Payrolling

Compliant payrolling and EOR in the Netherlands – without bureaucracy

Octagon supports:

Challenges of expanding to The Netherlands

1. Long-term sick pay liability

Dutch employment law heavily protects workers who fall ill. Employers face extended financial obligations for continued salary payments and strict, mandatory reintegration responsibilities that can severely impact budgets if not managed correctly.

2. Strict dismissal protections and severance

Terminating an employment contract in the Netherlands is rarely unilateral and typically requires formal legal or governmental approval. Employers must also navigate mandatory transition payments (severance), which represent a significant financial risk upon exit.

3. Contractor misclassification crackdown

The Dutch Tax Authority is actively enforcing strict regulations against “bogus self-employment” through the Wet DBA and the upcoming Wet VBAR. Incorrectly classifying a local worker as a freelancer exposes foreign entities to severe retroactive payroll taxes and fines.

4. Complex CAO and pension compliance

Many Dutch industries are governed by mandatory Collective Labour Agreements (CAOs) and strict sector-specific pension fund rules. Applying the wrong CAO or failing to enroll an employee in the correct mandatory pension fund can lead to massive retroactive premium collections.

5. Entity setup and banking bureaucracy

Establishing a local legal entity (BV) involves complex notarial deeds, Chamber of Commerce registrations, and notoriously rigorous banking compliance checks that frequently delay market entry by several months.

6. Mandatory employee representation

As your local team scales, Dutch law mandates the formation of Works Councils or staff representation bodies, giving employees formal legal rights to be consulted on major management decisions.

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Strategic benefits of payrolling and EOR in The Netherlands

✓ Rapid market entry

Setting up a Dutch Besloten Vennootschap (B.V.) is a heavily bureaucratic process that typically takes 8 to 12 weeks and requires notarial deeds, Chamber of Commerce registration, and complex tax filings. An EOR bypasses this completely, allowing you to legally onboard local talent in just 1 to 2 weeks.

Predictable costs vs. high overhead

The initial setup for a Dutch BV costs thousands of euros, while ongoing annual expenses for local HR staff, accounting, and mandatory compliance can easily exceed €70,000. An EOR eliminates these massive overheads, replacing them with a predictable, flat monthly fee per employee.

✓ Total employer liability shield

Dutch employment law is highly protective of workers. For example, employers face a massive financial risk because they are legally mandated to continue paying at least 70% of an employee’s salary for up to 104 weeks (two full years) in the event of illness. The EOR assumes 100% of the legal liability for this sick pay mandate, as well as complex, heavily regulated termination procedures.

✓ Fast-tracked visas and the 30% ruling

Hiring non-EU talent requires a business entity to be an IND “Recognized Sponsor,” a status that takes newly formed companies months to achieve and requires strict financial audits. Established EORs already hold this status, enabling fast-tracked Highly Skilled Migrant visas (often processed within 2 weeks) and expertly administering the highly regulated 30% tax-free ruling for expats.

✓ Elimination of misclassification risk

The Dutch Tax Authority actively investigates bogus self-employment following the end of the Wet DBA enforcement moratorium in 2025, with strict new presumption laws (Wet VBAR) coming in 2026. An EOR converts risky independent contractor agreements into fully compliant, localized payroll contracts, completely shielding your business from retroactive tax penalties and fines.

✓ CAO and pension compliance

The Dutch labor market is strictly governed by complex, industry-specific Collective Labour Agreements (CAOs) and mandatory occupational pension funds (such as StiPP). An EOR completely abstracts this burden, automatically mapping employees to the correct CAO scales, managing required pension enrollments, and calculating mandatory holiday allowances without requiring you to build a specialized local HR team.

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