Income, consumption, wealth of households: key figures; National Accounts
| Characteristics of households | Periods | Total amount Wealth Financial assets Other assets (million euros) | Total amount Wealth Financial liabilities Other liabilities (million euros) | Average amount Wealth Financial assets Other assets (1,000 euro) | Average amount Wealth Financial liabilities Other liabilities (1,000 euro) | Standardised amount Wealth Financial assets Other assets (1,000 euro) | Standardised amount Wealth Financial liabilities Other liabilities (1,000 euro) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Others | 2023* | 166,653 | 24,798 | 304.4 | 45.3 | 124.6 | 18.5 |
| Source of income: other | 2023* | 89,834 | 15,360 | 63.7 | 10.9 | 41.8 | 7.1 |
| Source: CBS. | |||||||
Table explanation
This table describes the income, consumption, saving and wealth distributions of the sector households in the national accounts across different household groups. Whereas macro-economic aggregates and averages convey merely the general situation, these distributional statistics provide insight into how economic resources and developments are distributed among different segments of the population. The relevance lies in the fact that the economic aggregates or growth of the Household sector may by reflected differently and unevenly when decomposed by different household groups. The Households sector is broken down into groups identified by main source of income, living situation, household composition, age class of the head of the household, income deciles, and net worth deciles.
These statistics are produced through combining microdata on households (among others administrative data and surveys) with the National Accounts aggregates. By adhering to the National Accounts totals, these distributional statistics align to the official macro-economic statistics. To accomplish this alignment, definitional, population-related, and methodological differences between micro- and macro-statistics are analyzed and resolved. Since National Accounts are internationally harmonized in terms of concepts and methodology, these aggregates are comparable across countries. Hence, due to the alignment to National Accounts totals, these distributional statistics have similar international comparability.
The methodology applied is developed in international context within expert groups of the OECD, ECB, and Eurostat, among others the work of the Expert Group on Disparities in a National Accounts framework (EG DNA). This methodology is outlined in the OECD Handbook on the Compilation of Household Distributional Results on Income, Consumption and Saving in Line with National Accounts Totals.
Data available from: 2021.
Status of the figures:
All data are provisional. The macro statistics are final, however the micro data used have varying statuses. The methodology is still under development at the international level.
Changes as of January 29th 2026:
None. This is a new table. Statistics Netherlands has carried out a revision of the national accounts. The Dutch national accounts are recently revised. New statistical sources, methods and concepts are implemented in the national accounts, in order to align the picture of the Dutch economy with all underlying source data and international guidelines for the compilation of the national accounts. This table contains revised data. For further information see section 3.
When will new figures be published?
New figures will be released at T+2 at the latest.
Description topics
- Total amount
- Wealth
- Wealth components are assets, liabilities, and non-financial assets. The sum of these components equals net worth. Up to and including 2010 these data concern the households sector including the non-profit institutions serving households. From 2011 onwards these NPISH are no longer included.
- Financial assets
- Assets are possessions of households.
- Other assets
- Other assets are possessions of households excluding pension entitlements.
- Financial liabilities
- Liabilities are debts of households.
- Other liabilities
- Other liabilities are debts, excluding home mortgages.
- Average amount
- Amount per household.
- Wealth
- Wealth components are assets, liabilities, and non-financial assets. The sum of these components equals net worth.
- Financial assets
- Assets are possessions of households.
- Other assets
- Other assets are possessions of households excluding pension entitlements.
- Financial liabilities
- Liabilities are debts of households.
- Other liabilities
- Other liabilities are debts, excluding home mortgages.
- Standardised amount
- Amount per household converted to a single-person household.
- Wealth
- Wealth components are assets, liabilities, and non-financial assets. The sum of these components equals net worth.
- Financial assets
- Assets are possessions of households.
- Other assets
- Other assets are possessions of households excluding pension entitlements.
- Financial liabilities
- Liabilities are debts of households.
- Other liabilities
- Other liabilities are debts, excluding home mortgages.