In Delft, urgent cases receive priority in suitable allocation, such as homeless persons, victims of domestic violence or persons with medical urgency. The municipality of Delft allocates urgency housing via the WoningNet Delft registration system. You must demonstrate your urgent situation with medical certificates, police statements or a report from the Domestic Violence Support Point in Delft.
Housing associations in Delft, including Vestia and Welgelegen, must allocate 80% of their homes suitably, but urgency overrides this. Without urgency, your registration time with WoningNet determines the order. In Delft, the waiting time for social rental housing is often long due to the high student pressure and limited supply in neighbourhoods such as Poptahof and Vrijenban. Objection to a refusal? Submit this within 6 weeks to the municipality of Delft via the Wmo counter. The Suitable Allocation Act regulates this nationally, but Delft applies local priorities for status holders and permit holders. Successful urgency claims usually lead to priority within 3 months. Note: urgency is temporary, generally 2 years, and requires a suitability check on income, household composition and health for the best match in Delft rental housing.