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How to Update Commercial Contracts in the Netherlands After the 2026 Law Changes, a Practical Checklist for Smes

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

The 2026 statutory package has landed, and Dutch SMEs that have not yet started to update commercial contracts in the Netherlands face mounting legal exposure on multiple fronts. Renewed enforcement against false self-employment, strengthened creator remuneration rights under the Copyright Contracts Act, tighter substantiation requirements for sustainability claims, and the courts’ evolving stance on changed circumstances under Article 6:258 of the Dutch Civil Code (BW) all converge on the same practical problem: clauses drafted even two years ago may no longer protect you. This guide delivers the clause-by-clause implementation checklist that SME owners, managing directors, and in-house counsel need, organised into a 30/60/90-day action plan with model wording, negotiation pointers, and litigation-risk flags.

Your 30/60/90-Day Executive Checklist

Before diving into the legislative detail, use the priority matrix below to sequence your contract review. Industry observers expect that enforcement activity will accelerate through the second half of 2026, making the first 30 days critical.

Within 30 days, high risk, act now:

  • Freelancer/ZZP agreements. Audit every contractor relationship for false self-employment red flags. Re-word or terminate non-compliant arrangements.
  • IP and creator contracts. Add remuneration transparency, reporting, and audit-right clauses required by the Copyright Contracts Act Netherlands amendments.
  • ESG warranty language. Remove or substantiate every green or sustainability claim in customer-facing terms of sale and marketing annexes.

Within 60 days, moderate risk, schedule review:

  • Supplier agreements. Update price-variation mechanisms, force-majeure triggers, and renegotiation clauses to reflect current guidance on changed circumstances.
  • Distribution and reseller contracts. Align territorial restrictions, termination provisions, and compliance representations with 2026 competition and sustainability expectations.

Within 90 days, housekeeping and governance:

  • NDAs and data-processing agreements. Reconcile IP assignment language with expanded creator moral-rights protections.
  • General terms and conditions (AV). Publish updated AV and serve formal notice to counterparties before the next renewal window.
  • Internal governance. Establish an annual contract-review cadence, at minimum once per year, plus a triggered review whenever new legislation, sector guidance, or a material change in circumstances arises.

What Changed in 2026, A Quick Legislative Map

Four legislative and enforcement developments converge to make 2026 contract changes in the Netherlands uniquely urgent. Each reform maps directly to specific clauses in standard commercial contracts Netherlands businesses use daily. The table below summarises the reforms, their effective dates, and the immediate contractual consequences.

Law / Rule Effective From Immediate Contractual Effect, What to Update
Copyright Contracts Act amendments (Wet auteurscontractenrecht) 2026 amendments package Add payment-transparency provisions, remuneration-review clauses, reporting obligations, and audit rights for creators in every IP licence and assignment agreement
False self-employment enforcement, Belastingdienst / Ministry of Social Affairs renewed guidance 2026 enforcement package (lifted moratorium) Re-word contractor vs employee clauses; insert behavioural-independence tests, substitute-right provisions, and indemnities; remove exclusivity and supervision language
Sustainability-claims enforcement (ACM guidelines on sustainability claims aligned with EU Green Claims Directive signals) 2026 / ongoing Substantiate every green claim with measurable metrics; add conditional ESG warranties with audit, cure, and cap mechanisms; remove vague environmental representations
Article 6:258 BW, courts’ evolving approach to changed circumstances (hardship) Ongoing (judicial development) Include robust hardship and renegotiation-trigger clauses in long-term supplier and distribution contracts; define thresholds for price escalation and force-majeure extensions

Employment reform, the end of the enforcement moratorium

The Belastingdienst’s long-standing restraint on penalising false self-employment has been lifted under the 2026 enforcement package. The practical effect is that tax inspectors can now reclassify contractor relationships retroactively, imposing back-taxes, social-security contributions, and penalties. Businesses that still operate freelance contracts in the Netherlands under pre-2020 templates face the highest exposure.

