Oldest visible housing layer
About 2,128 addresses in Haarlem fall into Voor 1945. That is roughly 3% of the current housing stock.
85,119 addresses, 62 neighborhoods, 20 streets
Haarlem has 85,119 addresses in the WoningSearch database, including about 85,119 residential properties. Use this city page to move from city level to neighborhoods, streets and individual address profiles before comparing a home value.
The city overview links 62 neighborhoods and 20 streets, including Romolenpolder-oost, Oude Amsterdamsebuurt and Potgieterbuurt and streets such as Aagje Dekenstraat, Aart van der Leeuwstraat and Abeelstraat. This helps buyers and renters spot local differences instead of relying on one city-wide average.
For property research in Haarlem, the housing stock matters: an average construction year around 1953; a municipal WOZ signal near €479; the largest sampled building period is Voor 1945; energy label C appears most often in the sample. Check a specific address to see the building, energy and neighborhood signals together.
CBS context adds demand-side perspective for Haarlem: about 165,396 residents, 5,662 residents per km2, 52% owner-occupied homes and 48% rental homes. These signals make the page useful for both search-intent research and local comparison.
Most buildings (2,128) were constructed during Voor 1945.
The most common energy label is C (758 homes).
This block shows the non-residential side of the city: how many postal zones, shops, offices and business spaces Haarlem contains.
Of the 85,119 homes in Haarlem, 52% owner-occupied and 48% rental. It gives a quick read on the balance between owner occupation and rental stock.
There are 85,119 properties in Haarlem. Of these, 52% are owner-occupied and 48% are rental.
More than trivia — measurable traces of how Haarlem was built over time.
About 2,128 addresses in Haarlem fall into Voor 1945. That is roughly 3% of the current housing stock.
The biggest growth wave sits in Voor 1945. 2,128 addresses date from that period, around 3% of the total.
The average construction year in Haarlem is around 1953. It shows which era most of the city still comes from today.
Use the address, street and neighborhood pages for Haarlem to compare current property characteristics, WOZ signals and local differences.
Together these figures show how Haarlem evolved: with an older layer from Voor 1945 and a clear growth wave in Voor 1945.
Haarlem has 85119 registered addresses according to the BAG (Basisregistratie Adressen en Gebouwen), the official government database managed by the Kadaster. These addresses are spread across 30 neighborhoods and 20 streets. The average living area in Haarlem is ? m2 and the average construction year is 1953. On WoningSearch you can find detailed information for each address including area, construction year, energy label, WOZ value, and neighborhood statistics. All data is updated weekly from official government sources.
On WoningSearch you can search for real estate agents in Haarlem via our agent directory. You can filter by association (NVM, VBO, VastgoedPro), specialty, and location. Each agent has a profile with contact details, service area, and specializations. Visit woningsearch.nl/makelaars/ to view all agents in Haarlem. We partner with trusted, certified agents active in the region.
The average WOZ value in Haarlem is based on Kadaster valuations and is set annually by the municipality. The WOZ value determines property taxes (OZB), deemed rental value, and water board levies. On WoningSearch you can view the estimated market value per address, calculated using WOZ valuations from the Kadaster Waardeloket and CBS municipality data. Property prices in Haarlem vary significantly by neighborhood and property type. Use our search to compare specific addresses.
Haarlem is divided into 30 neighborhoods according to the CBS Wijken en Buurten classification. Each neighborhood has its own page on WoningSearch with statistics on demographics, property values, energy labels, safety, and amenities. The neighborhood classification is maintained by Statistics Netherlands and forms the basis for local policy. View the neighborhood pages to compare livability and housing characteristics before making a buying or renting decision.
WoningSearch uses only official government sources for Haarlem. Addresses come from the BAG (Basic Registry of Addresses and Buildings) via PDOK, managed by the Kadaster. Neighborhood statistics come from CBS. Energy labels are from RVO. WOZ values come from the Kadaster Waardeloket. Building heights and roof shapes come from 3D BAG (TU Delft). All data is automatically updated weekly. WoningSearch is completely free, independent, and available in 13 languages.