This paper summarizes reports of raptors attacking people in the dunes between Camperduin and Wijk aan Zee. Attacks on members of the local raptor group when visiting nests were recorded for Hobby Falco subbuteo, Sparrowhawk Accipiter nisus and Goshawk Acccipiter gentilis. In 1986-98, raptorphiles were attacked twice in 18 cases of climbing Hobby nests; these attacks were feints. In 1995-2004, 10 out of 168 pairs of Sparrowhawks attacked visiting raptorphiles, as compared to 1 out of 80 pairs in 2005-14. In the Goshawk, no attacks were recorded in 1995-2004 but in 2005-14 five out of 191 pairs attacked visitors to the nest (it should be noted that the local raptor group started ringing Goshawk chicks from 2004 onwards, hence a higher frequency of climbing nests after 2004). Most attacks came from two aggressive females. Attacks of raptors on the general public were mostly confined to Buzzards, with single cases for Sparrowhawk and Goshawk. Most Buzzard attacks occurred in late June/early July; two out of 15 cases were recorded outside the breeding season, both relating to incidents not unequivocally attributable to aggression. In the breeding season, most attacks were directed to solitary runners. Buzzards attacked from behind and targeted at the head. Most victims were actually hit, but it is thought that feigned attacks were underreported. Between 1995-2004 at least 1% (2 out of 233 breedinng pairs), and between 2005-2014 at least 3% (11 out of 352 pairs) of Buzzard pairs attacked people. Compared to a previous study of raptor attacks throughout The Netherlands (Sevink & Bijlsma 2013), this seems a high proportion of Buzzard pairs attacking people. In Castricum, for example, at least 13% of the Buzzard pairs was recorded to have attacked people in the past decade. It should be noted that the dunes between Camperduin and Wijk aan Zee are among the most frequently visited nature reserves in The Netherlands, i.e. on average 1 million visitors per 1000 hectares per year. This plot also had the highest density of Buzzard pairs in the section of dunes investigated in 2005-2014, i.e. 8 nests per 1000 ha per year.