When I first landed in the Netherlands as an international student, I didn’t know anyone. I didn’t have “European work experience.” I didn’t speak Dutch fluently. And like most students, I had one silent fear I didn’t always admit out loud:
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“What if I finish this degree and still can’t get a good job?”
I used to scroll through LinkedIn and see job posts offering €40,000 to €50,000 per year and think, “This is for people with 5 years of experience… not me.” But what shocked me later was this: many of the international students getting those €45K offers didn’t have traditional experience either. What they had was strategy.
In this article, I want to explain—clearly and honestly—how international students in the Netherlands are securing €45K jobs without prior experience. Not theory. Not recycled advice. But the exact patterns I’ve seen work again and again.

Understanding the €45K Salary Reality in the Netherlands
First, let’s clear something up.
€45K per year in the Netherlands is not a “CEO salary.” It’s a very achievable starting salary in certain sectors like:
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Tech (IT support, data analyst, software trainee roles)
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Engineering
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Finance and accounting
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Supply chain and logistics
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Business analytics
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Marketing (especially digital marketing)
For a graduate role, €38K–€45K is common in larger companies. The difference between someone earning €32K and someone earning €45K often has nothing to do with intelligence — it has everything to do with positioning.
Step 1: Choosing the Right Field (Even Before Graduation)
One mistake I see students make is studying a course without checking its market demand.
In the Netherlands, high-paying entry roles are concentrated in:
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Tech (Data, Cybersecurity, Software Development)
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Engineering
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Finance
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Supply Chain
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Renewable Energy
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AI and Automation
Many international students who land €45K roles studied:
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Data Science
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Computer Science
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Business Analytics
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Mechanical or Electrical Engineering
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Finance
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International Business (with technical focus)
But here’s the truth: even if your course is not highly technical, you can reposition yourself.
I’ve seen marketing students pivot into data analytics by learning Power BI and SQL during their studies. I’ve seen business students enter supply chain tech roles because they understood systems like SAP.
The degree alone doesn’t guarantee the salary. The skills layered on top of the degree do.
Step 2: Exploiting the Orientation Year (Zoekjaar)
This is one of the biggest advantages international students ignore.
After graduation, you can apply for the Orientation Year Visa (Zoekjaar), officially called the “orientation year for highly educated persons,” offered by the Immigratie- en Naturalisatiedienst.
This visa allows you to:
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Stay in the Netherlands for 1 year
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Work for any employer without sponsorship restrictions
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Negotiate salary more freely
Here’s the strategic part most people don’t know:
During the orientation year, the salary requirement for a Highly Skilled Migrant permit is significantly lower than standard thresholds. That means companies are more willing to hire you because hiring you is cheaper and easier.
Students who understand this use the orientation year aggressively:
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Apply widely
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Take trainee programs
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Accept slightly lower entry offers (around €40K)
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Then switch companies within 1–2 years
That’s how many move from €40K to €50K quickly.

Step 3: Getting “Experience” Without Official Experience
This is where mindset changes everything.
Most students think:
“No experience means I can’t apply.”
But employers think differently.
In the Netherlands, they value:
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Projects
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Internships
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Practical coursework
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Student jobs
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Research assistant roles
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Capstone assignments
I’ve seen someone get a €43K data analyst role because of a master’s thesis where they analyzed customer churn using Python. That thesis became their “experience.”
You don’t need 3 years in a company.
You need proof you can solve real problems.
So smart students:
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Turn university projects into portfolio pieces
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Upload code to GitHub
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Document analytics dashboards
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Create case studies from group projects
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Show measurable results
Even retail or hospitality jobs help — they show adaptability and communication skills.
Step 4: Mastering the Dutch CV Style
This is something I learned the hard way.
The Dutch CV is:
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Straightforward
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Achievement-focused
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Clean and minimal
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Usually 1–2 pages
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No exaggeration
International students who land high-paying jobs adapt their CV to the local standard.
Instead of writing:
“Responsible for assisting team members”
They write:
“Built an automated Excel dashboard that reduced weekly reporting time by 30%.”
Numbers change everything.
Step 5: Applying to Graduate & Trainee Programs
Large companies in the Netherlands run structured graduate programs. These programs often start between €40K–€48K annually.
Examples of companies known for strong graduate hiring include:
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ASML
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Philips
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ING
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Shell
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Booking.com
These companies hire internationally. English is often the working language.
Many students avoid applying because they assume:
“They only take top Dutch students.”
Not true.
What they look for:
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Problem-solving ability
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Communication
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Analytical thinking
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Cultural adaptability
Not 5 years of experience.

