Best Used Electric Cars Under €25,000 in the Netherlands
A practical guide to electric used cars under €25,000 in the Netherlands: range, battery checks, charging, tax, subsidy and model shortlists.
RideIQ is the tool I built to solve the problems in this guide: a used-car search for internationals in the Netherlands. Try it free
Table of contents
Used electric cars under €25,000 are now genuinely interesting in the Netherlands. You can find city EVs, compact family EVs and older Tesla Model 3s. But you need to think about battery health, charging, winter range and warranty.
Start with electric cars under 25000.
Check your charging situation first
ANWB notes that range and battery are not the only issues; charging options matter too. Ask:
- Can you charge at home or work?
- Do you regularly drive more than 200 km in a day?
- Do you need fast charging?
- Is there reliable public charging near your home?
Without easy charging, an EV can become inconvenient even if the price is good.
Subsidy and road tax
The old SEPP purchase subsidy is closed according to the Dutch government. RVO notes that fully electric cars receive a 30% MRB discount from 2026, with further changes later. Always check current rules before buying.
Tesla Model 3
The Model 3 offers range, performance and charging convenience. Check tyres, insurance, damage history, battery warranty and software status.
Hyundai Kona Electric
The Kona Electric is compact but has useful range, especially with the larger battery. Check charging speed, updates and battery warranty.
Kia e-Niro
The e-Niro is practical and popular with families. Check warranty history, charging cables, damage and real winter range.
Renault Zoe
The Zoe can be affordable, but check whether the battery is owned or leased. Older examples can have battery-rental arrangements.
Volkswagen ID.3
The ID.3 is modern and spacious. Check battery size, software updates, heat pump and tyre condition.
Nissan Leaf
The Leaf can be cheap, but older cars have range limitations and CHAdeMO fast charging. Buy one only if your routes are predictable.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a used EV under €25,000 sensible?
Yes, if charging and range fit your life. Battery health, warranty and charging speed matter more than engine-style specs.
Is there a Dutch EV subsidy in 2026?
The old SEPP subsidy is closed. Check Rijksoverheid or RVO for current rules before buying.
How do I check the battery?
Ask for warranty status, service history and ideally a battery-health or State of Health report.
Which EV is best for families?
Kia e-Niro, Hyundai Kona Electric, Volkswagen ID.3 and Tesla Model 3 are good starting points.
More guides
Ready to search?
RideIQ searches thousands of cars across every major Dutch platform, with everything explained in English.
Get started free