A parental loan may help a buyer, but the Dutch tax result follows the contract, not the family story.
The case indexed as ECLI:NL:RBDHA:2026:12696, Rechtspraak puts A home loan gift workaround does not automatically work the way people expect on the table. For founders, the useful question is whether the records can explain the facts, figures, assumptions and decisions when the story is tested.
The signal has to become readable
At the kitchen table, the scene is plain. Parents have cash. A child has found a home. The bank will not stretch far enough. The family wants the purchase to go through. That is where many Dutch housing questions begin, and where tax reality starts to harden. Belastingdienst and Rijksoverheid are clear: the former own-home gift exemption, the jubelton, ended for new gifts on 1 January 2024.
For first use in 2020, Belastingdienst listed that exemption at €103,643. That old figure still matters because many family arrangements were built around it. A gift that size could keep a purchase alive, help with refinancing, or later soften a debt. But the route was a legal one, not a family one. The law looked at the structure of the debt.
The family story is not the tax route
The hard word here is eigenwoningschuld. It sounds technical, but it decides real money. The historical gift-tax route for repayment of an own-home debt linked to article 3.119a of the Wet inkomstenbelasting 2001. In plain English, the law asked what kind of debt was being repaid, and how.
Belastingdienst knowledge-group guidance says that, since 2013, a debt must carry a contractual duty to repay fully during the term, at least annuitously, and within no more than 360 months. Without transition protection, a first-time buyer’s interest-only loan does not qualify for that route. If that loan is later converted into a qualifying annuity loan, the qualification can begin from the conversion moment.
What the signal changes
That detail is easy to miss in family discussions. A payment through the notary can show that money reached the home purchase. A mortgage right can show that the parents took security seriously. Neither point changes the repayment test. The family may have made a real loan and still have missed the tax doorway it expected to use.
The market explains the pressure
None of this happens in a calm housing market. CBS and Kadaster reported that existing owner-occupied homes were 4.3 percent more expensive in April 2026 than one year earlier. The price index stood at 154.0, with 2020 as 100. Prices were also 15.8 percent above the July 2022 peak.
DNB and AFM reported in March 2026 that house prices had risen 21 percent since mid-2023, while incomes rose 14 percent. Nearly three quarters of housing transactions in 2025 were above asking price. In that market, parents do not lend for ornament. They lend because the gap is real.
Imagine a couple running a small installation company. Their daughter has found an apartment, but the bid needs more cash than the bank will give. The parents release private money after a dividend decision. They keep the loan interest-only so the monthly burden stays low in the first years. Around the table, that feels sensible. In the tax file, the repayment design is the central fact.
DNB has also warned that interest-only debt carries extra risk because repayment often depends on home value, refinancing, income, or later choices rather than regular debt reduction. DNB and AFM now place around two-fifths of Dutch mortgage debt in interest-only form. That wider market pressure does not decide gift tax. It does explain why interest-only terms are never a neutral detail.
The private loan enters the business ledger
For founders and owner-managers, private housing help rarely stays fully private. The money may come from dividends, a current-account movement, an asset sale, retained private wealth, or cash that would otherwise have stayed behind the company. A family loan can look separate from the business and still affect the same household balance sheet that carries wages, rent, tax, invoices, and a bad quarter.
There is another quiet trap. If parents make a gift free of right, they pay the gift tax owed by the recipient. Belastingdienst Kennisgroepen explains that the tax payment itself is part of what the recipient receives. The promise that the child will not feel the tax bill can therefore change the calculation. Good intentions do not simplify the arithmetic.
What founders should check
The gift-tax return has a narrow job. It reports a claimed position. It does not turn an interest-only loan into an annuity loan. It does not make a mortgage right the same as a qualifying repayment duty. A family agreement written for cash comfort may later be tested against a stricter legal route.
Return to the installation-company parents. If the daughter later refinances, sells, separates, or receives partial debt forgiveness, the old loan terms come back to the table. If the company then needs cash for vans, stock, or payroll, the earlier family help is no longer only a generous memory. It has become part of the family risk map.
A cleaner family file
The useful discipline is not fear. It is legibility. A family arrangement should be readable by someone who was not at the kitchen table. Was the money a loan, a gift, a forgiveness of debt, or a mix? Which year matters? Which exemption was being used? Was there a real repayment duty? Did the bank movements match the documents?
For 2026, the planning frame is smaller and stricter than in the old jubelton years. Belastingdienst lists the annual parent-to-child gift exemption at €6,908 and the exemption from other persons at €2,769. The one-time freely spendable parental exemption is €33,129, subject to conditions. The expensive-study exemption is €69,009, also subject to conditions.
Above the relevant exemption, gift tax applies. For 2026, the child rate starts at 10 percent up to the first bracket limit. That is enough to turn a weak family solution into a cash-flow problem.
The Dutch housing market will keep tempting families to turn affection into financing. That is understandable. A parent may help a child cross a price gap that the bank will not cross. But the tax result follows the legal route, the loan terms, the year, the payment trail, and the proof. The calmer family is not the one that gives less. It is the one that makes the help precise enough to survive the next question.
Sources
- DNB supply-chain warning
- Geen jubelton bij aflossingsvrije ouderlening eigen woning – Taxence
- Wettenbank – Legal bridge between own-home gift exemption and own-home debt
- Belastingdienst Kennisgroepen – Interest-only family loan and eigenwoningschuld qualification
- Belastingdienst – Historical own-home gift exemption conditions
- Belastingdienst – Current 2026 gift-tax exemptions
- Rijksoverheid – Policy confirmation of jubelton abolition
- Belastingdienst – Gift-tax rates if the exemption fails
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