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Invoicing · Netherlands 9 min read · Updated June 2026

How to Invoice in the Netherlands: BTW, Rules & Template

Dutch invoices have strict legal requirements — miss a field and your client's accountant will send it back. Here's every mandatory element, the BTW rates, and the reverse-charge rule that trips up freelancers selling across the EU.

If you're a ZZP'er (freelancer) or run a small business in the Netherlands, your invoices have to meet the requirements set by the Belastingdienst (Dutch Tax Administration). The rules are stricter than in many countries — a missing BTW-id or invoice number can make the invoice invalid for your client's VAT return, and they'll ask you to redo it.

This guide covers exactly what a compliant Dutch invoice needs, the BTW rates, and how reverse-charge works.

The essentials

Every Dutch invoice needs your BTW-id and KVK number, a unique sequential invoice number, the date, both parties' details, an itemised description, the BTW rate and amount, and the total. Keep all invoices for seven years.

Mandatory fields on a Dutch invoice

The Belastingdienst requires all of the following. Leave one out and the invoice may not be legally valid:

FieldDetail
Your business name & addressThe legal name registered with the KVK
Your BTW-idYour VAT identification number (the one starting NL…B…)
Your KVK numberChamber of Commerce registration number
Invoice numberUnique and sequential — no gaps or duplicates
Invoice dateThe date of issue
Customer detailsName and address (and their VAT number for B2B/EU)
DescriptionNature and quantity of goods or services
Supply dateWhen the goods/services were delivered, if different from invoice date
BTW breakdownThe rate (21%, 9%, 0%), the amount of BTW, and the amount excluding BTW
TotalAmount including BTW

BTW rates in 2026

The Netherlands uses three BTW (VAT) rates:

  • 21% — standard rate. Applies to most goods and services.
  • 9% — reduced rate. Food, drinks (non-alcoholic), books, medicines, public transport, and some labour-intensive services like repairs.
  • 0% — zero rate. Mainly for international supplies and exports; you charge no BTW but can still reclaim input BTW.

Some activities (such as certain medical, educational and financial services) are BTW-exempt entirely — different from 0%, because exempt suppliers generally can't reclaim input BTW.

💡 The KOR scheme. Small businesses under the kleineondernemersregeling (small entrepreneur scheme) turnover threshold can opt out of charging BTW altogether. If you use the KOR, you don't add BTW and you note this on the invoice — but you also can't reclaim BTW on your purchases.

Reverse-charge: "btw verlegd"

This is the rule that confuses freelancers selling to businesses in other EU countries. For most B2B sales to a VAT-registered customer elsewhere in the EU, you apply the reverse-charge mechanism:

  1. You charge 0% BTW.
  2. You write "btw verlegd" (VAT reverse-charged) on the invoice.
  3. You include both your and the customer's VAT numbers.
  4. The customer accounts for the VAT in their own country.

You also report these sales in your BTW return and an ICP declaration (Opgaaf intracommunautaire prestaties). Reverse-charge also applies domestically in specific sectors like construction subcontracting.

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Compliant by default

Create a Dutch invoice free with GetInvoiceMaker

Add your BTW-id and KVK number, pick 21% / 9% / 0% or reverse-charge, and get a clean, Belastingdienst-ready PDF in under a minute. No signup.

Create a free invoice →

Invoice deadlines and record-keeping

You must issue an invoice no later than the 15th day of the month following the month in which you supplied the goods or services (for B2B supplies). And you must keep your invoices — issued and received — for seven years, the standard Dutch retention period (ten years for invoices relating to immovable property).

A quick BTW worked example

Standard 21% invoice

Amount excluding BTW: €1,000.00
BTW (21%): €210.00
Total including BTW: €1,210.00

Frequently asked questions

What must a Dutch invoice include?
Your name, address, BTW-id and KVK number; a unique sequential invoice number; the date; the customer's details; a description and quantity; the BTW rate and amount; and the total. Keep invoices for seven years.
What's the difference between BTW-id and BTW number?
The BTW-id (VAT identification number) is the one you put on invoices and your website. The older "omzetbelastingnummer" is used only in correspondence with the Belastingdienst. Always show the BTW-id on invoices.
When do I use reverse-charge?
Mainly for B2B sales to VAT-registered customers in other EU countries, and in specific domestic sectors like construction subcontracting. You charge 0%, write "btw verlegd", and include both VAT numbers.
Do I charge BTW under the KOR scheme?
No. Under the small entrepreneur scheme you don't charge BTW and note it on the invoice, but you also can't reclaim BTW on your own purchases.