Hidden income after divorce in Rotterdam
Rotterdam is a city where people work hard. With the port, a thriving hospitality sector, and a vast network of self-employed professionals in neighbourhoods like Kralingen, the Oude Noorden, and Delfshaven, there are countless opportunities to generate income — including income that stays off the books. After a divorce, this regularly leads to a distorted picture: the alimony payer who officially earns modestly but supplements income with undeclared cash work, or the recipient who has been living with a new partner for months but fails to report it so payments continue.
Under Article 1:401 of the Dutch Civil Code, alimony can be modified when there is a relevant change of circumstances. However, the burden of proof lies with the party requesting the modification. Suspicions alone are not enough at the Rotterdam District Court — you need concrete, documented facts demonstrating that your ex-partner’s financial situation differs from what is being presented.
Warning signs that point to alimony fraud
Not every discrepancy between lifestyle and reported income indicates fraud, but certain patterns deserve attention:
- Your ex drives an expensive car, takes long-distance holidays, or lives in a home that does not match their declared income
- There are cash payments for work in construction, hospitality, or logistics
- Business activities are registered under a partner’s or family member’s name
- Your ex has moved in with a new partner but denies cohabitation
- Stated costs or debts are artificially inflated to reduce assessed financial capacity
These signs warrant further investigation, but they require a professional approach to gather legally admissible evidence.
How SAJ Recherche investigates alimony fraud
An alimony investigation combines multiple research methods to uncover the true financial situation of your ex-partner:
- Surveillance of daily activities, work patterns, and lifestyle
- OSINT research into business interests, real estate, and vehicles through public registers
- Analysis of social media profiles for indications of income or cohabitation
- Asset investigation through the Land Registry, Trade Register, and public bankruptcy registers
- Establishing a cohabitation situation based on factual observations
All activities take place within the framework of the Wpbr and the GDPR (AVG). SAJ Recherche holds a POB licence and delivers a factual report that can be submitted directly to your solicitor or the Rotterdam District Court.
Practical example
A man in Rotterdam-West was paying substantial monthly spousal alimony. His ex-partner told the court she had no income. Through social media analysis and surveillance, SAJ Recherche established that she had been cohabiting with a new partner in Blijdorp for five months. The report was submitted in a modification procedure, after which the court terminated the spousal alimony under Article 1:160 of the Dutch Civil Code.
Financial fairness starts with facts
Alimony is intended as a fair arrangement after divorce. When one party misrepresents reality, it affects not only your finances but also your sense of justice. The longer the situation continues, the harder it becomes to reclaim overpaid amounts.
Do you suspect your ex-partner is hiding income or cohabitation? Get in touch with SAJ Recherche for a confidential consultation.
SAJ Recherche Editorial
The SAJ Recherche editorial team writes about investigation, fraud, evidence law and security. POB licence 8779.
Cite this article
APA
SAJ Recherche (2024). Alimony Fraud in Rotterdam — Are You Paying Too Much?. sajrecherche.com. https://sajrecherche.com/en/blog/alimentatiefraude-rotterdam HTML
<a href="https://sajrecherche.com/en/blog/alimentatiefraude-rotterdam">Alimony Fraud in Rotterdam — Are You Paying Too Much?</a> — SAJ Recherche