Koopvaardij
How to Become a Merchant Navy Officer in Netherlands
In the Netherlands the merchant navy is the Koopvaardij. The Dutch model is known for 'maritiem officier' programs that train dual-purpose officers competent in both navigation and engineering, with strong links to the offshore and dredging sectors.
Regulator: Human Environment & Transport Inspectorate (ILT) Β· Updated 2026-05-01
The Koopvaardij in Netherlands
A career as a Dutch merchant navy officer offers internationally portable qualifications, structured promotion and some of the highest entry-level earnings of any technical profession. Training follows the global STCW convention, so a certificate earned in Netherlands is recognised worldwide β while the entry route, terminology (Koopvaardij) and approved institutes are specific to the country.
Eligibility & requirements
- HAVO/VWO or relevant MBO qualification depending on the program level.
- Maritime medical fitness (keuring).
- Sea-internships built into the program.
- Dutch and/or English depending on the institute.
Entry paths to become an officer
1. Maritiem Officier (dual-purpose) β HBO or MBO
Programs producing officers qualified for both deck and engine roles, prized in offshore and short-sea trades.
Approved institutes & academies
| Institute | Location | Type |
|---|---|---|
| Maritiem Instituut Willem Barentsz | Terschelling | University |
| Rotterdam Mainport Institute (STC Group) | Rotterdam | University |
| Maritieme Academie Harlingen | Harlingen | Academy |
Ranks & salary structure
Merchant navy officers progress through a clear rank ladder in two main departments β Deck (navigation) and Engine β plus the Electro-Technical Officer (ETO) role. Promotion depends on sea-time and higher Certificates of Competency.
Dutch officers are paid on Western-European scales with strong offshore demand (indicative USD below).
| Rank | Department | Indicative pay (USD / month) |
|---|---|---|
| Deck Cadet / Trainee | Deck | $300 β $700 |
| Third Officer (3/O) | Deck | $2,500 β $4,000 |
| Second Officer (2/O) | Deck | $3,500 β $5,500 |
| Chief Officer (C/O) | Deck | $6,000 β $9,500 |
| Master (Captain) | Deck | $9,000 β $15,000 |
| Trainee / Fifth Engineer | Engine | $300 β $700 |
| Fourth Engineer (4/E) | Engine | $2,500 β $4,500 |
| Third Engineer (3/E) | Engine | $4,000 β $6,000 |
| Second Engineer (2/E) | Engine | $7,000 β $10,500 |
| Chief Engineer (C/E) | Engine | $9,000 β $15,000 |
| Electro-Technical Officer (ETO) | ETO | $4,000 β $6,500 |
Figures are indicative monthly wages for foreign-going officers and vary by company, flag state, vessel type and contract length.
Documents, exams and planning checklist
Confirm eligibility and medical standards before paying any institute fees.
Shortlist only training routes recognised by ILT.
Keep passport, academic records, medical certificate and sponsorship letters organised.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Dutch word for merchant navy?+
It is 'Koopvaardij'. Dutch academies are well known for the dual-purpose 'maritiem officier' qualification.
The realities of life at sea
Things the recruitment brochures leave out β and every candidate should know before committing.
Shore leave is disappearing
Modern container and tanker ports turn ships around in 8β16 hours. Officers can arrive in Rotterdam, Singapore or Houston and never step off the gangway. For months at a time, the ship is the entire world.
Paperwork has overtaken seamanship
ISM, MLC, ISPS, SMS β every incident generates a new form. Industry surveys show senior officers spending 2β3 hours daily on documentation. Many describe it as the most demoralising part of the job.
Mental health is the unspoken crisis
Confinement, isolation, repeated separation from family, and a culture that equates stoicism with professionalism combine into a serious mental-health risk. Seafarer well-being surveys consistently record depression and anxiety rates well above land-based populations.
Your contract governs more than you think
The flag state, not your nationality, determines most of your working rights at sea. A Filipino officer on a Liberian-flag ship managed by a Greek company operates under Liberian law and ITF-negotiated terms β not Filipino labour law.
No employer pension β ever
Most seafarers are employed on fixed-term contracts through manning agencies. There is no employer pension contribution as standard. Retirement planning is entirely self-managed, yet most young officers spend freely during high-earning years.
Re-entry shock is real
After 4β6 months aboard, returning home is not just a relief β it is a social recalibration. Children have grown; spouses have adapted; social groups have moved on. Officers repeatedly describe feeling like a visitor in their own home.
For the full picture β including who this career genuinely suits and why it remains one of the most financially rewarding technical professions on earth β read the complete career guide.
