Most people searching for housing in the Netherlands fixate on Amsterdam, Utrecht or Rotterdam. Zwolle barely comes up in those conversations. Which is exactly why it’s worth knowing about if you have any flexibility on location.
Finding an apartment here is genuinely more manageable than in the Randstad. Prices are significantly lower, competition is real but not brutal, and there’s a proper student scene with solid rail connections to the rest of the country. Start your search 6 to 8 weeks out, know which neighbourhood fits your situation, and have documents sorted before you start applying. That’s really the whole strategy. The full breakdown is below.
📍 Zwolle at a glance
Before getting into the rental specifics, here’s the basic picture:
| Province | Overijssel |
| Population | approx. 135,000 |
| Main universities | Windesheim, Saxion (partial) |
| Student population | approx. 30,000 |
| Train to Amsterdam | 60 min direct |
| Train to Utrecht | 45 min direct |
| Train to Groningen | 90 min direct |
| Average studio rent | 800 – 1,200 per month |
| Average 1-bedroom rent | 1,000 – 1,500 per month |
| Housing market | Competitive but manageable |
The train connections matter more than you’d expect. Utrecht in 45 minutes sounds like a compromise until you’re actually doing it a few times a week and realising it’s not much different from commuting within a bigger city. Amsterdam is about an hour, too far for daily trips but fine when you occasionally need to be there.
✨ Is Zwolle actually worth it?
Yes, genuinely. It’s bigger than most people assume: 135,000 people, old city walls still standing, canals running through the centre, and the kind of layout where you buy a bike in week one and rarely need anything else to get around. It has students without feeling like a student city, which is harder to find than you’d think.
Windesheim pulls in around 30,000 students and is the main reason most people in their 20s end up here. Saxion has a smaller presence too. The student population is real but it doesn’t define the whole place the way it does somewhere like Wageningen or Tilburg.
For people doing hybrid work or working remotely, Zwolle makes a lot of practical sense. Housing is significantly cheaper than anywhere in the Randstad, and Utrecht is close enough that going in a few days a week is workable. If your job doesn’t require you in Amsterdam or Utrecht every day, the savings on rent alone are worth paying attention to.
Worth being upfront about one thing: if you’re coming for the nightlife or need a big expat community around you, Zwolle isn’t that. It’s a proper city but a quieter one. Most people who need that kind of energy know within a month it’s not for them.
The practical side of living here is all fine. Good supermarkets, a market running a few days a week, decent cafes and bars. There’s a nightlife scene but it’s not what draws people to Zwolle. Getting around by bike is how most people do it and the city is built for it. If you’re coming from a smaller city somewhere in Europe, Zwolle will feel properly urban. If you’re coming from London or Paris, it’ll feel quiet. Both are accurate.
🏘️ Best areas to rent in Zwolle
| Neighbourhood | Bon pour | Average rent | Worth knowing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Binnenstad | Tout le monde | 1,000 – 1,700 | Historic, walkable, most expensive |
| Assendorp | Students, young renters | 800 – 1,300 | Close to centre, popular with Windesheim students |
| Stadshagen | Families, expats | 1,100 – 1,700 | Newer area, spacious, quieter |
| Holtenbroek | Budget-focused | 750 – 1,100 | Further out, cheaper, fine transport |
| Dieze | Mixte | 850 – 1,200 | Up and coming, good value |
| Westenholte | Familles | 1,200 – 1,800 | Quiet, suburban feel |
Assendorp is where most students end up. It sits close enough to Windesheim and the centre that most things are reachable on foot or bike. Rents are noticeably lower than the Binnenstad.
Holtenbroek gets written off a lot by people who haven’t properly looked at it. The reputation isn’t entirely deserved. Transport into the city works fine and you get meaningfully more space for less money. Worth a serious look if budget is the priority.
Stadshagen is the choice for people who want space, quiet streets and newer housing stock. More families and working professionals, less student-heavy. The area is well planned and has all the everyday facilities you’d want.
💡Dieze has been changing over the last few years. More affordable than the centre with a bit more character than Holtenbroek. Worth checking if you want good value and don’t want to feel like you’re in a purely residential suburb.
💶 What you’ll actually pay in Zwolle
The numbers come as a relief after anything in the Randstad. If you’re coming as a student, a shared room is the most realistic starting point: 500 to 850 euros per month. That’s how most Windesheim students start out, and for a first year in the city it’s a reasonable option. Studios are between 800 and 1,200. If you want your own place, a one-bedroom runs between 1,000 and 1,500. Two-bedrooms for people splitting costs start around 1,300. Family houses in Stadshagen or Westenholte push higher but that’s the ceiling.
