Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Supreme Court of the Netherlands in The Hague.
Supreme Court of the Netherlands in The Hague. - Credit: Bas Kijzers / Rijksvastgoedbedrijf / Wikimedia - License: All Rights Reserved
Business
Dutch Supreme Court
temporary worker
flexible working hours
European directive
European Union
Friday, 21 November 2025 - 15:20

Share this article:

Supreme Court: need for flexible staff not enough to justify 13 years as temp worker

In a case brought by a temporary worker seeking a permanent contract, the Supreme Court has ruled that employing someone on a temporary basis for 13 years in a row is too long. The worker had repeatedly asked for a permanent contract, which the employer denied. According to the court, a company’s claim that it needs a “flexible staff pool” is not a valid reason to keep someone in a temporary position for so long.

The temporary worker had worked for the same company as a production employee for nearly 13 consecutive years until 2022. “Such a long-term placement can constitute abuse of the temporary contract,” the Supreme Court stated. The company refused to offer the employee a permanent contract, claiming it needed flexible staff.

The Supreme Court overturned the earlier decisions of the district court and the court of appeal, both of which had ruled in the company’s favor. The case has now been sent to a different court of appeal for a new assessment.

The Supreme Court notes that, under European directives and case law, EU countries must guarantee that temporary employment remains truly temporary. This applies whether the role is a single ongoing assignment or a sequence of consecutive assignments.

A temporary contract is deemed misused if a worker is employed for longer than what can reasonably be considered temporary and no sufficient justification is provided.

According to the Supreme Court, the company’s need for a flexible staff pool “does not constitute a sufficient justification.” The court adds that if the court of appeal intended to argue that there was a valid objective reason for the worker’s prolonged temporary employment in these specific circumstances, it failed to provide adequate reasoning for that conclusion.

Reporting by ANP

More like this

Image
Shopping cart symbol on the keyboard
Supreme Court rules that the online order button is not clear enough
Image
Exterior of Schiphol Airport in August 2022
Number of flights at Schiphol should not be reduced without EU approval
Image
Shein online shop app on a smartphone screen
Dutch gov't scraps plans for own tax on packages from China; Awaiting EU import tax
Image
European union flag in front of building
Dutch-led proposal urges phased EU benefits and longer transitions for new members
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Truck drivers face constant parking shortages as deficit reaches 4,400 spaces
  • Netherlands advised to stop criminal prosecution for school truancy
  • More teens, parents turn to hotlines over organized crime, bullying, depression
  • Teen sentenced to two years in juvenile detention for fatal Amsterdam-Zuidoost shooting
  • Strikes threaten Father’s Day shopping as Gall & Gall, Etos, Kruidvat face walkouts

Top stories

  • 15-year-old girl suspected of murdering parents in Groningen remains in custody
  • 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

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

Footer menu

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