Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Woman working on a laptop
Woman working on a laptop - Credit: IgorTishenko / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
Dutch Tax Authority
self employment
Knab
Kamer van Koophandel
Friday, 6 September 2024 - 12:00

Share this article:

Many Dutch workers fear plan to finally enforce false self-employment law next year

More than a third of self-employed people in the Netherlands are concerned about the tax authority’s plan to begin enforcing a 2016 law to end false self-employment constructions. Online bank Knab surveyed more than 3,000 self-employed people, including some of its own clients, about the Deregulation Assessment of Employment Relations Act, known as the DBA Act.

The Belastingdienst, the country's tax office, will begin checks on January 1 to determine whether self-employed people are not being hired for jobs that should actually be carried out under employment conditions. These checks have not happened for years, but according to the Cabinet, too many false self-employment constructions are being created. Companies are hiring independent contractors for work in such a manner that would be considered an employer-employee relationship under Dutch law if the situation were properly reviewed.

However, according to Knab, many self-employed people said they do not want or need this government intervention. Self-employed people with office jobs and high revenue fear their independent status will be put under pressure.

The number of self-employed people in the Netherlands has increased significantly over the last few years. The Dutch Chamber of Commerce (KvK) reported earlier this year that their number has risen by 85 percent in 10 years. There were around 875,000 self-employed people in the Netherlands in 2014, and there are currently more than 1.6 million.

Knab also warns of a looming brain drain on the Dutch labor market. Many experienced business owners are contemplating early retirement if the law forces them to stop their current work, and young entrepreneurs are looking towards moving to a foreign country. This could result in a lot of knowledge, experience, and talent leaving the already tight Dutch labor market.

Of the self-employed, 13 percent are expected to be designated as falsely self-employed when the Tax Authority starts upholding the law. These percentages are the highest in the government, IT, Media, and Communication sectors.

Self-employed people in these sectors usually work on one assignment for a long time and are dependent on one client for their wages. Just 30 percent would like a salaried job if they have to stop their current self-employed work.

Reporting by ANP

More like this

Image
Construction workers in Rotterdam
Number of freelancers in Netherlands rises despite stricter tax enforcement
Image
DigiD app on a Google Pixel A4, 28 January 2024
Tax Authority probes €6.7M tax fraud scheme involving Bulgarian-linked DigiD accounts
Image
Young man at a doctor's consultation
Netherlands hikes disability premium despite €39 billion surplus, drawing backlash
Image
A bankruptcy administrator sitting at a desk with a big pile of papers
Online home store Fonq declared bankrupt, 100 jobs at risk
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Utrecht dethrones Noord-Holland as province with highest property values; Up 10.3% in NL
  • Dutch courts give harsher punishments to poorer people, study finds
  • Court orders housing developer to pay Amsterdam family €400K over constant water leak
  • Netherlands on track to meet clean air health target by 2030, health institute says
  • Netherlands will only feel impact of SpaceX IPO in long term

Top stories

  • Utrecht dethrones Noord-Holland as province with highest property values; Up 10.3% in NL
  • Dutch courts give harsher punishments to poorer people, study finds
  • Negligence alleged in crash that killed 3 kids, school principal biking in Zeeland
  • Netherlands bans gay conversion therapy after Senate majority backs new law
  • Video: Boy riding fatbike shot in front of Gouda grocery store

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content