Netherlands 세금 거주 규칙: 183일 기준 총정리
183일 기준
Netherlands에서 183일 규칙이 적용되는 방식
The Netherlands uses a facts and circumstances test. Physical presence of 183+ days is a strong indicator but not the sole criterion.
달력 연도 (1월~12월). 일수 계산이 매년 1월 1일에 초기화됩니다. 전년도 일수는 이월되지 않습니다.
183일을 초과하면, Netherlands가 세금 거주자로서 전 세계 소득에 과세할 수 있습니다. 정확한 결과는 개인 상황, 적용 가능한 조세 조약, 소득 유형에 따라 달라집니다.
일수 계산 방식
Dutch tax residency turns on where the centre of your personal and economic life actually sits. The Belastingdienst weighs a long list of factors: where you live with your family, where you work, where your savings and major assets are, whether you are registered with your municipality (BRP), and how long you spend in the country during the year. No single number decides it.
하루로 인정되는 기준
Day count enters as evidence rather than as a decisive trigger. Crossing 183 days in the Netherlands strongly suggests residency, but staying below 183 will not save you if the rest of your life is plainly anchored here.
일수 외 추가 판정 기준
Registering with the BRP and having a home permanently available to you both create strong presumptions of Dutch residency. The Belastingdienst still reviews each case on its merits, but starting from those two markers is hard to argue out of.
특별 세금 제도
The 30% ruling is the relevant regime. It used to give qualifying highly skilled migrants a tax free reimbursement worth 30% of gross salary for five years, alongside an option to be treated as a partial non resident for box 2 and box 3 purposes. From 2024 the percentage steps down across the five years to 30%, then 20%, then 10%.
조세 조약
Dutch treaties follow the OECD model, and the Netherlands has extensive treaty coverage, which is part of why so many international holding structures are based here.
자주 묻는 질문
Is the 30% ruling still 30% for all five years?
No. From 2024 the ruling stepped down to 30% for the first 20 months, 20% for the next 20, and 10% for the final 20. Transitional rules apply for arrivals before that change.
Can I avoid Dutch residency by not registering with the BRP?
Not on its own. The Belastingdienst looks at where you actually live, work, and keep your day to day life. Skipping registration tends to draw scrutiny rather than shield you from it.
Does the 183 day rule appear in any Dutch context?
Yes, in tax treaties between the Netherlands and other countries, for splitting employment income. It is not the residency test for individuals under domestic Dutch law.
공식 출처: https://www.belastingdienst.nl/wps/wcm/connect/en/individuals/individuals