Who Can Register at Your Address in the Netherlands and Under What Conditions? (Updated 2026)

🏠Here's how it actually works.
Who can register at your address in the Netherlands and under what conditions?
Who can register at your address in the Netherlands and under what conditions?

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Your partner just arrived. Or a friend needs to get their official paperwork sorted somewhere. Or someone staying with you has asked about registering there, and now you’re not sure if it’s even allowed, who needs to sign off on it, or what you’re actually responsible for if things go sideways.

These questions come up constantly. The answers matter because getting address registration wrong can cause real problems. Here’s how it actually works.

Anyone who genuinely lives at your address can legally register there. The key word is “genuinely” – registration must reflect actual residency, not just where it’s convenient for someone to be registered. In rental situations you almost certainly need written permission from your landlord first. In Amsterdam there’s a specific form for this. Partners, friends, and family members can all register under the right conditions.

👥 Who can register and under what conditions?

Who wants to registerCan they?Key conditionExtra steps
Partner moving inJaMust actually live thereLandlord permission, adrestoestemming in Amsterdam
Friend who genuinely lives thereJaMust actually live there, not just use addressLandlord permission
Family member who moves inJaMust actually live thereLandlord permission
Temporary resident (short stay)SomsMust actually stay there, not permanent address elsewhereCheck with your specific gemeente
Someone subletting a room from youYes if subletting is allowedLease must permit sublettingLandlord permission required
Someone who doesn’t actually live thereNeeRegistration must reflect real residencyDoing this is technically fraud

The consistent thread through all of these: registration reflects where someone actually lives. The municipality doesn’t care about the relationship. They care about the physical reality of who is residing at that address.

🆔 What is BRP registration and why does it matter so much?

BRP is short for Basisregistratie Personen, which is essentially the Dutch population register. If you’re living in the Netherlands for more than four months, you’re required to be in it. Your registered address is what the Dutch government treats as your actual address, full stop.

Your BSN number is tied to your BRP registration. And your BSN is tied to basically everything: your bank account, health insurance, employment contracts, tax returns, student finance. Without a registered address, none of that works properly. That’s why people ask about registering at someone else’s address. They need it for practical reasons, not bureaucratic ones.

👩‍❤️‍👨 If your partner wants to register at your address

This is the most common scenario and generally the most straightforward. If your partner moves in with you and genuinely lives there, they can register.

What you need to do:

  1. Check your rental contract to confirm that an additional occupant is permitted
  2. Get written permission from your landlord or housing corporation
  3. In Amsterdam, get the adrestoestemming form signed by the landlord before going to the Stadsloket
  4. Your partner books an appointment at the gemeente (municipality) online
  5. They attend with valid ID and proof of address (usually the lease agreement plus your landlord’s permission letter)
  6. The municipality processes the registration

💡In Amsterdam specifically, the Stadsloket will ask for the adrestoestemming form. Without it, the registration doesn’t happen that day. Get this sorted before making the appointment.

🤝 If a friend wants to register at your address

Same rules as a partner. If they actually live there, it’s possible. If they just want to use your address as a registration address while living somewhere else, that’s not legal and can cause problems for you.

The practical question to ask yourself: does this person genuinely reside at my address? Sleeping there most nights, having their belongings there, this being their actual home? Then registration is legitimate and possible. Using your address as a postal address while living elsewhere is a different situation and the municipality treats it as such.

Your landlord permission requirement applies here too. Some landlords are fine with it, some aren’t. Check your lease and ask before you say yes to anyone.

⏳ If someone needs temporary registration

Temporary address registration exists in the Netherlands for people who don’t yet have a permanent place to live. The rules vary by municipality and the situation needs to reflect genuine residency.

Some municipalities allow temporary registration at a family member or friend’s address. Others have specific requirements. Contact your local gemeente directly for the rules that apply to your specific city and situation. The national BRP rules are the same everywhere but municipalities have some discretion in how they process temporary registrations.

