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## Summary
The Dutch-American Friendship Treaty (*DAFT*) is one of the most distinctive and underutilized residency routes in Europe — available only to U.S. citizens (and Japanese citizens under a parallel treaty). It allows Americans to obtain Dutch self-employment residency with a capital requirement of just €4,500, a figure unchanged since the treaty was signed in 1956.
The treaty was signed on March 27, 1956, between the United States and the Netherlands as a broad economic and commercial friendship agreement. Article III of the treaty contains the reciprocal right for nationals of either country to establish themselves as entrepreneurs in the other. The IND is the Dutch immigration service; it implements DAFT under the *"Verblijf als zelfstandige op basis van een internationaal verdrag"* (residence as self-employed under an international treaty) residence permit category.
### Why DAFT is structurally unique
- U.S.-only access — Japanese citizens have a parallel treaty, but no other nationality qualifies
- €4,500 capital vs. EU comparables — the Dutch self-employed route for non-treaty nationals uses a points-based system with much higher scrutiny; France's *profession libérale* has no fixed minimum but requires proving financial viability; Spain's entrepreneur visa typically expects €50,000+; Portugal's D2 expects €5,000+ plus a robust business plan
- No points test — DAFT applicants don't go through the points-based evaluation that other Dutch self-employed applicants face
- No business plan approval — the IND doesn't need to approve the business idea in advance
- Business-friendly review — the route is well established and built around a simple treaty-based eligibility test
### The €4,500 requirement — what it actually means
The capital must be:
- Deposited in a Dutch business bank account (not a personal account)
- In the business's name — typically a sole proprietorship (*eenmanszaak*) or a Dutch BV (the Dutch equivalent of a private limited company)
- Maintained throughout the permit duration (not just at application time)
- Reflected on the opening balance sheet of the Dutch business, prepared by a qualified Dutch bookkeeper with a BECON number. A BECON number is a Dutch tax/intermediary identification number used by authorized tax advisers and bookkeepers.
The €4,500 is genuinely the minimum — it has not been indexed for inflation and remains the figure the IND applies today.
### 2026 IND enforcement — two directions at once
The IND has been doing something interesting in 2026:
Streamlined application pilot — since 2024, the IND runs an ongoing pilot where a DAFT application is provisionally approved based on general residency requirements. The applicant then has 6 months from issuance to provide:
- Proof of Chamber of Commerce (*Kamer van Koophandel*, KvK) registration
- Opening balance showing the €4,500 invested capital, signed by a BECON bookkeeper
This removes the chicken-and-egg problem of needing a Dutch business bank account before having a Dutch address.
Parallel compliance audits — starting in late February 2026, the IND began sending compliance letters to existing DAFT permit holders requesting detailed proof that:
- The €4,500 has remained in the business account throughout the permit
- The business is genuinely operating (revenue, invoices, real activity)
- The holder is actually self-employed, not dormant or a disguised employee
Bottom line: DAFT is still open and still cheap, but the IND wants the setup to be real. Holders who register a shell company and never use it are now at risk of permit revocation.
### Business structure options
Eenmanszaak (sole proprietorship) — simplest structure. You're personally liable for business debts, but setup is fast and cheap. Popular for freelancers and solopreneurs. Taxed as personal income.
BV (Besloten Vennootschap) — private limited liability company, similar to a U.S. LLC. Higher setup costs (~€500–1,500 for notary + bookkeeper) but separates personal and business liability. Required if you want to scale or take on investors.
VOF (partnership) — if two or more eligible applicants want to team up on a DAFT business.
Most DAFT applicants start with an *eenmanszaak* unless they have specific liability or investor concerns.
### Permit structure
- Initial permit: 2 years
- First renewal: 5 years (continuous with original permit)
- Permanent residency eligible at 5 years of continuous Dutch residence
- Renewal is straightforward — the €4,500 must still be in the business, and the business must still operate
### Path to permanent residency and citizenship
After 5 years of DAFT residence, holders can apply for:
- Dutch permanent residency (*vergunning voor onbepaalde tijd*) — if A2 Dutch integration exam passed
- EU Long-Term Resident status — same 5-year clock
Citizenship: the Netherlands generally requires renunciation of U.S. citizenship for naturalization. Since DAFT is *the* American route, the irony is pointed — most Americans who arrive on DAFT end their journey at Dutch permanent residency rather than citizenship, because renouncing U.S. citizenship to become Dutch would terminate the DAFT renewal right going forward. PR provides indefinite residence without requiring that tradeoff.
### Tax treatment
DAFT holders are not eligible for the 30% ruling — that's an employee-side tax benefit for recruited highly skilled migrants, not self-employed entrepreneurs.