Copyright Contracts Act, stronger creator protections

The Copyright Contracts Act Netherlands amendments strengthen the position of individual creators vis-à-vis commissioning parties. Creators now have an explicit right to periodic remuneration reporting, a mechanism to request additional fair remuneration where exploitation significantly exceeds initial expectations, and the ability to terminate a licence or assignment that remains unexploited. Any IP-heavy commercial contract drafted before 2026 almost certainly lacks these mandatory provisions.

ESG and sustainability, from soft guidance to hard enforcement

The Autoriteit Consument & Markt (ACM) has moved from issuing voluntary guidelines to active enforcement of misleading sustainability claims. Businesses making green representations in their terms of sale, product warranties, or supply-chain documentation must now substantiate every claim with verifiable data. Industry observers expect the ACM’s enforcement posture to intensify as the EU Green Claims Directive matures.

Which Clauses to Update Commercial Contracts in the Netherlands, Checklist by Contract Type

The reforms do not affect every clause equally. Below is a structured checklist, broken out by the most common commercial contracts Netherlands SMEs maintain, identifying the specific provisions that require review or redrafting.

Supplier agreements, price, force majeure, and renegotiation

Supplier agreements bear the brunt of inflationary and regulatory pressure. When you update supplier agreements in the Netherlands, focus on these clauses:

  • Price-variation mechanism. Replace fixed-price terms with an indexed escalation clause linked to a published benchmark (e.g., CBS consumer price index). Include a floor-and-cap band and a renegotiation trigger if the index moves beyond an agreed threshold. Guidance from CMS Legal on price increases in commercial contracts confirms that Dutch courts will scrutinise one-sided price-escalation rights and may refuse to enforce unreasonable increases.
  • Force majeure. Expand the definition to cover regulatory changes, supply-chain disruptions, and pandemic-related events. Specify notice periods, mitigation obligations, and a termination right if force majeure persists beyond a defined period.
  • Delivery SLAs. Tighten delivery obligations with measurable KPIs and remedy ladders (notice → cure period → liquidated damages → termination). This protects SMEs relying on just-in-time supply.
  • Hardship / changed circumstances. Insert an explicit renegotiation clause referencing Article 6:258 BW. Define what constitutes a material change, for example, a cost increase exceeding 15%, and set a mandatory good-faith negotiation period before either party may seek judicial modification.
  • Sustainability representations. If the supplier makes environmental claims about products or processes, require documentary substantiation and an audit right (see ESG section below).

Customer contracts and terms of sale, warranties, liability, ESG

Customer-facing terms are where ESG claims clauses in the Netherlands create the most immediate regulatory risk. Key clauses to update include:

  • Product warranties. Remove or conditionally qualify any broad sustainability or “green” warranty. Replace with a limited warranty tied to specific, verifiable metrics and supported by third-party certification where available.
  • Limitation of liability. Ensure that any liability cap explicitly addresses claims arising from regulatory enforcement actions (e.g., ACM fines for misleading sustainability claims). Consider whether indemnities for greenwashing exposure should be mutual or one-directional.
  • Governing law and dispute resolution. Confirm governing-law and jurisdiction clauses. For high-value contracts, consider the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC), which permits proceedings in English and applies Dutch substantive law.
  • General terms and conditions (AV). Under Dutch law, AV must be properly communicated to the counterparty before or at the time of contract formation. Where you amend AV, serve a fresh notice and obtain written acknowledgement of receipt. Business.gov.nl emphasises that failing to communicate updated terms effectively can render new clauses unenforceable.

IP, creator, and licence agreements

These contracts are most directly affected by the Copyright Contracts Act amendments. At a minimum, update the following:

  • Remuneration and reporting. Add a clause requiring the commissioning party to report periodically on the scope of exploitation and revenues derived from the creator’s work.
  • Additional remuneration right. Include a mechanism for the creator to request a fair adjustment if the commercial value of the exploitation significantly exceeds the original fee.
  • Reversion / non-use right. Grant the creator a right to reclaim rights if the licensee or assignee does not exploit the work within an agreed period.
  • Moral rights. Confirm that moral rights are acknowledged and cannot be waived by contract (as required under Dutch copyright law).