🔑 The landlord permission requirement

If you’re renting, confirming your landlord’s permission in writing before allowing someone to register is important. Here’s why:

Registering an additional person at a rented property without the landlord’s knowledge can violate your lease. In social housing, it can be treated more seriously and potentially as fraud. Most private landlords need to agree to additional occupants before they’re registered. Some rental contracts explicitly limit the number of registered residents.

In Amsterdam, the municipality requires the adrestoestemming form, which is a formal document the property owner or landlord signs to give permission. Without it, the municipality will not process the registration. This form exists specifically because Amsterdam’s housing shortage makes address fraud a real issue there.

⚠️ Risks to know about as the main tenant

Saying yes to someone registering at your address is not a formality. There are a few things worth understanding before you agree.

If your rental contract has restrictions on additional occupants and someone gets registered without your landlord knowing, that can be grounds for a lease dispute. If the person being registered has significant debts, their registered address can show up in official processes. That doesn’t mean your belongings are at risk, but it can create bureaucratic headaches you didn’t ask for. In some social housing situations, the number of registered residents also affects rent calculations or housing benefit amounts.

None of this means you can’t do it or shouldn’t. It just means checking your lease first and getting landlord permission in writing before anything else happens.

✅ Checklist before allowing someone to register

Go through this before saying yes to anyone:

  • Read your rental contract for anything about occupants or subletting
  • Get written permission from your landlord or housing corporation
  • If in Amsterdam, arrange the adrestoestemming form before the gemeente appointment
  • Confirm the person genuinely lives at your address, not just uses it for registration
  • Check whether your housing benefit or rent allowance changes with an additional registered resident
  • Make sure you both understand that when they leave, they need to update their own registration

🏙️ Does the process differ by city?

Yes, somewhat. The BRP is national but municipalities have some local discretion.

StadNotable specifics
AmsterdamAdrestoestemming form required from landlord before municipality will register additional person
RotterdamStandard landlord permission required
Den HaagStandard landlord permission required
UtrechtStandard process, appointment at gemeente required
Other citiesGenerally follow national BRP rules

Amsterdam’s adrestoestemming requirement is the most commonly asked about. It’s a direct response to the city’s housing shortage and the historical problem of address fraud. The form is filled in by the landlord or property owner and submitted with the registration request at the Stadsloket.

❌ Common mistakes

Registering someone who doesn’t actually live there.

This is technically fraud. The BRP is supposed to reflect actual residency and doing this as a favour can create serious problems for both parties if it comes to light.

Not getting landlord permission first.

If you’re renting, your landlord almost certainly needs to agree before anyone else registers at your address. Get that permission in writing before the gemeente appointment, not after.

Showing up in Amsterdam without the adrestoestemming form.

The Stadsloket requires it. If you arrive without it the appointment goes nowhere, so sort the form before you book the slot, not the other way around.

Not deregistering when someone moves out.

Updating the registration when they leave is their responsibility, not yours. But if they don’t do it, they stay officially linked to your address and that can cause complications down the line. If someone moves out and doesn’t deregister, you can contact the municipality yourself to report that they no longer live there.

📋 Your situation at a glance

Your situationWhat you need
Partner moving in, you’re rentingLandlord permission in writing. Adrestoestemming form if in Amsterdam.
Friend genuinely living with youSame as above. Confirm they actually reside there, not just using the address.
Short-term guest, not actually living thereRegistration is not appropriate. This reflects real residency, not convenience.
You’re in AmsterdamAdrestoestemming form is mandatory before the Stadsloket will process anything.
Someone moves out but doesn’t deregisterTheir responsibility to update. If they don’t, you can report to the municipality that they no longer live there.
Your housing benefit might be affectedCheck before registering. Household composition can change rent allowance calculations.

🚀 What to do next

If someone needs to register at your address: check your lease, get landlord permission in writing, use the adrestoestemming form if you’re in Amsterdam, and make sure the person actually books their gemeente appointment.

And if you’re still looking for a rental in the Netherlands where you can register properly, that’s where the search starts. Confirming BRP registration is possible should be one of the first questions you ask before signing any lease.

Renthunter monitors over a thousand rental sources across the Netherlands. Search by city and find a rental that actually works for your situation.

Set up a free search alert at renthunter.nl.

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