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MPMigrationProvisionThe Hague · Administrative Justice
Statute · Awb 4:14

An extension is allowed but only under four conditions.

Article 4:14 of the Algemene wet bestuursrecht is the statute that lets the authority extend the term in Awb 4:13. It is the only way the IND, an embassy or a municipality can legally postpone the decision date without breaching the term. The article is short but precise: the extension must be in writing, sent before the original term expires, name a specific further date, and give a reason. Letters that miss any of the four conditions do not move the clock.

Awb 4:14 · the four conditions for a valid extension

What Awb 4:14 actually says

The article reads: "Indien een beschikking niet binnen de bij wettelijk voorschrift bepaalde termijn kan worden gegeven, deelt het bestuursorgaan dit aan de aanvrager mede en noemt het daarbij een redelijke termijn waarbinnen de beschikking wel tegemoet kan worden gezien." In English: where a decision cannot be given within the statutory term, the authority shall notify the applicant and name a reasonable further term within which the decision can be expected.

Four words do the heavy lifting: in writing, before, reasonable further term, with a reason. Miss one and the extension is invalid.

The four validity conditions

ConditionWhat it requiresCommon failure
In writingA letter addressed to the applicant, on letterhead or in Mijn IND.Phone call or generic email without case-reference.
Before the original term expiresPostmark or send-date before the Awb 4:13 deadline.Letter dated one day after the term has passed.
Naming a specific further dateA concrete date ("by 15 August 2026"), not a vague phrase."Within a few months" or "as soon as possible".
With a reasonA short explanation of why more time is needed.Boilerplate "administrative reasons" or no reason at all.

What is not an extension

The article on what an extension letter does walks through real-world examples of each failure mode.

What an extension does to the clock

A valid extension sets a new further date. The clock does not restart from zero. It runs against the new committed date. If the authority does not decide by that new date, the same Notice of Default route is open. The daily penalty (dwangsom) calculation begins from the new date's expiry plus 14 days, not from the original term.

Multiple extensions

Awb 4:14 does not explicitly cap the number of extensions, but case-law of the Centrale Raad van Court appeal (Beroep) and the Afdeling bestuursrechtspraak van de Council of State (Raad van State) has held that repeated extensions of significant length can themselves become unreasonable under Awb 4:13. In practice: one or two extensions are common; a third extension on the same file is rarely accepted as reasonable in court.

What the applicant can do

  1. 1
    Read the letter against the four conditions
    Mark which conditions it meets. If any one is missing, the letter is not a valid Awb 4:14 extension.
  2. 2
    If invalid, calculate the elapsed term against the original date
    Treat the letter as if it had not been sent. Apply Awb 4:13 to the original term.
  3. 3
    Serve the Notice of Default
    If the original term has passed and there is no valid extension, the Notice opens the 14-day window. The daily penalty and court route follow as normal.
  4. 4
    If valid but late on the new date
    Wait for the new date. If the authority does not decide by then, the Notice goes out then. The procedural stairway is identical.

Where MigrationProvision sits

Every Notice of Default we draft includes a one-paragraph audit of any extension letter the applicant has received. If the letter is procedurally defective, we quote the Awb 4:14 condition it fails. The IND's internal review-team is usually fast to acknowledge a defective extension and to decide on the merits, because the alternative is a court appeal that the authority will lose on the procedural point.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

What is Awb 4:14 in one sentence?
It is the article that lets a Dutch authority extend the statutory decision term, but only by sending the applicant a written letter, before the original term expires, with a specific further date and a reason.
Does an Awb 4:14 extension restart the clock?
No. It sets a new further date. The clock runs against the new date, not from zero. If the authority misses the new date, the same Notice of Default route is open.
Is a phone call a valid extension?
No. Awb 4:14 requires writing. A phone call or a verbal commitment by a caseworker does not extend the term.
Is "uw aanvraag is in behandeling" a valid extension?
No. That is a status update. A valid extension names a specific further date and gives a reason; a status update does neither.
How many times can the authority extend?
The statute does not name a cap, but case-law has held that repeated extensions of significant length can themselves become unreasonable. One or two extensions are common; a third on the same file is rarely upheld.
What if the extension letter is dated after the original term has passed?
It is invalid. Awb 4:14 requires the letter to be sent before the original term expires. A retroactive extension does not move the clock.
What if the letter names "a few weeks" instead of a specific date?
Vague timing fails the condition. A valid extension names a concrete date the applicant can mark on a calendar.
Can the authority extend the new further date?
Awb 4:14 allows further extensions in principle, subject to the same four conditions and to the reasonableness test in Awb 4:13. A further extension that is just "more of the same" is often successfully challenged.
How do I know if an extension is valid?
Read the letter against the four conditions: in writing, before the original term, specific further date, with a reason. If all four are met, it is valid.
Where can I read the original text?
Awb art. 4:14 is at wetten.overheid.nl. The text is two paragraphs.
Related reading
what an extension letter doesawb 4 13 explainedawb 4 17 daily penalty explainedNotice of Default (ingebrekestelling) immigration

Got an extension letter and not sure if it counts?

We audit it against the four Awb 4:14 conditions. €8.75 for the file. If the letter fails, the Notice goes out the same day.

Open a file · €8.75