Renting a House in Maarssen
Ten minutes by train to Utrecht, twenty-five to Amsterdam, with a Vecht village and a post-war residential area on either side of the canal.
Maarssen has two faces. On one side, Maarssen-Dorp: a historic ribbon along the Vecht, with country estates from the Golden Age, canal houses, and waterside cafes. On the other side, Maarssenbroek: a residential area of 23,600 inhabitants (2025) and over 10,000 homes, built in the 1970s and 1980s to address the housing shortage in Utrecht and Amsterdam. Together, they form a town of approximately 39,000 inhabitants, part of the municipality of Stichtse Vecht. Those considering renting a house in Maarssen effectively choose between these two worlds.
Houses in Maarssen
Maarssen station is located in Maarssenbroek. The train to Utrecht Centraal takes ten minutes. To Amsterdam, twenty-five. The A2 is directly accessible via the N230. This combination makes Maarssen popular with commuters who travel in both directions. The downside: demand is high, and rental properties in the more desirable neighborhoods are quickly gone.
Duivenkamp: Terraced Houses in a Courtyard Layout
Duivenkamp is one of Maarssenbroek's most recognizable neighborhoods. Built between 1975 and 1985. Almost three-quarters of the homes are terraced houses, the remainder are corner houses, and a handful of apartments. 931 homes in total, designed as residential areas with cul-de-sacs and cars parked at the periphery.
Residents consistently describe the neighborhood as one of the most pleasant parts of Maarssenbroek. Homes facing a playground, gardens opening onto a ditch. It might not be groundbreaking architecture, but it works. The homes are spacious enough for families, primary schools are nearby, and the Bisonspoor shopping center is within cycling distance.
€3,230 / month
€2,590 / month
€2,650 / month
€2,480 / month
€2,790 / month
Fazantenkamp: Semi-Detached Houses on the Outskirts
Fazantenkamp differs from the rest of Maarssenbroek. Where terraced houses dominate elsewhere, this neighborhood consists of 62 percent semi-detached homes. Built in the same period, but more spaciously designed, with larger plots and mature greenery. 953 homes, 95 percent of which are owner-occupied.
This latter fact means the rental housing supply here is limited. But when something becomes available in the free sector, they are spacious homes with more land than in Duivenkamp or Bloemstede. For those willing to wait for the right moment, Fazantenkamp is the neighborhood where you get the most house for your money in Maarssen.
Bloemstede: Where Maarssenbroek Began
Bloemstede is the oldest neighborhood in Maarssenbroek. Built between 1965 and 1975, when the first residents moved into the polder. A mix of terraced houses (58%) and apartments (29%). 733 homes. Slightly smaller than in the later neighborhoods, but also more variety in the streetscape.
The location is central: close to Bisonspoor and daily amenities. The homes are older, which can be both a disadvantage (maintenance, insulation) and an advantage (character, mature gardens). Bloemstede is the neighborhood for those looking for an affordable rental home without wanting to live on the edge of the district.
Maarssen-Dorp: Country Estates and Canal Houses on the Vecht
On the other side of the Amsterdam-Rhine Canal lies Maarssen-Dorp. The Herengracht, the Langegracht, the Schippersgracht. Country estates like Goudestein (now the Stichtse Vecht town hall), Vreedenhof, and Doornburgh along the water. The Maarsseveense Plassen border the village.
The rental housing supply here is small and different in character. No terraced houses and residential areas, but canal houses, village homes, and occasionally an upstairs apartment. Turnover is low. Residents who live in the Dorp often stay for a long time. But whoever wants to rent a house in Maarssen here lives in a place that has more in common with Breukelen or Loenen than with Maarssenbroek on the other side.
Haagstede: New Garden Village Next to Bloemstede
Between Bloemstede and Boomstede, Haagstede is being built: 139 homes in a garden village style. Terraced houses, corner houses, and semi-detached homes, supplemented with 48 apartments. Squares, more greenery, more water than in the surrounding neighborhoods. Completion is expected from 2025 onwards.
It is the first significant addition of single-family homes to Maarssenbroek in years. A portion will enter the rental market. For those seeking new construction in an established environment, Haagstede is the project to follow.
Houses Price Breakdown in Maarssen
| Bedrooms | Average | Median | Price Range | Available |
|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | €2,110 | €1,950 | €1,900 - €2,480 | 1 |
4+ | €2,643 | €2,620 | €2,100 - €3,230 | 4 |
Ruimtekwartier: 2,500 Homes on the Planetenbaan
The largest development project in Maarssen is called the Ruimtekwartier, on the former office location at the Planetenbaan. Approximately 2,500 homes over ten years. The first residential towers and student accommodations are already in place. The Kwadrant, with 499 rental homes, is under preparation. The municipality received over five million euros in national subsidies to accelerate construction.
These are predominantly apartments, not single-family homes. But every resident who moves to the Ruimtekwartier leaves a home elsewhere in Maarssenbroek. This flow is more relevant to those looking for a house than the new construction itself.
The Vecht: Golden Age Along the Water
The Vecht was the richest recreational river in the Netherlands during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Amsterdam merchants built their country estates there: Goudestein, Vreedenhof, Doornburgh. This legacy still defines the character of Maarssen-Dorp. It is one of the few places in the Utrecht region where you live by historic water, with a town center that is fully functional rather than just picturesque.
Two Cities within Fifteen Minutes
Maarssen Station offers trains to Utrecht Centraal in ten minutes and Amsterdam in twenty-five. The A2 is directly accessible. This dual orientation makes Maarssen one of the most accessible residential areas in the region. Commuters who work alternately in Utrecht and Amsterdam are strategically located here.
Maarssenbroek: Built for Families, Still in Use
Maarssenbroek was built in the 1970s and 1980s as an overflow district. 23,000 inhabitants, 10,000 homes, neighborhoods like Duivenkamp and Fazantenkamp. It may not win architectural awards, but it does what it was built for: providing families with spacious homes with gardens within cycling distance of two major cities.
Anyone looking for a house in Maarssen first chooses: Village or "Broek"? The answer determines not only the type of property but the entire living experience. Duivenkamp and Fazantenkamp offer family homes with gardens in a quiet environment. Maarssen-Dorp offers character and water but limited supply. Have your documents ready: employer's statement, payslips, copy of ID. Set up a search query. And go for a bike ride on a weekday. Maarssenbroek is better than it sounds, Maarssen-Dorp is more beautiful than you think.
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