Best savings accounts in Netherlands
4 savings offers from banks in Netherlands.
| Country | Payment | Apply | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yapi Kredi Bank Nederland N.V. savings account | Netherlands | 30.00% | — | at maturity | Visit → |
Yapi Kredi Bank Nederland N.V. savings account | Netherlands | 2.00% | — | at maturity | Visit → |
Van Lanschot Kempen N.V. savings account | Netherlands | 1.20% | €10,000 | at maturity | Visit → |
Van Lanschot Kempen N.V. savings account | Netherlands | 1.00% | €10,000 | at maturity | Visit → |
Savings accounts in Netherlands still absorb the largest share of household liquidity, and they are also where the largest gap tends to open between the ECB rate and what depositors are actually paid. This is our working reference on the Netherlands savings market, its regulatory frame, and how to read the offers on the table.
Where the Netherlands savings market sits
ING, Rabobank, and ABN AMRO form the big-three retail deposit market; N26, bunq, and Openbank compete meaningfully on rate.
Because interest itself is untaxed, gross posted rates translate directly to gross yield — but Box 3 still applies at the balance level once the annual free allowance is exhausted.
Savings behaviour in Netherlands is shaped less by promotional rates than by branch relationships and inertia — a pattern common across Europe, but more pronounced in some markets than others. The result is that the posted rate on a standard demand-savings account often understates what the same institution will pay on request, and dramatically understates what a direct-only competitor will pay for the same money without a phone call.
Protection, supervision, and the fine print
The prudential regulator is De Nederlandsche Bank / AFM (DNB). Deposit protection is administered by Depositogarantiestelsel (DGS Nederland) and covers €100,000 per depositor per bank. The seven-working-day payout window applies uniformly across the EU; the practical experience of a recovery inside that window has been demonstrated repeatedly since the 2014 directive, most visibly in the resolutions of ABLV Bank in 2018 and Sberbank Europe in 2022.
Savings accounts, unlike fixed deposits, are demand instruments — the balance is available on request, subject to the operating conditions of the account. Read the notice period and any minimum-balance requirement carefully; both are more common on the higher-rate offerings than on standard demand accounts. A "savings account" that requires 32 days' notice is not a demand product for practical purposes.
How interest is taxed
The applicable rate is Box 3 wealth tax (fictitious return). Interest is not taxed as income; savings assets fall under the Box 3 assumed-return system, revised after the 2021 Hoge Raad ruling. Where a regulated or exempt product exists in Netherlands, it usually pays visibly less than an unregulated account, and the after-tax comparison is the only one that matters. Where interest is withheld at source, gross-of-tax pan-European league tables systematically overstate what a resident of Netherlands actually keeps.
For residents earning meaningful savings interest, the reporting side of the equation is worth taking seriously. Interest paid within Netherlands is generally already known to the tax authority; interest paid abroad reaches the same authority via the Common Reporting Standard on a delay of up to a year. That delay is not an opportunity — corrections after an information exchange are treated less favourably than a voluntary declaration.
Netherlands savings rates against the wider market
The ECB deposit facility rate moved from -0.50% in mid-2022 to 4.00% in September 2023 and began to ease from June 2024. The pass-through to eurozone savings accounts has been visibly incomplete and asymmetric — quicker on the way down than on the way up. In the euro area, this gap is the single largest source of value for a saver willing to shop.
Across Europe the pattern is the same: the direct banks and the pan-European deposit marketplaces price close to the policy rate, the retail incumbents price at whatever balance-weighted rate keeps the deposit base sticky. A savings rate in Netherlands that sits materially below the ECB deposit facility does not necessarily mean a bad market — it means the marginal saver has not yet moved. The line between "loyal customer" and "captive customer" is finer than most banks would like their retail clients to know.
How we rank savings offers
We start from the effective annual rate paid on the largest realistic balance, not the promotional first-tier rate. New-money bonuses, tiered rates that step down above a threshold, and rates that revert to a lower standard rate after an introductory period are footnoted rather than featured.
The other variables that move the ranking, in order of weight, are: the DGS affiliation and its coverage in the currency of the account, the schedule of fees for withdrawals and transfers, the minimum-balance requirement, and any operational friction — notice period, mandatory linked current account, or app-only access — that limits the availability of the balance on demand.
Practical notes for cross-border savers
A non-resident opening a savings account in Netherlands should expect proof of identity, proof of address in a form acceptable to DNB, a tax-residency declaration under CRS, and — depending on the bank — evidence of source of funds. The pan-European deposit marketplaces have streamlined this into a single onboarding, but the guarantee still runs to the underlying bank, and the depositor should know exactly which one that is.
Two habits pay for themselves. Keep balances at any one authorised institution below the €100,000 line unless there is a specific reason to breach it. And retain the account confirmation from the underlying bank, not only from the marketplace or platform — the identifier that matters to the guarantor is the bank's account number, not the marketplace reference.


