Guide: WWS points system explained

How WWS points decide your rent in the Netherlands

The rent points system sets a legal maximum for almost every home in the Netherlands. Here is how it works, why your rent might be over it, and what you can do about it.

What the WWS points system is

Almost every rented home in the Netherlands has a legal maximum rent, and that maximum is set by a points system called the woningwaarderingsstelsel, or WWS for short. Points are awarded for the things that make up your home: its surface area, the kitchen and bathroom, energy label, outdoor space, and more. Add up the points, and a national table tells you the highest rent a landlord is allowed to charge.

The reason so many internationals overpay is simple. Most tenants never see this calculation, the rent is presented as a take it or leave it figure, and the whole system is documented in Dutch. None of that changes the law. If your rent is above the WWS maximum, it is too high, whatever the contract says.

How points turn into a maximum rent

Each feature of your home is worth a set number of points. More space, a better energy label and private facilities push the total up. The combined score lands you on an official table that converts points into a maximum monthly rent. The higher your points, the higher the legal ceiling, and vice versa.

  • Surface area is usually the biggest single factor, so a small room with a high rent is a classic overpayment.
  • Energy label matters more than most tenants expect, and a poor label drags the maximum down.
  • Kitchen, bathroom and outdoor space each add measurable points.
  • Shared versus private facilities change the score significantly.

Why 2025 made this matter for more people

Rent regulation used to be mostly about social housing. Since 2025, regulation reaches further up the market, covering mid rent homes up to 186 points. In practice that means a home you were told is free sector may actually fall under the regulated rules, with a legal maximum you can enforce. The label on your contract is not the final word.

The deadline you cannot ignore

If you want to challenge your starting rent, you generally have six months from the start of your tenancy to do it through the Huurcommissie. Miss that window and challenging the initial rent gets much harder. This is the single biggest reason to check your points early rather than later.

You do not need to calculate any of this by hand. Our free rent check runs your home through the points system and shows your legal maximum in about two minutes.

What to do if your rent is over the maximum

If the points say your rent is too high, you can ask the Huurcommissie to set the legal rent, and often reclaim what you overpaid. We handle that entire Dutch process for you on no cure, no pay, so there is no risk in finding out where you stand.

No cure, no pay

See how it applies to your rent

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