Laura Kleijne
Specialised in:
Government and Aviation
Call Laura at:
+31 (0)10 209 27 49 or +31 (0)6 29 32 73 93
Education
In 2023, Laura obtained her bachelor’s degree in Law from the University of Groningen. In 2025, she completed her master’s degree in Constitutional and Administrative Law at Leiden University.
Lawyer at LVH
Since August 2025.
Function and facts
Laura started as a student intern at LVH Advocaten in early 2025. In August of that same year, she was sworn in by the Rotterdam District Court and has been working as a lawyer at LVH ever since.
Laura graduated with a degree in administrative law and wrote her master’s thesis on the protection of local residents against noise pollution from Schiphol Airport. She also has a special affinity for aviation.
Expertise
Government and Aviation.
Competences
Laura has a wide range of interests, is eager to learn, and enjoys being of service. With a strong sense of justice, she derives satisfaction from advising and assisting clients.
Personal characteristics
Social, empathetic, independent, and proactive
Articles
The letter of intent in a business takeover
A business takeover ultimately involves concluding a purchase agreement. A whole process precedes this. In the preliminary phase, it is possible to conclude a letter of intent. In this article, I will tell you more about this.
New regulation VAT supplements applicable as of January 1, 2025
From January 1, 2025, a new obligation will apply with regard to VAT supplementations: if it is found that too little VAT has been declared and paid, this must be corrected within eight weeks by submitting a VAT supplementation to the Tax Authorities. This significantly tightens the replenishment deadline, or at least there is less room for ambiguity. Failure to comply with the replenishment obligation may result in the imposition of fines. In the case of intent or gross negligence, there may even be a fine of up to 100%.
Breakthrough; corporate tax interest is unreasonably high, here’s what you can do.
On 7 November 2024, the North Netherlands Court ruled that a tax interest rate of 8 per cent on a 2021 assessment is not reasonable. This landmark ruling opens up new opportunities for taxpayers who have faced high corporate tax interest rates. What does this ruling mean specifically for you, and what steps can you take now?