NDAs and confidentiality agreements

Where NDAs contain IP-assignment or work-product provisions, reconcile those clauses with the new creator-protection rules. Ensure that any assignment of work product generated by a freelance creator is supported by fair remuneration and includes the transparency obligations described above.

Freelancers, ZZP, and the False Self-Employment Enforcement Risk

The lifted enforcement moratorium makes the contractor vs employee distinction in the Netherlands the single highest-risk compliance issue for SMEs engaging freelancers. Reclassification can result in retroactive tax assessments, employer social-security contributions, and administrative penalties.

Red flags that attract enforcement

The Belastingdienst and courts look at the actual working relationship, not merely the contract wording. The following operational indicators raise the probability of reclassification:

  • Exclusivity. The freelancer works predominantly or exclusively for one client.
  • Supervision and instruction. The client dictates how, when, and where work is performed, rather than specifying the deliverable.
  • Integration. The freelancer uses company email addresses, attends internal meetings as a team member, and appears indistinguishable from employees to third parties.
  • Tools and equipment. The client provides laptops, software licences, or other essential work tools.
  • No substitute right. The freelancer may not delegate the work to a qualified replacement without client approval.
  • Invoicing patterns. Fixed monthly amounts resembling a salary rather than project-based billing.

Remediation checklist for existing ZZP agreements

Updating freelance contracts in the Netherlands requires both documentary and operational changes. A paper redraft alone is insufficient if the working relationship remains unchanged.

  1. Audit current arrangements. Map every freelancer relationship against the red-flag indicators above. Score each on a traffic-light basis (red / amber / green).
  2. Operational changes first. Where red flags exist, change the operational reality: remove exclusivity requirements, allow substitution, stop providing company equipment, and shift from time-based to deliverable-based scoping.
  3. Redraft the contract. Insert an explicit substitute-right clause, remove supervisory language, confirm the freelancer’s entrepreneurial independence, and include an indemnity for tax and social-security exposure if reclassification occurs.
  4. Transition plan. For relationships that cannot be remediated, prepare a conversion-to-employment roadmap: calculate back-dated entitlements, draft an employment offer, and agree transitional terms.
  5. Ongoing monitoring. Schedule six-monthly reviews of freelancer relationships against the enforcement criteria.

Model safe-harbour clause, substitute right

“The Contractor shall be entitled, at its own cost and without the prior consent of the Client, to engage a suitably qualified substitute to perform the Services, provided that the Contractor remains fully responsible for the quality and timeliness of the deliverables. The Contractor shall notify the Client of any substitution within [5] business days.”

This clause alone does not guarantee safe-harbour status, but its absence is a near-certain reclassification trigger. It must be supported by operational reality, the substitute right must be genuinely exercisable.

Copyright Contracts Act, What to Change in Creator and Licence Clauses

The Copyright Contracts Act Netherlands amendments directly affect any agreement under which an SME commissions creative work, from software development and graphic design to marketing copy and photography. The reforms tilt the balance toward creators by imposing transparency and fair-remuneration obligations that cannot be contracted away.

Key requirements under the 2026 amendments

  • Remuneration transparency. The commissioning party must provide the creator with regular, comprehensible information about the extent to which the work is exploited and the revenues it generates.
  • Right to additional remuneration. Where the agreed fee proves disproportionately low relative to the commercial success of the exploitation, the creator may claim a fair additional payment. This right is mandatory and cannot be waived.
  • Non-use reversion. A creator may terminate the licence or reclaim assigned rights if the commissioning party fails to exploit the work within a reasonable timeframe.

Drafting guidance, assignment versus licence

From a risk-management perspective, an exclusive licence is often preferable to a full assignment for SMEs. A licence preserves the creator’s residual ownership while granting the SME the exploitation rights it needs, and it reduces the scope of the additional-remuneration exposure. Where a full assignment is commercially necessary, pair it with a transparent reporting obligation and a pre-agreed escalation mechanism.

Sample clause, creator remuneration and audit right

“The Commissioning Party shall, no later than [31 March] of each calendar year, provide the Creator with a written statement setting out: (a) the forms of exploitation of the Work during the preceding calendar year; (b) the gross revenues attributable to such exploitation; and (c) the remuneration paid or payable to the Creator. The Creator shall have the right, at its own expense, to appoint an independent auditor to verify the accuracy of any such statement, upon reasonable notice and during normal business hours.”

