Termination
Netherlands
Grounds
Termination is permissible on misconduct, performance, redundancy or other substantial grounds. Dismissal is only possible on the basis of one of the reasons specified in the Dutch Civil Code.
Employees subject to termination laws
All.
Restricted or prohibited terminations
Members of a European Works Council, employees on their first 2 years of sick leave, pregnant employees and employees on military service.
These prohibitions on termination do not apply in the event that:
- An employee consents to the termination in writing
- The termination takes place during the probationary period
- The termination is, by operation of law, due to the expiry of a fixed-term contract
- The termination is a dismissal with immediate effect
- There is a company closure (though the termination of employees who are pregnant or on maternity leave in that event still prohibited/restricted) or
- The termination takes place because the pensionable age has been reached.
Third-party approval for termination/termination documents
Employers do not need any third-party approval for:
- Immediate termination due to an urgent reason
- Termination during a probationary period
- Termination by operation of law due to expiry of a fixed-term contract or
- Mutual consent termination.
In all other situations, employers must either seek approval of the Dutch Employee Insurance Agency (UWV) or request a court to dissolve the employment agreement. Mutual consent terminations are common.
Mass layoff rules
Strict information and consultation rules apply in situations where 20 or more employees in a certain area are to be made redundant within a period of 3 months or less.
Notice
The notice period that must be given by the employee is 1 month. For the employer, notice requirements depend on the duration of the employment:
- Less than 5 years requires 1 months' notice
- Between 5 and 10 years requires 2 months' notice
- Between 10 and 15 years requires 3 months' notice and
- 15 years or more requires 4 months' notice.
Parties can agree on a longer notice period than 1 month for the employee, provided that the notice period for the employer is at least twice as long as the notice period for the employee (ie, 2 months for the employee and 4 months for the employer). The maximum notice period that can be agreed for an employee is 6 months. With the consent of the employee, employers can make a payment in lieu of notice.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
Employers do not have a statutory right to pay in lieu of notice. However, if the employer (validly) terminates the employment agreement without observing a notice period, damages in the amount of a payment in lieu of notice are due (such payment has to compensate for all remuneration elements the employee would be entitled to during the notice period). Employers have no statutory right to impose garden leave on an employee. Garden leave needs to be agreed in writing in order to be valid.
Severance
- 1/3 of 1 month's salary (including holiday allowance and, if any, fixed end-of-year bonus and/or average bonus of the last 3 years and/or commission of the last 12 months) for each calendar year that the employment agreement has lasted, and a pro rata amount for a period where the employment agreement has lasted less or longer than a calendar year.
The maximum transition payment for 2024 amounts to EUR94,000 gross or, where an employee earns over EUR94,000 per annum, a maximum of 1 year's salary.
The statutory transition payment is not due if (i) the employee has engaged in seriously culpable behavior; (ii) the employee terminates the employment agreement, provided that the termination is not a result of seriously culpable behavior by the employer and (iii) in case of a termination due to the employee reaching the statutory retirement age (AOW-leeftijd).
Waivers
Enforceable, but employees must be given time to consider and to seek legal help.