Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Working from home
Working from home - Credit: SarkisSeysian / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
startup
investment
Mollie
Bunq
MessageBird
fintech
business services
transport sector
healthcare sector
Dutch Startup Association
TechLeap
Janneke Niessen
Lucien Burn
CapitalIT
Monday, 19 July 2021 - 11:00

Share this article:

NL startups raised record 3 billion in six months

In the past six months, Dutch startups raised a total of 3.1 billion euros in investments - a new record and about as much as in all of 2019 and 2020 combined, the Dutch Startup Association and Techleap said based on an analysis of the currently available data. Startups are catching up on the investments missed out on during the pandemic, they said, NOS reports.

The record is the result of a number of very large investments. Transaction processor Mollie received a capital injection of 665 million euros, for example. And customer service platform MessageBird got 678 million euros.

Most of the money went to the FinTech sector, at 1.2 billion euros. Business services came in a close second at 1.1 billion euros, followed by health at 499 million euros and transport at 349 million euros.

The massive investments resulted in the Netherlands now having more "unicorns" - companies worth more than 1 billion euros on paper. These include Mollie and digital bank Bunq. And the second half of 2021 is also looking good for startups, with the investment counter already standing at 700 million euros in total.

Lucien Burn of the Dutch Startup Association called the record amount unique. "It is due to a number of large investment rounds and that is really special for the Netherlands," he said to NOS. He attributed the high amount to the startup landscape maturing and more money from abroad. "The Dutch ecosystem does not have such funds that can make such large investments." That is something that needs attention, he said.

Janneke Niessen of CapitalIT also believes the Dutch startup market is maturing. "These major investments are no coincidence," she said. But she added two caveats. "If you look at the startups that are younger and therefore raise smaller amounts, the picture is less rosy. Diversity among finders also lags behind: it's still a lot of white young men."

More like this

Image
A group of people working around notebooks, laptops and coffee
Investments in Dutch startups fell over economy concerns, military conflicts
Image
Zuidas, the financial and business district in the south of Amsterdam
Amsterdam's goals of being a leading tech city rapidly slipping away: study
Image
Artificial Intelligence
Dutch AI sector behind other EU countries, despite having highest density of AI talent
Image
Bunq
Dutch bank Bunq gains U.S. license to offer American investments
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Amsterdam neighborhood rocked by loud explosion heard in Amsterdam-Oost
  • Most Dutch municipalities back asylum distribution law but resist implementation
  • Dutch government weighs cuts to infrastructure spending amid multibillion-euro shortfall
  • Drag queen attacked again in Amsterdam
  • Four members quit Schiphol advisory council amid internal conflict over representation

Top stories

  • Amsterdam neighborhood rocked by loud explosion heard in Amsterdam-Oost
  • Netherlands records second official heat wave of 2026 on Saturday as Ell hits 30.1°C
  • Police release photos, ask for help identifying man who assaulted two women in Utrecht
  • Hundreds of venues prepare to host fans for Netherlands vs Sweden World Cup match
  • Video: Severe storms kill woman after tree crushes car; Fires sparked nationwide

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

Footer menu

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