Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
An UWV office complex in Breda. November 2015
An UWV office complex in Breda. November 2015 - Credit: G.Lanting / Wikimedia Commons - License: CC-BY-SA
Business
ING
ABN Amro
ASN Bank
layoffs
Wednesday, 18 February 2026 - 15:20

Share this article:

Dutch companies accelerate layoffs: Thousands of jobs at risk

Companies across the Netherlands are stepping up layoffs as rising costs, economic uncertainty, falling revenues, and more use of AI push firms to reduce staff. Employers warn that job cuts are expected to continue for months.

A spokesperson for the employers’ association AWVN told NU.nl, “We’re in the middle of a round of reorganization that began two years ago. We hear the concerns from our members and are not optimistic. It is far from over.”

The cuts span multiple sectors, including industry, chemicals, finance, business services, and education. Benefits agency UWV received 355 notifications of company reorganizations last year, the highest number in a decade.

Heineken plans to eliminate 5,000 to 6,000 positions over the next two years as part of its cost-cutting measures. The company has not yet specified which roles will be affected. “That will become clear in the coming months or years,” a spokesperson said.

Other major employers, including ING, ABN AMRO, ASN Bank, and chip manufacturer ASML, are also reorganizing, with thousands of employees expected to lose their jobs.

Olaf van Vliet, an economics professor at Leiden University, said that reducing costs remains the primary reason for the workforce cuts. “Companies reorganize for several reasons. Rising wages are only part of it. After the COVID-19 pandemic, the labor market was very tight, so companies delayed restructuring. Reorganizations can also involve changing processes or management structures,” he told NU.nl.

Van Vliet added that AI is not the main driver of the layoffs. “In the recent announcements, other factors are at play. At ASML, it concerns changes in management layers, while at Heineken, declining beer sales are a factor. Employees are not being replaced by AI.”

Labour market economist Ronald Dekker of TNO said that publicly traded companies often reorganize to meet shareholder expectations. “It starts with profit, returns, and dividend requirements. Economic uncertainty plays little role. If companies face higher costs or adopt AI, it can serve to show shareholders that the same work can be done with fewer staff,” he said.

More like this

Image
ING Bank
ING joins other banks in tightening interest-only mortgage rules in Netherlands
Image
mortgage application form
Concerns over stricter rules for interst-only mortgages
Image
Dutch flag on a euro coin with banknotes in the background
Bank accounts now much more expensive than five years ago
Image
mortgage application form
Mortgages more expensive as 15 Dutch lenders hike interest rates this week
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • 73% of Dutch entrepreneurs dissatisfied with Jetten Cabinet's first three months
  • Meerstad girl shared footage of murdered parents with schoolmates; Town in shock
  • Katwijk municipal council gives provisional green light for Eli Lilly pharma factory
  • Dutch suicide rate lowest level since 2010; More young women, girls taking their lives
  • Storm warning joins heat warning: Temps up to 35°C, with hail, gusts, & downpours

Top stories

  • Storm warning joins heat warning: Temps up to 35°C, with hail, gusts, & downpours
  • No NS trains for 4 hours on Wednesday as workers strike against social benefits cuts
  • Dutch police failed to investigate over 10,000 serious crimes in 2024: Court of Audit
  • Pinkpop expects extreme heat at festival; Race events adjust plans amid marathon deaths
  • Teen daughter reportedly in custody after married couple found killed in Groningen home

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

Footer menu

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