DON’T MISS
IamExpat FairIamExpat Job BoardIamExpat Webinars
Newsletters
EXPAT INFO
CAREER
HOUSING
EDUCATION
LIFESTYLE
EXPAT SERVICES
NEWS & ARTICLES
Home
Expat Info
Dutch news & articles
Smoking ban to be tightened further
Never miss a thing!Sign up for our weekly newsletters with important news stories, expat events and special offers.
Keep me updated with exclusive offers from partner companies
By signing up, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with our privacy policy

Smoking ban to be tightened further

Never miss a thing!Sign up for our weekly newsletters with important news stories, expat events and special offers.
Keep me updated with exclusive offers from partner companies
By signing up, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with our privacy policy
or
follow us for regular updates:



Related Stories

Price of cigarettes in the Netherlands has doubled in past decadePrice of cigarettes in the Netherlands has doubled in past decade
Significant increase in drug-related criminality in South Significant increase in drug-related criminality in South
Utrecht seeks to regulate cannabis productionUtrecht seeks to regulate cannabis production
Personality of young adolescents connected to cannabis usePersonality of young adolescents connected to cannabis use
Plea to make tobacco possession in under-16s a criminal offencePlea to make tobacco possession in under-16s a criminal offence
Most enterprising Dutch universities announcedMost enterprising Dutch universities announced
Dutch are leading more sober lives, research showsDutch are leading more sober lives, research shows
Dutch income tax system should be simplified, report statesDutch income tax system should be simplified, report states
For expats of all colours, shapes and sizes

Explore
Expat infoCareerHousingEducationLifestyleExpat servicesNews & articles
About us
IamExpat MediaAdvertisePost a jobContact usSitemap
More IamExpat
IamExpat Job BoardIamExpat HousingIamExpat FairsWebinarsNewsletters
Privacy
Terms of usePrivacy policyCookiesAvoiding scams

Never miss a thing!Sign up for expat events, news & offers, delivered once a week.
Keep me updated with exclusive offers from partner companies
By signing up, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with our privacy policy


© 2025 IamExpat Media B.V.
© 2025 IamExpat Media B.V.
Feb 14, 2013
Mark McDaid
Mark hails from the Emerald Isle but has been living in the land of cheese and deep-fried-indiscriminate-meat since February 2009. He can often be found trying to read through a hand shaking vociferously from coffee-intake or attempting to act in one of Amsterdam's English-language theater groups. Read more

The Dutch parliament has once more moved to alter the laws on smoking in the horeca sector, with a narrow majority of MPs now behind a total ban.

In 2010 the Minister of Health and VVD member Edith Schippers created an exception for cafés or bars smaller than 70 square meters in size so long as they also did not employ staff.

Such a policy drew angry responses from health critics who claimed that the tobacco lobby was exercising undue influence upon the government, while cynics cited the huge financial contribution made towards the Dutch economy for the relaxation of the ban.

Now the SGP, the fundamentalist Christian party, has thrown it's weight behind the plan for a ban across the entire hospitality industry, giving a slight majority to the proposal.

The leader of the SGP, Kees van der Staaij, quoted in the AD, explains that he had initial doubts over the proposal but decided that "health interests are paramount."

This past Tuesday the proposal, initiated by the Christian Union, secured it's majority. It will now be passed onto the current government for implementation. However, the coalition partners loyalties appear to lie on either side of the issue, with the PvdA behind the current bid and the VVD the architects of the exception permitted in 2010.

The VVD was joined by the SP, PVV and 50Plus in opposition to the proposal, claiming that smaller bars in non-urban areas, usually one-man-businesses with no staff to protect, will now fear for their continued existence.

Anti-smoking groups argue that any exception sends the wrong message to the public and will claim a victory for public health in the wake of this recent vote.

Source: Algemeen Dagblad

By Mark McDaid