Jul 02, 2026
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Retire in the Netherlands
Discover real monthly budgets by city and insider financial guidance for your Dutch retirement dream.
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Love Netherlands
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Dear Netherlands,
There are two kinds of mornings in the Dutch spring. The kind where you cycle to the market and come home with warm cheese and rye bread and a handful of wild tulips. And the kind where it rains sideways for an hour, then the sun comes out and everything looks like a Vermeer. Today, if you’re lucky, is one of those mornings.
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Photo via Love Netherlands
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In today’s email:
- How Much Money Do You Need to Retire in the Netherlands? (2026 Budget Guide)
- At The Café — Café De Klomp — The Oldest Café in Friesland
- Around The Web — Kinderdijk Windmills: The Complete Visitor Guide, Dutch Surnames of Flevoland: Origins and Meanings, Amsterdam’s Museum Quarter: The Complete Visitor Guide + more
- From Love Netherlands — From Table Mountain to Amsterdam: Tracing Your Boer Roots in the Netherlands
- Dutch Food You Will Love — Hutspot — The Dutch Mash With a Siege Story
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How Much Money Do You Need to Retire in the Netherlands? (2026 Budget Guide)
👉 Read the full story
The Netherlands has long attracted Americans searching for a slower pace, excellent healthcare, and a high quality of life. But before you swap your stateside suburb for a canal-side apartment, the question everyone asks is the same: how much money do you actually need to retire in the Netherlands? The honest answer depends on where you settle and how you like to live — but this 2026 budget guide gives you the real numbers, by city, so you can plan with confidence. Love the Netherlands? Join our free newsletter for hidden Dutch gems → inlovewithnetherlands.substack.com This guide covers monthly costs for a retired American couple, the mandatory Dutch health insurance system, regional price differences across key cities, and the financial considerations that catch expats off guard. For information on the residency routes available to Americans — including the DAFT treaty and long-stay…
👉 Read the full story
Have you been there? Do you have a memory of this corner of the Netherlands? Hit reply and tell us — we’d love to hear your story.
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At The Café
Café De Klomp — The Oldest Café in Friesland
Café De Klomp in Leeuwarden’s old centre has been pouring beer since 1620, making it Friesland’s oldest continuously running pub. The room is small and dark with wooden tables polished by four centuries of elbows. Frisian is spoken behind the bar and at half the tables — a separate language, not a Dutch dialect. Order a glass of Beerenburg, the local herb-infused jenever, and listen to a Saturday afternoon unfold around you in a language most Dutch people don’t speak either.
👉 Visit the café
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Around The Web
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From Love Netherlands
Your family might call the Cape their home. But somewhere, centuries ago, your ancestors left the Netherlands for a journey they could never have imagined. Their descendants built farms, towns, and a nation. Now you can follow that trail back to its source. This guide is for South Africans of Dutch descent — Boer and Afrikaner families whose surnames, language, and faith still carry the fingerprints of the Low Countries. It covers the history,…
👉 Read the full story
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Photo via Love Netherlands
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Dutch Food You Will Love
Hutspot — The Dutch Mash With a Siege Story
Hutspot is a thick mash of potatoes, carrots, and onions, served alongside klapstuk (slow-cooked beef brisket) or smoked sausage. The story is that the Dutch found a pot of it abandoned by Spanish soldiers fleeing Leiden in 1574 — the city had been under siege so long they’d been eating it themselves to survive. Every 3 October, Leiden still serves hutspot for free at its annual Ontzet festival. It’s the kind of plate that looks unassuming and tastes like centuries of practical Dutch winter cooking — sweet, savoury, and made for a long evening.
👉 Read the full story
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