why appointments and time matter
Being five minutes early is normal — and showing up matters.
3 min read
Calling in sick — the Dutch way
You call early, you rest, and nobody asks for a doctor's note.
3 min read
Why Dutch meetings have an agenda
Start time, agenda, action points, end time — and they end on time.
2 min read
Work–life balance is a real thing
Evenings and weekends belong to family, friends and the bike.
3 min read
Salary is private (mostly)
Talking about pay is slowly opening up — but tread carefully.
2 min read
Daily life
Biking, groceries, appointments and quiet hours.
Cycling etiquette
The bike lane has its own rules — and they are not optional.
4 min read
Neighbors, noise and quiet hours
A short knock and a calm chat solve almost everything.
3 min read
Grocery habits and store hours
Bring your own bag, weigh your own fruit, plan around Sunday.
2 min read
Everything needs an appointment
Doctor, haircut, gemeente, sometimes even visiting a friend.
3 min read
Public transport etiquette
Check in, check out, sit on the empty side — and stay quiet.
2 min read
Sorting your trash, the Dutch way
Glass, paper, PMD, GFT, restafval — each has its own bin and rhythm.
3 min read
Quiet Sundays and slow mornings
Most shops are closed, the city slows down, and people go outside.
2 min read
Family life
Schools, childcare, parenting and sports clubs.
How Dutch schools communicate
Short, direct, mostly in Dutch — and they expect your involvement.
4 min read
Why Dutch children are so independent
Cycling to school at 8 isn't reckless — it's the local norm.
3 min read
Sports clubs are how kids belong
Football, hockey, gymnastics, judo — joining a club shapes the week.
3 min read
Childcare: book before the baby arrives
Daycare and BSO often have year-long waiting lists.
3 min read
How Dutch school levels work
Basisschool, then VMBO / HAVO / VWO — the path is decided around 12.
4 min read
Money & systems
Tikkie, subscriptions, insurance and budgets.
Tikkie culture: splitting €2.50 is normal
Asking for small amounts back isn't cheap — it's fair and easy.
3 min read
Why everything has an insurance
From bikes to liability — Dutch life is built on small monthly safety nets.
3 min read
Subscriptions and contracts are sticky
Read the cancel terms before you sign — they are usually monthly, sometimes yearly.
3 min read
Letters from the Belastingdienst
Open them. They are usually not scary — but they have deadlines.
3 min read
Why nobody uses cash
iDEAL, pinnen and contactless — cash is the awkward exception.
2 min read
Energy bills and toeslagen
Predicted monthly bill, yearly settlement, and government allowances if you qualify.
3 min read
Why Dutch people save quietly
Big purchases are planned, not surprised.
2 min read
These lessons are written by people who moved here too. They describe common patterns — not rules, and not every Dutch person. If something feels off for your situation, ask the AI guide for a calmer second view.