This model wording satisfies the transparency obligation and provides an enforceable audit mechanism. Adjust the reporting frequency and scope to match the commercial relationship.

ESG Claims and Sustainability Warranties, Drafting and Substantiation

Misleading sustainability claims are no longer merely a reputational risk, they are an enforcement priority. The ACM has signalled that businesses making environmental representations in commercial contracts, product packaging, or marketing materials must be able to substantiate those claims with verifiable evidence. The table below summarises the recommended substantiation framework for common warranty types.

Warranty Type Recommended Substantiation Evidence Period
Carbon-neutral product Third-party certified lifecycle assessment (LCA); verified offset certificates Annual recertification
Recycled-content claim Supply-chain audit trail; material composition certificates from supplier Per batch / per shipment
Sustainably sourced raw materials Recognised certification scheme (e.g., FSC, MSC); supplier self-declaration with audit right Certification validity period
Energy-efficient operations Published energy-performance data; ISO 50001 or equivalent certification Annual reporting

Drafting ESG claims clauses in the Netherlands, practical approach

Rather than making absolute environmental representations, use conditional warranties with a built-in remedy ladder:

  1. Conditional warranty. “The Supplier warrants that the Products meet the sustainability specifications set out in Annex [X], subject to the substantiation evidence described therein.”
  2. Materiality carve-out. Limit the warranty to claims that are material to the buyer’s purchasing decision and commercially reasonable to verify.
  3. Remedy ladder. Notice of breach → 30-day cure period → replacement or remediation → capped indemnity for third-party claims (including ACM enforcement costs).
  4. Audit right. Grant the buyer (and, where applicable, the buyer’s customers) a right to audit the supplier’s substantiation evidence upon reasonable notice.

This structure limits exposure for both parties while ensuring regulatory compliance. Vague language such as “eco-friendly” or “sustainable” without supporting specifications should be removed from all commercial contracts immediately.

Practical Amendment Process, Negotiation, Unilateral Changes, and Litigation Risk

Knowing what to change is only half the challenge. The how, the mechanics of amending an existing contract under Dutch law, carries its own legal traps.

Steps to amend a commercial contract

  1. Internal review. Identify every affected contract. Assign an owner (legal, commercial, or operations lead) for each counterparty relationship.
  2. Stakeholder mapping. Determine which contracts require bilateral negotiation and which can be updated via amended general terms and conditions.
  3. Draft the amendment. Prepare an addendum or side letter referencing the original agreement by date and parties, specifying the clauses amended, and including a mutual-signature block. Under Dutch law, contract amendments generally require mutual consent.
  4. Notification and execution. Serve the proposed amendment in writing. For AV amendments, ensure the counterparty receives the updated terms and expressly acknowledges them before the amendment takes effect.
  5. Document and archive. Store the executed amendment alongside the original agreement. Update any internal contract-management system.

Negotiation and unilateral changes, legal boundaries

Dutch law does not permit unilateral contract modification unless the original agreement contains an explicit amendment clause authorising it, or unless the change falls within a narrow exception (e.g., employer’s reasonable instruction right in employment contracts). Where a counterparty refuses to agree to necessary updates, escalate through good-faith negotiation. If the changed-circumstances doctrine under Article 6:258 BW applies, the court may modify or dissolve the agreement, but judicial intervention is a remedy of last resort, and courts impose a high threshold.

Litigation risk and interim relief

In urgent cases, for example, where a counterparty continues to make misleading ESG claims using your brand, or where a reclassified freelancer relationship creates immediate tax exposure, Dutch summary proceedings (kort geding) offer a fast-track remedy. A kort geding can typically be heard within two to four weeks and can yield interim injunctions, compliance orders, or provisional payment obligations. Early indications suggest that enforcement agencies are increasingly cooperating with private litigants in reclassification and greenwashing matters, making the availability of interim relief particularly valuable for SMEs.

