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TwitterIn the last decade, the population of the city of Utrecht increased by roughly 70,000. In 2009, Utrecht had approximately 300,000 inhabitants. By 2023, the number of inhabitants had grown to over 368,000. This was approximately one quarter of the total population of the province of the same name, of which the city of Utrecht is the capital. In 2021, the province of Utrecht had roughly 1.37 million inhabitants, making it the fifth-largest province in the country after South and North Holland, North Brabant and Gelderland.
Fourth-largest city in the Netherlands
With its 360 thousand inhabitants, Utrecht is one of the largest cities in the country. The capital, Amsterdam, is the largest city in the Netherlands, with roughly 873,000 inhabitants, followed by Rotterdam and The Hague. Utrecht follows in fourth place.
Rabobank and NS headquarters
Utrecht is home to a large number of internationally operating companies, of which Dutch bank Rabobank is just one. One of the leading banks in the country, Rabobank had nearly 450 branches nationwide in 2018. The Rabobank headquarters are in Utrecht though, as are the headquarters of the national railway organization (NS). Utrecht also has the largest railway station in the country, receiving an average of nearly 272.8 thousand passengers every working day.
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Historical dataset of population level and growth rate for the Utrecht, Netherlands metro area from 1950 to 2025.
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Population growth in The Netherlands by birth, death and migration by sex and region.
In addition to national data, information is presented by group of provinces, province, COROP region and municipality.
The regional totals shown concern cumulated municipal data. Where changes of municipal boundaries transect regional boundaries, the municipal classifications concerns the most recent situation. The municipality of Vianen, for example, was annexed by the province of Utrecht on 1 January 2002, and is classified under the province of Utrecht in the Table.
Data available from: 1942
Status of the figures: All data recorded in this publication are final data. Up to 1977 data may differ from other published data on StatLine. This is due to differences between the data files used by Statistics Netherlands and the official data as published in 'Loop van de bevolking per gemeente'.
Changes as of 9 July 2025: Final figures of 2024 have been added.
When will new figures be published? In the 3rd quarter of 2026 figures of 2025 will be added in this table.
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EN: The dataset is based on tables with detailed data for municipalities and boroughs of the population census and the occupational census of the Netherlands 1947. These detailed tables from the archive of Statistics Netherlands never have been published. They are written on so-called ‘transparanten’, sheets in A4-format. The set contains more than 35 table-types, some of which spread over two or more sheets, some combined on one sheet.Image scans of the detailed tables have been made in February 2005. Those scans, 29489 in total were published on www.volkstellingen.nl, ordered by province and municipality. In a later stage the scans have been converted by data-entry to Excel worksheets. In most cases one scan has been converted to one Excel file. However, if a scan contains two or more tables, a separate Excel file is made for each table. The Excel files also have been converted to CSV-text files.The thematic collection: 12th Population Census 31 May 1947 contains 11 datasets for the provinces plus one dataset for the Netherlands as a whole. The documentation for any dataset in the collection contains a description of the contents of all table-types and the instruction given for data-entry.This dataset regards the files of the province Utrecht. The files are grouped by municipality. General files for the province Utrecht are contained in the dataset for the Netherlands as a whole.The metadata per file (details) contains the table number. An overview of table numbers by file is contained in ‘Table number per scan_Utrecht.csv’. This applies for the scans as well as the Excel files and the CSV-text files. The file 'Titles of Tables' shows the table numbers with the corresponding titles of the tables.NL: De dataset is gebaseerd op gedetailleerde tabellen op plaatselijk en wijkniveau van de Volks- en Beroepstellingen 1947. Deze gedetailleerde tabellen uit het CBS-archief zijn nooit gepubliceerd. Zij stonden op perkamentachtig papier (‘transparanten’) in A4-formaat. Het betreft meer dan 35 tabeltypen, waarvan sommige per tabel op één transparant, sommige per tabel gespreid over twee of meer transparanten (afhankelijk van de grootte van de gemeente) en enkele met twee of drie tabellen op één transparant.Van deze gedetailleerde tabellen zijn in februari 2005 tijdens de Landelijke Contactdag Document Management image scans gemaakt in JPEG-formaat. De in totaal 29489 scans zijn in eerste instantie opgenomen op de website www.volkstellingen.nl, geordend per provincie en gemeente. Later zijn de scans met data-entry overgenomen in Excelbestanden. In principe is van elke scan één Excelbestand gemaakt. Alleen als een scan twee of meer tabellen bevat, is van elke tabel een afzonderlijk Excelbestand gemaakt. De Excelbestanden zijn ook geconverteerd naar CSV-tekstbestanden.De collectie datasets ‘Volks- en Beroepentellingen 1947’ bestaat uit 11 datasets voor de provincies plus een dataset voor Nederland als geheel. De documentatie voor alle datasets in deze collectie omvat onder meer een beschrijving van de inhoud van elk tabeltype en de instructies die zijn gegeven voor de data-entry.Deze dataset betreft de bestanden van de provincie Utrecht. De bestanden zijn ingedeeld per gemeente. Algemene bestanden over de provincie Utrecht bevinden zich in de dataset voor Nederland als geheel.De metadata per bestand (details) bevat het tabelnummer. Een overzicht met het tabelnummer per bestand staat in ‘Table number per scan_Utrecht.csv’. Dat is ook van toepassing op de bijbehorende Excelbestanden en CSV-tekstbestanden. Het bestand 'Titles of Tables' geeft een overzicht van de tabelnummers met de bijbehorende tabelnamen. Dit bestand is beschikbaar gesteld als pdf-document en als CSV-tekstbestand. 12de volkstelling 31 mei 1947 - Utrecht
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TwitterNot surprisingly, the capital of the Netherlands is also its largest city. At around *******, Amsterdam has over ******* inhabitants more than the second-largest city in the country, Rotterdam. The Hague and Utrecht, the third and fourth-largest cities in the Netherlands, together have approximately as many inhabitants as Amsterdam alone. Amsterdam and the pressure on the housing market A rapidly growing city, Amsterdam’s population increased from roughly ***** thousand to around ***** thousand in the last decade. This has created pressure on the real estate market, where average rent and housing prices have skyrocketed. In the first quarter of 2010, the average rent of residential property amounted to roughly ***** euros per square meter. In the first quarter of 2021, this had increased to over ***** euros per square meter. 2030 Outlook In the nearby future, Amsterdam is set to remain the Netherlands’ largest city. According to a recent forecast, by 2030 Amsterdam will have broken the barrier of one million inhabitants. Rotterdam, Den Haag and Utrecht are forecast to grow too, albeit at a much lower pace. In 2030, Rotterdam is expected to reach just under ******* inhabitants.
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In 2020, the research project ’10 Years Up’ (10yup.nl) started at Utrecht University, the Netherlands. It is the effort of a multi-disciplinary team. The study follows a longitudinal cohort of 500 young adults from age 16 for 10 years. The participants were recruited by random selection from the general Dutch population of 16-year old adolescents. Every three months, they use a mobile app to indicate which goals they are pursuing by swiping right or left, and answer questions about how they go about realizing them. They also fill in questionnaires about various other topics related to their current circumstances, health and well-being. This way, we will be able to determine antecedents and consequences of goal setting and striving as a self-regulation strategy over time. Finding out about how young people’s choices affect their health and well-being helps us to be able to guide them in the important transition from adolescent to adult. By knowing which goals are important to them in this period, we can support them in their development. Data of the first two years of data collection can be found in this repository, split in separate files per wave, as well as merged data files for year 1, year 2, and both years. Year 1 Wave 1: October/November 2020 Wave 2: January 2021 Wave 3: April 2021 Wave 4: Augustus 2021 Year 2 Wave 5: October/November 2021 Wave 6: January/February 2022 Wave 7: April/May 2022 Wave 8: Augustus 2022 For questions on this dataset, please contact us at 10yup@uu.nl.
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TwitterNo description is available. Visit https://dataone.org/datasets/95bee17b7811d2826d65e11b7f52bee8 for complete metadata about this dataset.
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TwitterNo description is available. Visit https://dataone.org/datasets/220cb85b5b785cce44cbefa30055e7f2 for complete metadata about this dataset.