A decent studio under 1,000 euros is genuinely findable here in a way it isn’t in Amsterdam anymore. There’s competition but it’s a different kind. You’re not losing places to 40 other applicants every time.
Official student housing through Windesheim or SSH is cheaper still, often significantly. The catch is that waiting lists can be long. If that’s your plan, register the day you know you’re coming.
🔍 Where to actually search
- Funda and Pararius cover Zwolle well and most agency listings end up on one or both.
- Kamernet is useful specifically for rooms in shared apartments, especially relevant for students.
- Local Zwolle agencies handle a real slice of the private rental market that never makes it to national platforms. Searching for verhuurmakelaars Zwolle turns up the active ones worth contacting directly.
- Facebook groups for Zwolle rentals exist and are chaotic as always. Real listings appear occasionally, particularly sublets and shorter stays. Worth checking if you’re finding the regular platforms thin.
- Renthunter pulls from over a thousand Dutch rental sources including smaller local platforms that don’t get checked as often. Sets off an alert when something new drops in Zwolle so you’re not discovering listings that went up two days ago.
📄 Documents to sort before you start
Zwolle landlords are used to dealing with Windesheim and Saxion students, including international ones. The documentation expectations are fairly standard but worth having ready before you begin:
- Passport or valid ID
- Enrollment confirmation from Windesheim or Saxion. If you haven’t started yet, a conditional offer letter usually works fine at the application stage
- Proof of income: DUO student finance approval, a scholarship letter from your home institution, or payslips if you have part-time work alongside your studies
- Guarantor letter from a parent or guardian, assuming your own income doesn’t hit the 3 to 4x rent threshold. It’s standard for students here and landlords expect it without question
- DUO student finance documentation if applicable. Some Zwolle landlords accept this as partial income proof alongside a guarantor letter
- Deposit funds accessible: 1 to 2 months rent ready to transfer
- Short intro covering your programme at Windesheim or Saxion, when you start, and whether you’re looking alone or with other students
⚠️ What catches people out
The most consistent mistake is starting too late. Six to eight weeks before move-in is the realistic timeline. Two weeks isn’t enough for anything decent, and the listings at the right price don’t wait around.
Holtenbroek and Dieze both get dismissed without a proper look. They’re not the centre, but transport works and the rent is noticeably lower. Spend ten minutes actually looking before deciding they’re too far.
If official student housing through SSH or Windesheim’s own channels is on your radar, register the moment you have a start date, not when you decide you want it. The waiting list starts at registration.
Local agency websites matter more in Zwolle than they do in a city like Amsterdam where listings flood every platform. A real portion of the market here never makes it to Funda or Pararius. Searching directly on verhuurmakelaars Zwolle is worth the extra step.
One thing that trips people up right at the end: before you sign anything, get written confirmation that you can officially register at the address with the municipality. No BRP registration means no BSN, and without a BSN the basics of Dutch life, banking, healthcare, tax, become unexpectedly difficult.
❓ FAQ
- Is Zwolle a good city for expats?
Yes. English is spoken widely, the city is well organised, and quality of life is high. The international scene is smaller than Amsterdam but it exists.
- How much is rent in Zwolle compared to Amsterdam?
Significantly less. A decent Zwolle studio costs roughly half of a comparable Amsterdam studio.
- Where are the cheap apartments in Zwolle?
Holtenbroek and Dieze for affordable options that are still well connected. Further into Westenholte if you don’t mind a longer commute.
- Is student housing in Zwolle available?
Yes, through official channels with waiting lists and through the private market. Register for official housing as early as possible.
- How well connected is Zwolle by train?
Very. Utrecht in 45 minutes, Amsterdam in about an hour, Groningen in 90 minutes. Good connections for a non-Randstad city.
- How long does it take to find a rental in Zwolle?
Usually faster than the Randstad. 4 to 6 weeks from serious searching to signing is realistic if you’re organised and responsive.
- Is Zwolle good for students at Windesheim?
Yes. Assendorp is right near the campus and popular with students. Official student housing is available but comes with waiting lists.
🏁 Start your search
Zwolle is one of the better Dutch cities for finding housing right now. Affordable by Dutch standards, well connected by train, properly liveable. The market has competition but nothing like Amsterdam or Utrecht.
Use multiple platforms, set up alerts, and check local agency sites alongside the bigger portals. A real portion of good Zwolle listings never makes it to Funda.
Renthunter monitors over a thousand rental sources in the Netherlands and sends a notification the moment something new drops in Zwolle.