Drapeau des Pays-Bas

Netherlands

France and the Netherlands

Date of update: April 01st 2026 Information still valid as of today's date

French presence

  • French community: 23,251 registered (2022)
  • Dutch community in France: 60,000 people.
  • Consulate General: Amsterdam (honorary consuls: Middelburg, ’s-Hertogenbosch, Groningen, Maastricht, Nijmegen, Rotterdam, Utrecht, Aruba, Curaçao and Saint-Mart)

Visits

Bilateral contact between France and the Netherlands is frequent with regular bilateral consultations and interministerial contacts. Contacts at the highest level take place regularly. Our relationship recently saw the French President make a state visit to the Netherlands on 11 and 12 April 2023, following that of the Dutch royal couple to Paris in March 2016. These mutual visits have helped highlight and strengthen our human, political, economic and cultural ties, as well as our defence ambitions.

As mentioned above, a second intergovernmental seminar was held with the French President, the Dutch Prime Minister, and several ministers from the two countries. We strengthened our bilateral partnership through a joint statement further affirming our shared goals. A number of agreements were signed on this occasion, including a Pact for innovation and sustainable growth between the countries’ business federations (MEDEF and VNO).

There are also frequent ministerial meetings: The two Foreign Ministers meet regularly in bilateral and multilateral settings, and Wopke Hoekstra, Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs, met the French Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs and Minister of State for Europe in Paris in July 2022. Meetings in broader formats are also held regularly, alternately in the two countries, to discuss European themes and foster open and confident dialogue on the future of the EU.

Ambassadors

  • Ambassador of France to the Kingdom of the Netherlands: François Alabrune (since September 2022).
  • Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to France: Jan Theophile Versteeg (since September 2022).

Cultural, scientific and technical cooperation

Bilateral scientific cooperation mainly takes place under the European Research Area, and France is the Netherlands’ fourth-largest scientific partner. Academic cooperation is organized around the French-Dutch Network for Higher Education and Research (RFN) located, for the French side, at the University of Lille III. Most French research bodies (National Centre for Scientific Research – CNRS, National Institute for Agricultural Research – INRA, National Institute for Ocean Science– IFREMER, National Institute of Health and Medical Research – INSERM, Agency for Research Promotion – ANVAR) have signed agreements with their Dutch counterparts. Our activities draw on the French-Dutch working group on science and technology, the RFN and the Van Gogh Hubert Curien Programme launched in 1997 to promote researcher mobility. The French state visit also sparked further scientific cooperation (INRIA and Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica – CWI, Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission – CEA and TNO, IFREMER and Wageningen University & Research, TU Delft France Initiative).

The Descartes-Huygens Prize has been awarded yearly since 1995 to a Dutch and a French researcher, and the Descartes excellence scholarship programme, set up in 2011, awards nine or ten scholarships of an average€9,000 per year to finance studies of students at master’s and doctorate level.

French remains the third foreign language in the Netherlands and is still widely taught (18% of students in the final year of secondary education and 43% of pre-university science students take French as a baccalaureate subject). Four universities have schools of French language and literature. A language assistant programme has been created. The large network of 33 Alliance Française branches teach French to more than 8,000 students a year.

Cultural cooperation is driven by Dutch operators (festivals, museums) promoting French productions, including in cinema, architecture and sculpture. This cooperation is very often maintained directly between large French and Dutch institutions including the Rijksmuseum, Louvre, Van Gogh Museum, Concertgebouw, Opéra and more.

The 20th Erasmus-Descartes Conference, organized by the Embassy of the Netherlands in France in liaison with the Embassy of France in the Netherlands, was held in Paris in November 2022 and focused on sustainable aviation. This Conference is a key event in French-Dutch cooperation in the scientific, academic and economic fields and also seeks to offer a platform for dialogue between the two countries’ civil societies.

Other cooperation

Cross-border cooperation on Saint-Martin/Sint Maarten. Saint-Martin/Sint Maarten, an island in the Lesser Antilles, has been a unique case of “European” territorial cooperation since the Concordia Treaty in 1648.

The treaty recognizes shared sovereignty and territorial delimitation while maintaining considerable unity. It enshrines the sharing of natural resources, the principle of mutual assistance in the event of armed conflict, and above all free movement of goods and persons. An agreement on the demarcation of the maritime border was negotiated in March 2015 and signed in April 2016. Following Hurricane Irma, close cooperation was initiated between France and the Netherlands to foster reconstruction on the island. In August 2020, this led to an agreement on cooperation in the event of hurricanes on Saint-Martin/Sint Maarten between our armed forces on land, at sea and in the air. An agreement on the shared border was signed on 27 May 2023. This agreement, which demarcates the border, ends France’s longest-standing border dispute, which had run since 1648.

A quadripartite cooperation meeting with representatives of the Dutch and French Governments, the community of Saint-Martin and the government of Sint Maarten was held in The Hague on 15 June 2023.

List of French representations