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Nurse dressed in a superman costume

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The Veterinary Nurse Professional Path in the Netherlands

Overall, the veterinary nurse profession in the Netherlands is well-trained, regulated and increasingly recognised as indispensable to modern veterinary care. A quick overview.

Key points

Legal Protection: The title paraveterinair is protected by law, and veterinary nurses must be registered.
Educational Foundation: Dutch veterinary nurses undergo an EQF Level 4 vocational program, with potential for Level 5 pathways in the future.
The 2026 Federation: A landmark merger on July 1, 2026, will unite vets and nurses as well as other veterinary professionals into a single professional federation.

From support role to veterinary professional: the Dutch perspective

In the Netherlands, there are over 8,600 veterinarians, with around 4,500 working in clinical practice across approximately 2,400 veterinary practices. These are predominantly small animal clinics (60%), followed by mixed practices (20%), equine (5%) and others (15%). While the exact number of veterinary nurses (called paraveterinair in the Netherlands) is not publicly available, workforce data indicate their growing importance within practice teams, with ratios of more than 1.7 nurses per veterinarian in general practices and over 2 in specialised companion animal clinics (estimations range from 4,000 to 6,000).

Legal protection of the title

Veterinary nurses are trained through a four-year full-time vocational programme (EQF Level 4) offered by eight institutions, one of which (Aeres MBO) is Acovene-accredited. Currently, there is no formal pathway at a higher EQF level, although discussions are ongoing regarding the development of EQF Level 5 (higher professional education) opportunities.

The title “dierenartsassistent paraveterinair” is legally protected. Only graduates of one of these programmes and who are listed in the national veterinary register are authorised to perform veterinary nursing tasks, and, effectively, work as veterinary nurses.

One federation for all veterinary professionals

Key current challenges of Dutch veterinary nurses include workload, job satisfaction and career progression. A long-standing shortage of veterinarians has led to greater utilisation of veterinary nurses’ competencies, increasing both their responsibilities and employability.

A major development in the Netherlands is the planned merger of the veterinary and veterinary nurse associations into a single federation — which will also include veterinary physiotherapists and embryo transfer technicians. The future Federation (planned for 1 July 2026) aims to strengthen collaboration, improve communication and further recognise veterinary nurses as integral members of the veterinary professional team, potentially opening the door to expanded legal competencies.

A versatile career pathway

Interestingly, 30-40% of students use veterinary nursing education as a stepping stone to higher education. Graduates go into studies of (human) nursing, lab technicians and physiotherapy to pursue careers in laboratories, the feed and pharmaceutical industries, or broader healthcare fields, highlighting the flexibility and value of the profession.

For more information:

DISCLAIMER: Please note that what veterinary nurses can and cannot do legally may differ per country.

Credit for the image is ©Zack Tu Nan/Pexels

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