Dutch cities want to ban property investors in all neighborhoods

Authored by nltimes.nl and submitted by Phroneo

The large municipalities in the Netherlands plan to make wide use of a legislative amendment that will allow them to designate neighborhoods where investors won't be allowed to buy cheap and medium-priced homes and rent them out, NOS found after surveying the municipalities.

This legislative amendment is expected to take effect on January 1. The intention is to give people looking for a home a better chance of finding one on the tight Dutch housing market. Last year, a third of all homes sold in the four large cities were bought by investors.

Amsterdam told NOS that if it can, it will use this purchase protection for the entire municipality. Utrecht said the same. "Especially because we want to prevent a waterbed effect," a spokesperson said, referring to investors targeting more expensive homes if they can no longer buy those in the lower segments.

Tilburg is considering implementing the purchase protection in the entire city, The Hague won't rule out that possibility. Groningen is also considering it, but is cautious. "We are going to see whether we can use the scheme as widely as possible, but we must be able to substantiate that," a spokesperson for the municipality of Groningen said to NOS.

The amendment states that municipalities must "substantiate whether and in which neighborhoods imbalanced and unjust effects occur due to the scarcity of cheap and medium-priced owner-occupied homes". The municipalities must also show that the purchase protection is "necessary and effective" in the chosen neighborhoods. The amendment does not set a price limit for cheap and medium-priced homes, as a cheap home in Amsterdam can easily cost as much as an expensive one in Groningen, for example. So municipalities will have to set - and explain - the price limits themselves.

Suikeran on September 5th, 2021 at 03:27 UTC »

Tell this to Australians, many of whom would rather kill themselves than let their house prices fall or rise more slowly.

Rex_visible on September 5th, 2021 at 01:09 UTC »

We could really use this in New Zealand. Problem is a huge amount of NZ's boomer population are property investors as are most of our politicians.

alwyn on September 4th, 2021 at 23:51 UTC »

Past week I've seen places in US sell within a day at double what they were worth 4 years ago. 25% more than what I would realistically pay.

Investors are buying up the market, there will be a time when it will be impossible for a normal person to buy.

That's why I am not selling my house ever unless I am lucky enough to find something better.