Implementation Timeline and Prioritisation Matrix

The matrix below maps each contract category to its risk level and the recommended action window. Use it to prioritise your review and allocate internal resources accordingly.

Contract Category Risk Level Action Window Primary Risk
Freelancer / ZZP agreements High 0–30 days Retroactive tax + social-security reclassification
IP / creator contracts High 0–30 days Mandatory remuneration claims; reversion of rights
Customer terms (ESG claims) High 0–30 days ACM enforcement; reputational damage
Supplier agreements (price / FM) Medium 30–60 days Unenforceable price clauses; margin erosion
Distribution / reseller agreements Medium 30–60 days Compliance cascade; territory and termination disputes
NDAs / confidentiality agreements Lower 60–90 days IP assignment conflicts with creator-rights rules
General terms and conditions (AV) Lower 60–90 days Unenforceability of updated terms if not properly notified

A downloadable one-page version of this matrix, together with a model clause bank containing supplier price-variation wording, contractor-classification safe-harbour clauses, IP remuneration templates, and ESG warranty ladders, is available through the Global Law Experts contact page.

Conclusion, Act Now to Update Commercial Contracts in the Netherlands

The 2026 legislative package is not a future concern, it is current law, and enforcement is underway. SMEs that delay updating commercial contracts in the Netherlands risk retroactive tax assessments, mandatory creator-remuneration claims, regulatory penalties for unsubstantiated sustainability representations, and unenforceable contractual provisions at precisely the moment they are needed most. Use the 30/60/90-day checklist and clause-level guidance in this article to begin your review immediately. For complex or high-risk situations, particularly those involving potential reclassification disputes or the need for interim relief through summary proceedings, engage specialist commercial-law counsel through the Global Law Experts directory without delay.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marcel Fruytier at Fruytier Lawyers in Business, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Business.gov.nl, Agreements and Contracts Guidance
  2. CMS Legal, Price Increase in Commercial Contracts (Netherlands)
  3. Rechtspraak.nl, NCC Commercial Contract Law
  4. Dutch-law.com, Changed Circumstances (Article 6:258 BW)
  5. Maak-Law, Contract Amendment Under Dutch Law
  6. Law&More, Essential Clauses in Commercial Contracts

FAQs

Which contract clauses must I update because of the 2026 changes?
At a minimum: freelancer/ZZP engagement terms (independence, substitution, indemnities), IP assignment and licence clauses (remuneration transparency, audit rights, reversion), supplier price-variation and force-majeure provisions, and any warranty or representation making sustainability or environmental claims. See the full checklist by contract type above.
The lifted enforcement moratorium means the Belastingdienst can now actively reclassify contractor relationships as employment, with retroactive tax and social-security consequences. Contracts must reflect genuine entrepreneurial independence, including a real substitute right, deliverable-based scoping, and the absence of supervisory control.
Commissioning parties must add periodic remuneration reporting, a mechanism for creators to request additional fair payment if exploitation exceeds expectations, and a reversion right if the work goes unexploited. These rights cannot be waived by contract.
Replace vague sustainability representations with conditional warranties tied to specific, verifiable metrics. Support every claim with third-party certification or auditable evidence. Build in a remedy ladder (notice, cure, cap) and grant audit rights. Remove terms like “eco-friendly” or “sustainable” unless backed by documented substantiation.
Audit all freelancer relationships for reclassification red flags, review every IP and creator contract for missing remuneration-transparency provisions, and strip unsubstantiated ESG claims from customer-facing terms. Assign an internal owner for each contract category and initiate counterparty negotiations for the highest-risk agreements.
Generally, no. Contract amendments require mutual consent unless the original agreement contains an express unilateral-amendment clause. For general terms and conditions, you must serve updated terms and obtain acknowledgement of receipt before the new provisions take effect.
At minimum annually, with a triggered review whenever new legislation takes effect, sector-specific guidance is published, or a material change in commercial circumstances occurs. The 2026 reforms represent exactly the kind of trigger event that demands an immediate, out-of-cycle review.

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How to Update Commercial Contracts in the Netherlands After the 2026 Law Changes, a Practical Checklist for Smes

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