Lawyer salary in the Netherlands after tax — 2026
Dutch legal pay splits sharply along one line: the Zuidas, Amsterdam's financial and legal district, versus everywhere else. A stagiair (trainee associate) at an international Zuidas firm can out-earn a mid-level advocaat at a regional practice within a couple of years. Here's what every level actually keeps after tax.
Dutch income tax runs through box 1 for employment income, with two brackets (35.82% up to €38,441, 49.50% above) that already include national insurance contributions. The algemene heffingskorting and arbeidskorting tax credits reduce the bill meaningfully at lower and middle incomes, but the labour credit phases out above €39,998 — which is exactly where most qualified advocaten sit, so the effective rate climbs quickly through this table.
Take-home pay by track — Dutch lawyers 2026
| Level | Firm Type | Gross Salary | Monthly Net |
|---|---|---|---|
| Advocaat-stagiair | Regional / mid-size firm | €48,000 | €3,158/mo |
| Advocaat-stagiair | Zuidas (international firm) | €90,000 | €4,697/mo |
| Advocaat, mid-level (4–6 yrs) | Regional firm | €70,000 | €3,964/mo |
| Senior associate | Zuidas | €140,000 | €6,610/mo |
| Bedrijfsjurist (in-house counsel) | Corporate / multinational | €85,000 | €4,514/mo |
| Partner (example) | Large firm, profit-share | €250,000 | €11,239/mo |
Bonuses not included (Zuidas bonuses typically run 5–20% of base). Partner income is illustrative only — real partner pay is profit-share based and varies enormously by firm and book of business. Source: Michael Page Netherlands Salary Guide, Amt Recruitment, NOvA (Nederlandse Orde van Advocaten) salary reporting.
The 30%-ruling on the Zuidas
International firms on the Zuidas recruit heavily from outside the Netherlands — London, Brussels, and further afield — and a large share of those hires qualify for the 30%-regeling: up to 30% of gross salary paid tax-free, with only the remaining 70% taxed through the box 1 brackets, for a maximum of 5 years. It's designed to offset the real cost of relocating for work, and it's one of the most consequential financial details in a foreign lawyer's Dutch offer letter.
To qualify, a lawyer generally needs to have been recruited from abroad (typically living more than 150km from the Dutch border beforehand) and meet a minimum taxable salary threshold after the 30% deduction — approximately €46,660/year for 2026 (indexed annually; confirm the current figure with the Belastingdienst, as this area of tax law has been amended more than once recently — a step-down to 30/20/10% over 5 years was legislated for 2024, then reversed in the 2025 Voorjaarsnota back to a flat rate for the full term, alongside a planned reduction to 27% and a higher salary threshold from 2027).
Take the Zuidas senior associate row above: €140,000 gross under standard tax nets roughly €6,610/month (43.3% effective rate). Run the same €140,000 through the 30%-ruling — €42,000 tax-free, €98,000 taxed normally — and monthly net rises to approximately €8,491, an effective rate near 27.2%. That's about €1,880 more per month, or roughly €22,500 more per year, on identical gross pay. For a Zuidas firm competing against London and New York offers, that gap materially changes the comparison.
Important caveat: the figures in the table and this site's calculator are the standard, non-ruling case. A foreign-recruited associate under the ruling will see meaningfully higher net pay than shown here. The ruling applies only to box 1 employment income — a partner's profit share, once it moves outside a normal employment contract, is typically taxed differently (often still box 1 as business income, but outside the scope of this facility), and box 2 (substantial shareholding) and box 3 (savings and investments) sit entirely outside what this page or calculator covers.
Salary distribution — where Dutch lawyers sit
| Percentile | Gross | Monthly Net |
|---|---|---|
| P25 — regional junior | ~€45,000–€55,000 | ~€3,000–€3,500/mo |
| P50 — mid-level / in-house | ~€70,000–€85,000 | ~€3,960–€4,510/mo |
| P75 — Zuidas stagiair / associate | ~€90,000–€140,000 | ~€4,700–€6,610/mo |
| P90 — senior associate / junior partner | ~€180,000+ | ~€8,600+/mo |
Frequently asked questions
A regional-firm stagiair on €48,000 takes home about €3,158/month. A Zuidas stagiair on €90,000 takes home roughly €4,697/month. A Zuidas senior associate on €140,000 takes home approximately €6,610/month. In-house counsel (bedrijfsjurist) on €85,000 takes home about €4,514/month. Figures exclude bonuses.
The 30%-regeling lets qualifying employees recruited from abroad receive up to 30% of gross salary tax-free for up to 5 years, subject to a minimum taxable salary threshold (approximately €46,660/year for 2026). Many foreign hires at international Zuidas firms qualify. On a €140,000 salary, it raises net pay from about €6,610/month to roughly €8,491/month — around €22,500 more per year. This site's calculator shows standard, non-ruling figures.
Financially, yes — a Zuidas stagiair on €90,000 takes home roughly €1,540 more per month than a regional stagiair on €48,000, and the gap widens further at senior associate level. The trade-off is hours: Zuidas associates commonly work 55–65 hours/week versus 40–45 at regional firms. Many associates move to in-house or boutique roles after several years specifically to reclaim time while keeping a meaningfully higher salary than they started with.
Zuidas first-year associate pay (€90,000, ~€4,697/month net) sits below London Magic Circle NQ pay (£125,000, ~£5,994/month net before currency conversion), but the gap narrows once a foreign hire's 30%-ruling is factored in, since it isn't available in the UK. Dutch working hours and cost of living outside Amsterdam are typically more favourable than London's, which is part of why international firms use the Netherlands as a regional hub.