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nietingezetenen

Nietingezetenen is a Dutch term used to describe a person who does not have their habitual residence in a particular country, region, or administrative unit. The precise meaning varies with context, but it generally distinguishes non-residents from residents.

In the Netherlands and similar systems, a resident (ingezetene) is someone who has a fixed address and

The status of nietingezetenen often carries different rights and obligations compared to residents. Taxation, social security

The term is used in tax law, immigration policy, and municipal administration. It is primarily bureaucratic

is
registered
in
the
municipal
population
registry
(Basisregistratie
Personen).
Nietingezetenen
are
those
who
do
not
reside
permanently
in
the
country;
they
may
stay
for
a
limited
period,
study,
work
temporarily
abroad,
or
be
visitors.
coverage,
and
access
to
certain
public
services
are
typically
linked
to
residency
status.
Non-residents
may
owe
taxes
on
income
sourced
in
the
country
and
are
usually
subject
to
different
tax
rules,
while
many
social
benefits
are
more
limited
for
non-residents.
International
agreements
and
national
laws
determine
specific
rules.
and
appears
in
official
documents,
statistical
reporting,
and
legal
texts
to
describe
status
rather
than
personal
characteristics.
While
the
concept
is
straightforward,
the
exact
criteria
for
identifying
nietingezetenen
can
vary
by
jurisdiction
and
governing
body.