Step 6: Networking the Dutch Way
In the Netherlands, networking is subtle and professional.
It’s not about begging for jobs.
It’s about conversations.
Students who succeed usually:
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Attend career fairs
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Connect with recruiters on LinkedIn
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Ask professors for industry introductions
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Join student associations
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Attend company open days
One connection can move your CV from the pile to the shortlist.
I’ve personally seen cases where:
A recruiter remembered a student from a university event — and that memory triggered an interview invitation.
Step 7: Learning Basic Dutch (Even If the Job Is in English)
Here’s something honest:
You can work in English.
But speaking basic Dutch gives you an advantage.
Even A2–B1 level Dutch shows commitment.
It signals:
“I’m not just here temporarily. I want to integrate.”
Some hiring managers prefer international students who show cultural interest.
That small effort can separate you from 200 other applicants.
Step 8: Applying Smart, Not Everywhere
Mass applying rarely works.
Students who secure €45K jobs usually:
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Apply to 10–15 well-matched roles weekly
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Tailor each CV
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Adjust cover letters
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Research companies deeply
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Prepare for interviews properly
Quality beats quantity.
Step 9: Interview Preparation Is Everything
Dutch interviews are practical.
Expect:
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Case questions
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Behavioral questions
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Technical demonstrations
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“Why this company?”
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“Why the Netherlands?”
Students who get high offers prepare for interviews like exams.
They:
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Practice STAR method answers
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Study company values
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Prepare project explanations
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Rehearse salary expectations
Confidence often determines salary negotiation success.
Step 10: Salary Negotiation (Yes, Even as a Graduate)
Many international students accept the first offer out of fear.
But in the Netherlands, negotiation is normal.
If you receive:
€42K offer
You can respectfully ask:
“Is there flexibility closer to €45K considering my skills and market rates?”
Sometimes they increase.
Sometimes they offer signing bonuses.
Sometimes they add relocation or training budgets.
But if you never ask, you never know.
The Hidden Formula Behind €45K Jobs
When I reflect on everything I’ve seen, the formula is simple:
Relevant Degree + Practical Projects + Orientation Year + Targeted Applications + Strong Interview Performance = €45K Entry Role
Not luck.
Not nationality.
Not perfect Dutch.
Strategy.
What Most Students Do Wrong
Let me be honest about the common mistakes:
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Waiting until final semester to job hunt
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Ignoring internships
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Not building technical skills outside class
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Using generic CVs
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Avoiding networking
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Being afraid of rejection
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Accepting low salaries without questioning
The job market rewards preparation months before graduation.

Is It Really Possible Without Experience?
Yes.
But “without experience” doesn’t mean “without skills.”
International students who land €45K jobs:
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Treat university like a career launchpad
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Build job-ready skills early
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Understand visa strategy
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Position themselves intentionally
The Netherlands has a strong demand for skilled graduates, especially in tech and engineering. Companies care about capability more than nationality.
Final Thoughts
If you are currently studying in the Netherlands and wondering whether you can secure a €45K job without experience, the answer is yes — but not accidentally.
You must:
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Be strategic early
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Build practical skills
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Use the orientation year wisely
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Apply with intention
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Prepare for interviews seriously
I’ve seen average students out-earn brilliant students simply because they understood how the system works.
The opportunity exists.
The difference is preparation.







