Do I need an adapter from Australia to Netherlands?

Last reviewed · sourced from IEC TC 23 and national electricity standards

Your answer: Australia → Netherlands

Plug adapter
Adapter required

Netherlands uses Type C, F; your Australia plug (Type I) doesn't fit. Pack a Type C/F adapter — or a universal one if you travel often.

Voltage converter
Not needed

Both countries run on 230V at 50Hz. Your devices work as-is.

Australia uses
Type I
230V · 50Hz
Netherlands uses
Type C
Type F
230V · 50Hz

What this means for your trip

Going from Australia to Netherlands you'll need a plug adapter, but voltage is identical on both sides, so that's one less thing to worry about.

Netherlands uses Type C/F outlets; Australia uses Type I. The shapes are incompatible, so every plug you bring needs a Type C/F adapter to reach the socket. The cheapest option is a simple shape-only adapter for that one country; if you travel often, a universal adapter (fits every country) pays for itself in a single trip.

Voltage is the same on both ends (230V vs 230V, 50Hz vs 50Hz), so every charger that works at home works in Netherlands without modification. No voltage converter, no hunting for "100-240V" on the brick.

Frequently asked

Do I need a travel adapter for Netherlands from Australia?
Yes. Netherlands uses Type C/F outlets, which don't accept Australia's Type I plugs. Pack a Type C/F adapter — or a universal one if you travel often.
What type of plug does Netherlands use?
Netherlands uses Type C and Type F outlets at 230V, 50Hz. Two round pins. Widespread across Europe, South America, and parts of Asia.
What's the voltage in Netherlands?
Netherlands runs on 230V at 50Hz. That's on the high-voltage standard, matching than Australia's 230V supply. Most modern phones, laptops, tablets, and camera chargers are dual-voltage (check for "100-240V" on the brick) and work on either. Single-voltage devices like hair dryers, curling irons, and travel kettles will not — bring a dual-voltage travel version or a voltage converter.
Are Australia chargers dual-voltage?
Most — but not all. Check the charger brick for a line that reads something like "INPUT: 100-240V, 50/60Hz." If you see that, the charger works on either voltage standard and you only need a plug adapter. If it lists just "120V" (or just "230V"), it's single-voltage and can't be plugged straight into the other side without a voltage converter.

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Gear we'd pack for this trip

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