KVK’s updated guidance turns emigration into a record, tax, and address decision.
Picture a sole trader who has moved to Spain, still serves Amsterdam clients, and invoices from the old Dutch template. The work feels Dutch because the money arrives from the Netherlands. The record may tell another story.
The signal has to become readable
KVK updated its guidance on 22 June 2026 for zzp’ers who work from abroad. The signal is simple. Dutch clients alone do not keep a business in the Dutch Handelsregister. The harder questions are where the work happens, where the business can still be reached, and which Dutch tax or social-security links remain attached.
I read that as a governance warning, not as a travel note. A move abroad changes the record before it changes identity.
The first record moves before the invoice does
Rijksoverheid says anyone who will live abroad for more than eight months in a year must report departure to the municipality. The personal record then moves from resident in the BRP to non-resident in the RNI. RvIG passes that change to organisations such as the Belastingdienst and pension funds.
That is the personal layer. KVK handles the business layer. If no business activities remain in the Netherlands, the Dutch business usually needs deregistration, even if Dutch clients stay. If paid work still happens in the Netherlands after emigration, the registration can remain. In that case the business needs a Dutch visiting address.
What the signal changes
That address is not decoration on a website. KVK treats the visiting address as the official Business Register address. A PO box will not do. If the entrepreneur does not use the premises, the file needs proof of use, such as a lease, ownership proof, or consent from the owner or occupant.
A Dutch address must carry real business weight
This distinction is easy to miss. A journalist who writes only from the United States for Dutch media may still serve a Dutch market, but not Dutch activity. An adviser who works from Sweden and visits Dutch clients only now and then may sit in the same position. A dentist who returns to the Netherlands for replacement shifts is different. So is a contractor who spends several months a year on Dutch sites.
The difference is not sentiment. It is the place of work. The founder in Spain should not ask whether clients still recognise the old KVK number. The better question is whether the register still describes the business honestly. When calls, writing, purchasing, packing, and administration all happen abroad, the old Dutch registration starts to look like packaging left around a business that has already moved.
Cost matters too. KVK says that when all activities stop for longer than six months, deregistration is required. Staying registered while inactive can still keep VAT returns and bookkeeping duties alive. A harmless old record then becomes a recurring bill, a missed return, or a bank question.
The tax tail does not vanish with deregistration
Deregistering from KVK does not close every Dutch tax question. Belastingdienst says an emigration year normally brings a migration-year income tax return, the M-form. After emigration, a non-resident declares only income taxable in the Netherlands. Dutch real estate remains taxable in the Netherlands, while treaty rules decide many other income questions.
VAT has its own logic. Belastingdienst defines a VAT fixed establishment as durable facilities and resources, such as people and equipment, that let an enterprise operate as an independent part of the business. A short stay, an occasional desk, or support storage does not create that. A foreign entrepreneur without a Dutch fixed establishment can still have Dutch VAT obligations when taxable supplies take place in the Netherlands.
For services within the EU, the split is familiar. B2B services are generally taxed where the customer is established, often with VAT reverse-charged. B2C services are generally taxed where the supplier is established, with exceptions. For consumer sales of goods and digital services, the €10,000 EU-wide threshold matters. Above it, consumer-country VAT applies, and OSS can run through the state of establishment.
What founders should check
For a small webshop, that is not technical decoration. If prices are tax-inclusive, a VAT rate change can eat margin. If invoices carry the wrong address, VAT number, or reverse-charge wording, the problem reaches the client before it reaches the tax file.
Governance is the sequence of small switches
The move abroad works best as one business event with several dates. The municipality date, KVK status, visiting address, foreign registration, VAT position, invoice template, client contract, insurance, bank profile, and bookkeeping cut-off should tell the same story.
AOW belongs in that same sequence. Rijksoverheid says living and working abroad often ends compulsory AOW insurance. Each uninsured year reduces future AOW by 2 percent, and SVB can receive a request for voluntary continuation within one year. That is a pension issue, but it is also a cash issue. A founder who counts only rent and flights is not seeing the full bill.
This is where governance becomes ordinary. It is the email to a client that names the right invoicing entity. It is the proof that a Dutch visiting address may be used. It is the last Dutch activity date in the ledger. It is the invoice template that stops pretending the business sits somewhere it no longer sits.
The clean answer is not that a business must stay Dutch or must leave Dutch. The clean answer is that the record should match the work. A founder can move abroad and keep Dutch customers. A founder can also keep real Dutch activities after emigration. But the proof has to follow the reality.
The sole trader in Spain does not need drama. She needs one calm table with dates, addresses, tax positions, invoices, and clients. Once that table is clean, the move stops being a blur. It becomes a business decision the records can carry.
Sources
- Zzp'en in het buitenland: wel/niet in het handelsregister? | KVK
- Rijksoverheid – BRP exit threshold and switch to non-resident (RNI)
- KVK – Keep or end Business Register entry after emigration
- KVK – Temporary inactivity and forced deregistration
- KVK – Requirements for a valid Dutch visiting address
- KVK – Consent to register at someone’s residential address
- KVK – Shielding the visiting address
- Belastingdienst – Migration‑year tax return (M‑form)
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