“30% of your salary is non-taxable…”: Why this Indian professional chose the Netherlands over home for work


“Coming from India, choosing the Netherlands to work just made sense for me,” an Indian professional writes, before listing seven reasons on his Instagram post. At first look, it reads like personal preference. Look closer, and it becomes a map of how policy, labour law and public systems shape work decisions long before emotion or ambition enters the picture.
The first reason he gives is straight. “30% of your salary is non-taxable for the first 5 years.”This refers to the Netherlands’ 30% facility for highly educated foreign employees. Under this scheme, eligible foreign workers earning more than €46,107 a year can receive a tax-free allowance of up to 30% of their salary for up to five years. The allowance is meant to offset costs linked to working abroad, such as travel, housing and maintaining ties to another country. Employers administer the benefit through the Dutch Tax Administration.Since January 2024, the scheme has been scaled back to 30% tax free for the first 20 months, 20% for the next 20 months and 10% for the final 20 months. There are also salary caps and parliamentary debate underway on partially reversing the rollback from 2027. Still, even in its reduced form, the policy sends a clear signal. The state acknowledges that skilled migrants incur costs and builds compensation into the tax system. For a worker comparing countries, this predictability is of significance.
The second reason is job security. “Strict labour laws + strong employee rights = you feel protected and stable at work.”In the Netherlands, permanent contracts, notice periods and termination procedures are regulated in detail. Dismissals involve clear legal thresholds and documentation. For a professional coming from a market where employment is often tied to long hours and limited recourse, the difference is structural rather than cultural.
Language appears next. “Around 98% of people speak English, so as an expat you can settle in without feeling lost.”This is less about convenience and more about access. Workplaces, government offices and healthcare systems function in English alongside Dutch. Integration does not require immediate linguistic assimilation, which lowers the entry cost of migration.
Then comes time. “Work-life balance is actually real. People respect your personal time. Work ends on time,” he shares.Dutch labour norms limit overtime and normalise part-time work even in professional roles. The result is not slower careers but bounded ones. The working day has edges.
Quality of life follows next. “Safe streets, clean cities, peaceful vibe.” These are outcomes of municipal planning, public spending and enforcement rather than lifestyle branding. They reduce daily friction, which in turn shapes how work is experienced.
Mobility is another factor. “You don’t need a car. Trains, buses and bikes make commuting easy and affordable.”Public transport and cycling infrastructure shorten commutes and lower household costs. For a professional, this is equivalent to a pay increase that does not appear on a contract.
The final point returns to systems. “Everything is organised. From paperwork to basic services.”Residence permits, tax filings and local registrations operate on fixed timelines. Delays exist, but expectations are defined.
Taken together, these reasons explain why the move “made sense.” The choice is less about leaving one country and more about entering a framework where rules are visible and enforced. For many Indian professionals, the comparison is not between cultures, but between systems. And systems, once experienced, are hard to unsee.