A garage or workshop can change the tax story before the euro amount is even discussed.
Picture a carpenter who keeps a van on the street, timber in a garage, and private bicycles against the same wall. The garage sits near the house, but not attached. It has no life of its own. Electricity comes from the home. Customers never enter it, yet every working week starts there.
The signal has to become readable
Then the WOZ assessment arrives. The first instinct is to inspect the number. Too high? Too low? Compared with the neighbour? I understand that reaction. With small buildings around a home, a better first question is quieter and more important: what exactly has the municipality valued?
What the law asks
The Wet WOZ starts with the object. Article 16 defines what counts as one immovable property for WOZ purposes. Under Article 16, opening words and letter d, two or more properties or parts can count as one object when the same taxpayer uses them and the circumstances show that they belong together.
The Hoge Raad sharpened that point in its judgment of 12 September 2025, ECLI:NL:HR:2025:1211. The court did not give a simple formula. It said the judge must weigh all circumstances together.
Distance matters. So do intervening properties, organisational connection, separate saleability, independent use, outward appearance and the way third parties see the connection. No single factor decides the case on its own.
What the signal changes
That is a Dutch answer, and it is precise. A garage can stand near the house and still remain separate. A workshop can stand apart and still belong with the main property. Same use by the same taxpayer opens the door. The full picture decides whether the door stays open.
What the model can miss
Municipalities do not have to visit every property. Rijksoverheid says they may use data, comparable sales, samples and computer models. For business premises, they may also use methods based on rental value or replacement value. An owner can request the WOZ valuation report from the municipality.
That report matters more than the number alone. It shows how the municipality looked at the property. Did it see a separate garage, a workshop, a shed, a yard or part of the home? Did it understand access, use and utilities? A model may know square metres. It may not know that the building cannot function without a cable from the kitchen wall.
For the carpenter in the opening scene, that difference is real. If the garage counts as a separate object, the discussion starts in one place. If it belongs with the home, the discussion starts somewhere else. The value may still be disputed, but the base of the dispute has changed.
Why small spaces matter
The wider market makes these boundaries easier to see. CBS shows the average WOZ value of all Dutch dwellings at 398,000 euros in 2025, up from 378,000 euros in 2024. For owner-occupied dwellings, the 2025 average was 473,000 euros. CBS and Kadaster also reported that existing owner-occupied homes were 4.3 percent more expensive in April 2026 than one year earlier, while prices were unchanged from March to April.
That is not a panic signal. It is a reminder that property values are high enough for smaller spaces to matter. A shed, garage or strip of land can feed several bills and records. WOZ value is used for onroerendezaakbelasting, sometimes sewerage charges, income tax, corporate income tax, gift tax, inheritance tax, water authority charges and the points system for maximum rent.
A modest outbuilding can therefore enter the business through a side door. It may shape a municipal bill. It may sit inside an income-tax calculation. It may show up again in a financing review, a sale, an inheritance file or a rental discussion. The amount may not look dramatic in year one. Repetition makes it worth understanding.
Where tax and records meet
Belastingdienst guidance adds another layer. A shed, garage or piece of land that belongs to the own home is an aanhorigheid, and its value belongs to the value of the own home. At the same time, a municipality may issue a separate WOZ decision for a garage, shed or land.
What founders should check
If a private home is partly used for business, only the residential part counts as the own home for the income-tax return. In that case, an adjusted WOZ value must be used. For entrepreneurs whose main residence belongs entirely to business assets, the woningforfait is linked to the WOZ value. Related buildings such as a garage count only if they belong to the dwelling.
This is where a practitioner should be careful. The problem is rarely one document. It is the mismatch between documents. The WOZ decision says one thing. The income-tax return says another. The purchase deed stays silent. The fixed-asset register treats the space casually. The insurance policy describes a workshop. Nobody set out to create a weak record, but the record becomes weak anyway.
The discipline that helps
A sensible owner does not need a thick legal folder for every shed. The useful discipline is smaller. Keep the WOZ decision and the valuation report. Compare the municipal description with the actual property. Make sure the purchase papers, cadastral information, photos, access route, utility supply and business-use records tell the same story.
The objection period against a WOZ decision is six weeks after the date of the decision. Filing an objection is free. Rijksoverheid also advises contacting the municipality or tax cooperation body before choosing the formal route. That timing matters. Facts gathered after the deadline may still help later, but they have already lost some force.
Return to the carpenter. The question is not whether he should fight every assessment. It is whether he knows how his garage is being seen. Is it private storage, business storage, mixed-use space, or a building that belongs with the home because it cannot operate alone? The answer should be clear before the bill is challenged.
The WOZ boundary is not a technical nuisance for specialists. It is the line where property, tax and daily business use meet. When the small building next to the house holds tools, stock, records or rental value, the owner should not start with irritation over the number.
Start with the object. The euros make more sense after that.
Sources
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