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TwitterThe quarterly pulse monitor expects the Dutch house prices to fall by five percent in 2023 due to the decline in purchasing power, higher cost of borrowing and worsening economic conditions. The price of Dutch residential property in 2022 was approximately 489,000 euros. These developments came on top of other issues that were already prevalent in the Dutch housing market, such as the discussion about nitrogen and its effect on housing construction. The effects of nitrogen on the price of a house At the end of 2019, months before the coronavirus, there was already a lot of uncertainty whether their predictions would hold true. This had to do with the so-called “nitrogen decision” (in Dutch: stikstofbesluit) in May 2019. Simply put, a Dutch advisory body found that the domestic policy for nitrogen emission (formally known as Programmatische Aanpak Stikstof or Programmatic Approach Nitrogen) went against European rules. As of August 2019, a sizable share of the Dutch population was not familiar with this nitrogen policy. However, the advisory body’s decision led to an immediate stop to all construction in the country (amongst other things). By the end of 2019, this stop was still in place. For 2020, newly to be constructed houses have to comply to new rules regarding nitrogen emission. This puts new pressure on a housing market that already had to keep with increasing demand. How about the housing market in Amsterdam? In the year 2022, Amsterdam ranked as the most expensive city in the Netherlands to acquire an apartment, with an average price per square meter that was 2,000 euros more expensive than in Utrecht. Amsterdam was also well above the average rents found in other cities. A house in Amsterdam had a rent of approximately 26 euros per square meter in 2023, whereas rents in Rotterdam cost roughly 18 euros per square meter. It should be noted, however, that rent changes in the Dutch capital are significantly lower than those found in Rotterdam and especially Utrecht.
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TwitterNo description is available. Visit https://dataone.org/datasets/80bbb438badd7651ce6740e5e4b34577 for complete metadata about this dataset.
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TwitterThe quarterly pulse monitor expects the Dutch house prices to climb by *** percent in 2025 due to the decline in purchasing power, higher cost of borrowing and worsening economic conditions. The price of Dutch residential property in 2025 was approximately ******* euros. These developments came on top of other issues that were already prevalent in the Dutch housing market, such as the discussion about nitrogen and its effect on housing construction. The effects of nitrogen on the price of a house At the end of 2019, months before the coronavirus, there was already a lot of uncertainty whether their predictions would hold true. This had to do with the so-called “nitrogen decision” (in Dutch: stikstofbesluit) in May 2019. Simply put, a Dutch advisory body found that the domestic policy for nitrogen emission (formally known as Programmatische Aanpak Stikstof or Programmatic Approach Nitrogen) went against European rules. As of August 2019, a sizable share of the Dutch population was not familiar with this nitrogen policy. However, the advisory body’s decision led to an immediate stop to all construction in the country (amongst other things). By the end of 2019, this stop was still in place. For 2020, newly to be constructed houses have to comply to new rules regarding nitrogen emission. This puts new pressure on a housing market that already had to keep with increasing demand. How about the housing market in Amsterdam? In the year 2022, Amsterdam ranked as the most expensive city in the Netherlands to acquire an apartment, with an average price per square meter that was ***** euros more expensive than in Utrecht. Amsterdam was also well above the average rents found in other cities. A house in Amsterdam had a rent of approximately ** euros per square meter in 2023, whereas rents in Rotterdam cost roughly ** euros per square meter. It should be noted, however, that rent changes in the Dutch capital are significantly lower than those found in Rotterdam and especially Utrecht.
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TwitterIn the last decade, the population of the city of Utrecht increased by roughly 70,000. In 2009, Utrecht had approximately 300,000 inhabitants. By 2023, the number of inhabitants had grown to over 368,000. This was approximately one quarter of the total population of the province of the same name, of which the city of Utrecht is the capital. In 2021, the province of Utrecht had roughly 1.37 million inhabitants, making it the fifth-largest province in the country after South and North Holland, North Brabant and Gelderland.
Fourth-largest city in the Netherlands
With its 360 thousand inhabitants, Utrecht is one of the largest cities in the country. The capital, Amsterdam, is the largest city in the Netherlands, with roughly 873,000 inhabitants, followed by Rotterdam and The Hague. Utrecht follows in fourth place.
Rabobank and NS headquarters
Utrecht is home to a large number of internationally operating companies, of which Dutch bank Rabobank is just one. One of the leading banks in the country, Rabobank had nearly 450 branches nationwide in 2018. The Rabobank headquarters are in Utrecht though, as are the headquarters of the national railway organization (NS). Utrecht also has the largest railway station in the country, receiving an average of nearly 272.8 thousand passengers every working day.