"A small team including defence ministry employees will return to Kharkiv in Ukraine at the end of next week," the Dutch security and justice ministry said in a statement.
Most of those on board the Boeing 777 when it was shot down over eastern Ukraine on July 17 were Dutch, and just three of the dead have yet to be identified by forensics experts in the Netherlands.
Kiev and the West have claimed that the airliner was shot down in the conflict-torn area by separatist fighters using a BUK surface-to-air missile supplied by Russia. Moscow denies the charges, pointing the finger at Kiev.
Dutch experts last year repatriated parts of the plane to be reconstructed as part of a probe into what caused the crash.
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When snow and frost abate and the security situation permits, experts will again return to the site to search for more "possible" human remains, the ministry said.
The team will also head back to the Netherlands "because winter has made work impossible," ministry spokesman Jean Fransman told AFP.