CONTACT US
Share: Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn I recommend visiting cushmanwakefield.com to read:%0A%0A {0} %0A%0A {1}

Turning right on the housing market: the fast track also requires affordability

Eelco Horstman • 03/07/2026

AMSTERDAM, 3 juli 2026 – What if the government opts for the fast track? Fewer regulations, faster permitting, and more room for market players and investors. It sounds appealing, especially at a time when construction output is lagging and the investment climate is under pressure. A right-leaning majority offers the shortest path: deregulation, maintaining fiscal incentives, and accelerating procedures can count on support from the right side of the political spectrum.

For builders, developers, and investors, that is good news. Projectscan get off the ground more quickly, the stack of procedures is reduced, and the investment climate receives a boost. The thinking behind this is clear: less fragmentation, fewer delays, more feasibility. This direction is also clearly reflected in the coalition agreement. Consider a single appeal process, higher thresholds for objections, simplified building regulations, uniform construction standards, and more room for alternative housing forms. These are all measures that carry the same promise: losing less time to procedures and creating more room for execution. That is precisely where the political appeal of a right-leaning approach lies.

Eelco Horstman, Head of Residential Valuation Advisory Cushman & Wakefield Nederland: "Measures that primarily stimulate construction and the market can push social safeguards and affordability into the background."

However, this route also has a downside. Measures that primarily stimulate construction and the market can push social safeguards and affordability into the background. Think of rent regulation, restrictions on buy-to-let acquisitions, and rules on owner occupancy. This is where the vulnerability lies: accelerating becomes politically difficult to sustain if affordability is not visibly addressed.
The value of a market-driven approach is clear: without a willingness to invest, housing construction will not take off on its own. But acceleration alone is not a complete solution to the housing crisis. That is why the key question is not only how fast homes can be built, but also how broadly the chosen approach is supported politically and socially.

 

This brings the core trade-off into focus. The fast track can unlock projects, but if affordability is not sufficiently addressed, the call for policy adjustments will inevitably return. That leads to renewed uncertainty: first room is given, then interventions follow. It is precisely this policy pattern that has put pressure on the investment climate in recent years.
For the market, the key issue is not only whether construction is allowed, but especially how long that course will be maintained. Developers and investors do not invest on the basis of a single political moment, but on expectations over multiple years. If acceleration is later followed by political correction, uncertainty remains.

 

This requires more than a sum of individual measures. The coalition agreement contains many proposals that are defensible on their own, but the market primarily looks at the coherence between them. If today’s focus on fewer procedures is followed by new restrictions tomorrow, it becomes more difficult for parties to commit plans, capital, and capacity for the long term.
That is why a right-leaning approach is not a simple choice for or against the market. It is above all a test of consistency: can the government give space to construction and investment without later needing to intervene again in the same areas?

Contact

Barbara Voskuil - Geerlings  - website
Barbara Voskuil - Geerlings

Head of Marketing Netherlands (EMEA Grade - Associate) • Amsterdam

More News

Netherlands

A global commercial real estate services leader, we will never settle for the world that’s been built, but relentlessly drive it forward.

Learn More

With your permission we and our partners would like to use cookies in order to access and record information and process personal data, such as unique identifiers and standard information sent by a device to ensure our website performs as expected, to develop and improve our products, and for advertising and insight purposes.

Alternatively click on More Options and select your preferences before providing or refusing consent. Some processing of your personal data may not require your consent, but you have a right to object to such processing.

You can change your preferences at any time by returning to this site or clicking on Cookies.
MORE OPTIONS
Agree and Close
These cookies ensure that our website performs as expected,for example website traffic load is balanced across our servers to prevent our website from crashing during particularly high usage.
These cookies allow our website to remember choices you make (such as your user name, language or the region you are in) and provide enhanced features. These cookies do not gather any information about you that could be used for advertising or remember where you have been on the internet.
These cookies allow us to work with our marketing partners to understand which ads or links you have clicked on before arriving on our website or to help us make our advertising more relevant to you.
Agree All
Reject All
SAVE SETTINGS