Welfare of households; key figures

Welfare of households; key figures

Household characteristics Periods Mean disposable income (1 000 euro) Mean equivalised income (1 000 euro) Low-income households (%) Income inequality (Gini coefficient)
Source: Income as employee 2022* 57.2 37.9 1.3 0.242
Source: Income as self-employed (total) 2022* 77.1 49.3 7.3 0.356
Source: Transfer income 2022* 34.5 27.9 8.1 0.261
Source: Income insurance benefit 2022* 37.2 30.1 3.2 0.244
Equivalised income: 1st 10%-group 2022* 14.2 11.3 58.8 0.276
Equivalised income: 2nd 10%-group 2022* 23.6 19.3 5.3 0.031
Equivalised income: 3rd 10%-group 2022* 28.0 22.7 0.0 0.023
Equivalised income: 4th 10%-group 2022* 34.3 26.1 0.0 0.023
Equivalised income: 5th 10%-group 2022* 40.9 29.8 0.0 0.021
Equivalised income: 6th 10%-group 2022* 48.1 33.5 0.0 0.019
Equivalised income: 7th 10%-group 2022* 55.0 37.6 0.0 0.019
Equivalised income: 8th 10%-group 2022* 63.7 42.4 0.0 0.022
Equivalised income: 9th 10%-group 2022* 75.7 49.5 0.0 0.031
Equivalised income: 10th 10%-group 2022* 125.5 81.7 0.0 0.832
Source: CBS.
Explanation of symbols

Dataset is not available.


This table aims to show the distribution of welfare of private households, measured by their income, expenditures and wealth.
The figures in this table are broken down to different household characteristics.

The population consists of all private households with income on January 1st of the reporting year.
In the population for the subject low-income households, both student households and households with income only for a part of the year have been excluded.

Data available from: 2011

Status of the figures:
The figures for 2011 to 2021 are final. The figures for 2022 are preliminary.

Changes as of 8 November 2023:
Figures for 2021 are finalized. Preliminary figures for 2022 are added.

Changes as of 9 February 2022:
The preliminary figures for 2020 concerning ‘Mean expenditures’ have been added.
The topic 'Mean expenditures' only contains 5-annual data, for 2015 and 2020. The data for 2015 for this topic were still preliminary and are now final.

When will new figures be published?
New figures will be published in the fall of 2024.

Description topics

Mean disposable income
Mean disposable income per household.

The disposable income is defined as the gross income minus current transfers paid (like alimony payments to an ex-partner), income insurance premiums, health insurance premiums and tax on income and wealth. Gross income is the sum of income from labour, income from self-employment, income from property, payments from the government and other receipts (like alimony payments by an ex-partner).

Mean equivalised income
Mean equivalised disposable income per household.

The equivalised income is the disposable income corrected for differences in household size and composition. The correction factor used reflects the advantages of scale of households with two or more members. The single person household is used as the reference household. The equivalised income is a measure of the prosperity of (members of) a household.

Low-income households
Number of households having an income below the low-income threshold as a percentage of all households in a category.

The low-income threshold represents the same purchasing power for all households and is adjusted annually for price changes using the consumer price index (CPI). The level is based on the welfare benefit level for a single person in 1979.

Income inequality
The Gini coefficient is a common measure for inequality. The value of the Gini coefficient varies between 0 (everyone has the same income) and 1 (one household has all the income, the others have none).
The Gini coefficient is calculated as the half of the mean income difference between households, divided by the mean income. In case of negative incomes, the Gini coefficient is normalized. The coefficient is based on the standardized disposable income.