Dutch football league system
The Dutch football league system consists of two fully professional leagues and eight levels of amateur football leagues. The three highest amateur leagues, the Tweede, Derde and Vierde Divisie play in nationwide leagues and the five levels below are regional leagues.
Promotion and relegation
All the leagues are connected by a promotion and relegation system, but in order to be promoted to the Eerste Divisie a club has to submit a solid business plan to be approved by the Royal Dutch Football Association, as well as meet certain stadium demands, and some other demands that the association stated for all the teams in the top two leagues.Before 2010 there was no promotion and relegation between the highest amateur level and the professional leagues. In the 2010–11 season the Topklasse was introduced as an intermediate level between the professional and amateur leagues. Promotion was optional, so it was possible that the IJsselmeervogels who won the 2010–11 Topklasse, was not promoted because they did not want to be bound to the demands for playing in the Eerste Divisie.
In 2016 the Tweede Divisie was introduced between the Topklasse and Eerste Divisie to further work on stimulating promotion and relegation between the amateur and professional leagues. However, due to resistance from the amateur clubs to meet the demands for the professional leagues and worries from the professional clubs to face bankruptcy after relegation, mandatory promotion and relegation was suspended for five to 10 years in June 2022.
Men
Professional leagues
- 18 teams in the Eredivisie
- 20 teams in the Eerste Divisie. The champion and runner-up of the Eerste Divisie is promoted directly to the Eredivisie, and the two worst teams in the Eredivisie are relegated to the Eerste Divisie. The team finishing 16th in the Eredivisie competes in promotion and relegation play-offs with 6 teams from the Eerste Divisie, in which the team from the Eredivisie play up to two rounds, and the other six teams play up to three rounds.
Amateur leagues
The highest league is called Tweede Divisie. Until 1971, when the division was discontinued, it was comparable to the former Topklasse. The Tweede Divisie was reintroduced in 2016, decrementing the Topklasse and lower leagues by a level in the pyramid.- The second highest is the Derde Divisie, formerly Topklasse. Since the 2017–18 season, 36 teams compete in the Derde Divisie., divided into two leagues, each containing 18 teams. After the season the A and B champions compete for the overall championship. The Derde Divisie champion promotes to the Tweede Divisie ; if they refuse promotion or don't meet necessary criteria, the runners-up will replace them. If also the runners-up refuse promotion or don't meet necessary criteria, no team is relegated from the Tweede Divisie.
- The third league is called Vierde Divisie, formerly Hoofdklasse, which is then followed by six numbered amateur leagues. It is divided into four divisions each, with 16 clubs in each division.
- The next league is called Eerste Klasse, with ten league divisions, with 14 clubs each.
- Tweede Klasse, with 11 Saturday league divisions and nine Sunday league divisions, with 14 clubs each.
- The next level, Derde Klasse, is additionally divided into regional groups. The Saturday and Sunday leagues are divided into five regional groups each with four divisions in every Saturday league. Sunday is divided into three or four divisions each. Each division has between 11 and 14 clubs.
- In the Vierde Klasse, the number of divisions varies from four to nine. Again, each division contains between 11 and 14 clubs. This is the lowest amateur league in the South 1 region.
- The lowest amateur league overall, in all regions except for the South 1 region, is the Vijfde Klasse. The Saturday league has four regional groups and the Sunday league is divided into five regions. The number of divisions varies from four to seven, with each division having between 11 and 14 clubs.
- Until 2015, Zesde Klasse had no regional groupings for the Saturday league, but four for the Sunday league. The number of divisions was between three and seven, with 10 to 14 clubs participating in each division.
- Until 2010, Zevende Klasse only existed in Sunday football in the North region. There was a total of three divisions, with 10 to 14 clubs participating in each division.
- Until 2001, Achtste Klasse only existed in Sunday football in the West 1 region. There was only one division.