DAFT holders file Dutch income tax as self-employed (*ZZP'er* or *ondernemer*). They may qualify for:
- Zelfstandigenaftrek (self-employed deduction) — €3,750 for 2026
- Startersaftrek (starter's deduction) — additional €2,123 in the first 3 years
- MKB-winstvrijstelling (SME profit exemption) — 12.7% of remaining profit tax-free
The U.S.-Netherlands tax treaty prevents double taxation. U.S. citizens still file IRS taxes using the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) for up to $130,000 of foreign earned income (2026 figure) or Foreign Tax Credit if paying more in Dutch tax.
### Family members
Spouses, registered partners, and dependent children get derivative DAFT-family permits. Family members receive:
- Unrestricted work rights in the Netherlands — any Dutch job, no separate work permit
- Public healthcare access
- Public education for children (free through secondary school)
Family members can take regular Dutch employment while the main applicant runs the DAFT business — a very flexible arrangement.
### Common DAFT professions
Based on IND public reporting and immigration-specialist data:
- Remote tech and design — freelance developers, designers, product managers with U.S. clients
- Consulting — management consultants, marketing, strategy
- Creative services — writers, photographers, videographers
- E-commerce and content — Amazon sellers, YouTubers, course creators
- Specialty retail — small shops, cafes, galleries
- Professional services — accountants, coaches, therapists
## Eligibility
- U.S. citizenship (the treaty is exclusive to Americans, plus Japanese citizens under a parallel treaty)
- Intent to operate a genuine Dutch business as self-employed — sole proprietorship, BV, or partnership
- €4,500 capital deposited in a Dutch business bank account, maintained throughout the permit
- Dutch Chamber of Commerce registration (KvK) within 6 months of permit issuance under the pilot
- BECON-registered Dutch bookkeeper to prepare the opening balance
- Valid passport
- Dutch health insurance (mandatory)
- Clean criminal record from U.S. authorities
- No points test, no business plan approval, no labor market test
## What This Route Allows
This route can allow you to live in the Netherlands through a qualifying investment, business, or self-employment plan. Approval usually depends on the amount, source of funds, business activity, and documents required by the country.
## What This Route Is Not
This is not just a business idea on paper. Entrepreneur and self-employment routes usually require a credible plan, real activity, funds, qualifications, or official endorsement.
## Next Steps
1. Confirm U.S. citizenship — DAFT is exclusive to Americans
2. Decide on business structure — *eenmanszaak* (simple, most common) or Dutch BV (liability shield, more setup cost)
3. Engage a Dutch bookkeeper with a BECON number — critical for preparing the opening balance
4. Enter the Netherlands — Americans are visa-free for Schengen short stays; you can enter as a tourist and begin the process
5. Apply for a BSN by registering at the local *Gemeente* (municipality) — you'll need a Dutch address
6. Open a Dutch bank account (ING, ABN AMRO, Rabobank, bunq all accept U.S. citizens)
7. Register your business at the Chamber of Commerce (KvK) — typically €80 one-time fee
8. Deposit €4,500 into the Dutch business bank account
9. Submit the DAFT application to IND — *Verblijf als zelfstandige op basis van een internationaal verdrag*, IND fee approximately €1,578 in 2026
10. Provide opening balance and KvK registration within 6 months of permit issuance under the current pilot
11. Enroll in Dutch health insurance (*Zorgverzekering*) — mandatory within 4 months of arrival
12. Register with the Belastingdienst for self-employed tax (VAT/*BTW* registration if revenue requires it)
13. Maintain the €4,500 in the business account and operate the business throughout the permit — the IND does audit
14. Renew at 2 years — continuous 5-year extension with proof of ongoing business
15. After 5 years, apply for Dutch permanent residency (requires A2 integration exam)
16. Consider citizenship only carefully — naturalization generally requires U.S. renunciation, which is incompatible with DAFT's treaty basis
## Sources
- [IND — Residence permit self-employed person](https://ind.nl/en/residence-permits/work/residence-permit-self-employed-person)
- [Dutch-American Friendship Treaty (1956) — full text](https://www.state.gov/bilateral-treaties-with-the-netherlands/)
- [Kamer van Koophandel (Chamber of Commerce)](https://www.kvk.nl/english/)
- [Belastingdienst — Starting a business in the Netherlands](https://www.belastingdienst.nl/wps/wcm/connect/bldcontenten/belastingdienst/business/)
- [I amsterdam — DAFT practical overview](https://www.iamsterdam.com/en/live-work-study/living/official-procedures/five-things-to-know-about-the-dutch-american-friendship-treaty-daft)
- [U.S. Embassy in the Netherlands — Americans living in the Netherlands](https://nl.usembassy.gov/u-s-citizen-services/)
- [Aliens Act (Vreemdelingenwet 2000)](https://wetten.overheid.nl/BWBR0011823/)
- [Apostille Convention (HCCH) — U.S. competent authorities](https://www.hcch.net/en/instruments/conventions/authorities1/?cid=41)
A residency route for Americans who want to start or run their own business in the Netherlands, under a 1956 treaty open only to U.S. citizens. Just €4,500 in business capital — one of the lowest thresholds in Europe.