Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Man pulling a wooden card painted like the Russian flag out of his suit pocket
Man pulling a wooden card painted like the Russian flag out of his suit pocket - Credit: Gajus-Images / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
Business
Russian-owned companies
Central Bureau for Statistics Netherlands
Statistics Netherlands
Saturday, 6 June 2026 - 16:25

Share this article:

Number of Russian-owned companies in Netherlands drops from 80 to 25 following sanctions

The number of Russian-owned companies in the Netherlands has dropped sharply over the past decade, falling from 80 in 2014 to 25 in 2024, according to data from Statistics Netherlands (CBS). The decline accelerated after Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, when expanded European Union sanctions pushed firms to close, relocate, or restructure ownership.

Employment under Russian corporate control fell over the same period from 1,276 workers in 2014 to 176 in 2024. The broader Dutch economy moved in the opposite direction. The number of foreign multinationals operating in the Netherlands rose by 37 percent during the same period.

The number of Russian-controlled companies fluctuated before the war but trended downward: 80 in 2014, 71 in 2015, 66 in 2016, 76 in 2017, 76 in 2018, 66 in 2019, 58 in 2020, 62 in 2021, 61 in 2022, 44 in 2023, and 25 in 2024 (all 2024 figures are provisional).

The sharpest contraction came after 2022, when sanctions tightened, and companies either ceased operations or moved headquarters outside the Netherlands.

In 2024, Russian-owned firms were distributed across financial institutions (8), wholesale and trade brokerage (5), information technology services (4), holding companies (4), and other activities (4). In 2014, the breakdown was financial institutions (25), wholesale and trade brokerage (13), information technology services (6), holding companies (7), and other activities (29).

Wholesale companies also shifted their trade focus. In 2014 they dealt in a wide range of goods, including fuels, chemicals, and machinery. By 2024, four out of five wholesale firms focused on fuels and chemical products.

Ownership changes after 2021 show the scale of disruption. Of the 62 Russian-controlled companies operating in the Netherlands at the end of 2021, 39 percent were dissolved by 2024. Another 23 percent remained under unchanged Russian ownership. The remaining firms shifted their parent companies to other countries, mainly the Netherlands and Cyprus, ending Russian majority control.

Those 62 companies were ultimately divided into 24 dissolved, 14 still under Russian control, 9 moved to the Netherlands, 5 to Cyprus, 3 to France, and 7 to other countries.

Larger firms were more likely to relocate: 55 percent of companies that moved their parent company abroad employed at least 10 people in the Netherlands.

More like this

Image
Bankruptcy process
Bankruptcies fall 19% in May in the Netherlands
Image
Grocery shopping
Dutch spending twice as much as 50 years ago, pushing GDP to 4th in EU
Image
Container ship moored at the EuroMax shipping terminal in the Port of Rotterdam
Dutch economy grows slightly as job market eases
Image
Gray-tone image of a teenage girl sitting on the floor crying
Rising youth debt in Netherlands linked to greater risk of drug crime, experts warn
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Twelve taken to hospitals after forklift battery triggers haz-mat response
  • Attacks on police: 17 arrested at Morocco World Cup parties in The Hague & Rotterdam
  • Prosecutors push Dutch crypto platform into bankruptcy court to protect investors
  • Immigration to Netherlands falls for third year as skilled and asylum entries decline
  • Video: International media critical of Dutch cautious play after penalty loss to Morocco

Top stories

  • Eurostar cancels many London-Amsterdam trains after Rotterdam rail fire
  • Morocco fans overjoyed in cities after beating Oranje; Fireworks thrown at Hague police
  • Oranje crash out of World Cup after another penalty shootout heartbreak against Morocco
  • Storm damage claims surge after weekend of severe weather across the Netherlands
  • Law changes take effect July 1: Wage, social benefits rise, import parcel fee introduced

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

Footer menu

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