IELTS Testing Centres in The Netherlands
In total, there are 5 test locations in The Netherlands that offer IELTS exams. You can select the one which is closer to you.
There are two types of test format available for IELTS exams: paper-based or computer-delivered. For both formats, the Speaking Section is done with a real IELTS examiner on a face-to-face basis.
Amsterdam, Netherlands
British Council – British Language Training Centre (BLTC)
Street Address: BLTC – Amsterdam, N.Z. Voorburgwal 328E, 1012 RW, Amsterdam
Telephone Number: +31206223634
Contact Email: bltc@bltc.nl
Website URL: www.bltc.nl
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (EUR) |
2020/08/8 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/08/22 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/08/29 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/09/5 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/09/12 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/09/17 | IELTS Academic | 236 |
Amsterdam, Netherlands
British Council – Aristozalen
Street Address: Teleportboulevard 100, Amsterdam, 1043 EJ
Telephone Number: 088 – 230 10 00
Contact Email: info@aristo.nl
Website URL: www.aristo.nl
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (EUR) |
2020/08/8 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 236 | |
2020/08/22 | IELTS General Training | 236 | |
2020/08/29 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/09/5 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/09/12 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/09/17 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 236 |
Rotterdam, Netherlands
British Council – Business Centre Nederland
Street Address: Registration address Oxford House Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal 328/E
Telephone Number: +31206223634
Contact Email: bltc@bltc.nl
Website URL: www.bltc.nl
Utrecht, Netherlands
British Council test location – Utrecht
Street Address: Utrecht – Aristozalen, Brennerbaan 150, 3524 BN Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht
Telephone Number: +31206223634
Contact Email: bltc@bltc.nl
Website URL: www.bltc.nl
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (EUR) |
2020/09/5 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/10/10 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/11/7 | IELTS Academic | 236 |
Eindhoven, Netherlands
British Council test location – Eindhoven
Street Address: Eindhoven Aristozalen, Vestdijk 30, 5611 CC Eindhoven, Eindhoven
Telephone Number: +31206223634
Contact Email: bltc@bltc.nl
Website URL: www.bltc.nl
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (EUR) |
2020/07/25 | IELTS General Training | 236 | |
2020/08/29 | IELTS Academic | 236 | |
2020/09/12 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 236 | |
2020/10/31 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 236 | |
2020/12/5 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 236 |
IELTS Exam Fee in The Netherlands
According to the test maker – British Council, the current cost to take IELTS test in The Netherlands is 236 EUR.
List of cities in The Netherlands where you can take the IELTS tests
- Amsterdam
- Eindhoven
- Rotterdam
- Utrecht
More about Netherlands
Netherlands, Dutch Nederland [-l ɑ nt], officially Dutch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden [ ko ː n ɪ ŋ krε k dər ne ː dərl ɑ ndə], German Kingdom of the Netherlands State in Western Europe (2018) 17.2 Million residents; The capital is Amsterdam.
The territory includes the Caribbean islands of Curaçao, Sint Maarten (Saint-Martin) and Aruba, which belonged to the Netherlands Antilles, which were dissolved in 2010 (Aruba only until 1986) and have been autonomous since then. The islands of Bonaire, Saba and Sint Eustatius, which also belong to the Netherlands Antilles, have had the status of Special Dutch Municipalities since 2010.
Population
The majority of the population is Dutch. In the course of the independence of the Dutch East Indies (1949), Indonesians and Ambonese, Indonesian-Papuan mongrels, immigrated. Until the independence of the Dutch Guiana (1975) came Surinamans who wanted to keep their Dutch citizenship; the number of allochtones (people with at least one parent born abroad) from Suriname is estimated to be over 357,000. The largest allochthonous group is made up of around 374,000 Indonesians. 5.36% of the people living in the Netherlands are foreign nationals (2017); the number of refugees is given by UNHCR (2017) as 103,900.
The average annual population growth is (2018) 0.38% (birth rate 1.09%, death rate 0.9%). The average age is 42.7 years, life expectancy 81.5 years (men 79.3; women 83.8). Of the residents, 16.3% are younger than 15 years, 19.1% are older than 65 years. The population density is (2018) 511 residents / km 2, making the country one of the most densely populated territorial states in Europe. 92% of the population live in cities and urbanized rural communities (2017). Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht belong to Randstad Holland; Over a third of the population is concentrated in this metropolitan area.
The biggest cities in the Netherlands
Biggest Cities (Inh. 2018) | |
Amsterdam | 855 900 |
Rotterdam | 638 700 |
The hague | 532 560 |
Utrecht | 347 480 |
Eindhoven | 229 100 |
Religion
The constitution (Article 6) guarantees freedom of religion. Since 1848, all religious communities have been legally equal and state and church are legally separated, which for the Reformed Church was associated with the loss of its previously privileged state position.
Around half of the population professes Christianity. According to various sources that provide different results on religious affiliation, around 24-29% belong to the Catholic Church, and around 15 to just under 22% belong to different Protestant churches (predominantly Reformed tradition). The Catholic Church comprises the Archdiocese of Utrecht with six suffragan dioceses. The largest Protestant church is the Protestant Church in the Netherlands. For historical reasons it is worth mentioning the numerically small Old Catholic Church (Utrecht Church).
The largest non-Christian religious minorities among the population are approximately 5–6% Muslims, approximately 1% Buddhists and approximately as many Hindus. The Jewish community has around 28,000 members (around 0.17% of the population). The first Jewish communities in the Netherlands emerged at the end of the 16th and first half of the 17th centuries. During the German occupation (1940–44 / 45) over 100,000 Dutch Jews were victims of the Holocaust. Between around 42% and 51% of the population cannot be assigned to any religious community.