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The question of waiting lists liability in the Netherlands has moved from a background policy concern to a front-page legal risk for every hospital board in the country. In April 2026, a Dutch foundation launched proceedings against the State over persistently long mental-healthcare waiting lists, bringing the relationship between access delays and legal accountability into sharp public focus. Regulators at the Inspectie Gezondheidszorg en Jeugd (IGJ) and the Nederlandse Zorgautoriteit (NZa) have simultaneously intensified their scrutiny of provider capacity planning and insurer contracting, while academic commentary from the Erasmus School of Law has questioned whether health insurers are meeting their statutory duty of care.
For hospital general counsel, supervisory boards and quality managers, the convergence of litigation, regulatory pressure and political attention in 2026 demands an immediate, structured legal response, one that goes far beyond simply monitoring queue lengths.
Key takeaways for hospital boards:
Dutch hospitals operate within a layered framework of statutory duties, regulatory expectations and contractual obligations, all of which bear directly on waiting-list management. Understanding this framework is the essential first step for any provider seeking to reduce its exposure to patient rights waiting times claims.
The core statutory obligation for healthcare providers in the Netherlands is contained in the Wet op de geneeskundige behandelingsovereenkomst (WGBO), the Medical Treatment Contracts Act, which is integrated into Book 7 of the Dutch Civil Code. Under the WGBO, a healthcare provider (zorginstelling) that accepts a patient into its care is bound to deliver treatment that meets the professional standard of a reasonably competent practitioner. While the WGBO does not prescribe specific maximum waiting times, the duty of care it imposes requires providers to organise their services so that patients receive timely access to diagnostics and treatment. A failure to do so, where harm results, can ground a claim for breach of the treatment agreement.
Beyond the WGBO, the Wet kwaliteit, klachten en geschillen zorg (Wkkgz), the Healthcare Quality, Complaints and Disputes Act, obliges providers to maintain systematic quality management. This includes ensuring that internal governance structures can identify and respond to access bottlenecks before they reach the point of patient harm. Hospitals must also have accessible complaints procedures that can process waiting-time grievances efficiently, as mandated by the Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sport (VWS).
The IGJ functions as the primary quality-of-care inspectorate. Its published guidance makes clear that patient safety encompasses not just clinical errors but also systemic failures in access, including unreasonable delays in receiving care. Where the IGJ identifies structural waiting-list problems during themed or risk-based inspections, it can impose improvement measures, enhanced monitoring or, in serious cases, administrative enforcement orders.
The NZa, meanwhile, supervises the healthcare market and the conduct of both providers and insurers. It publishes rules on the transparency of waiting times and requires providers to report waiting-time data. The NZa also oversees the contractual relationship between hospitals and insurers, ensuring that insurer purchasing decisions do not create or exacerbate access barriers. For hospitals, this means that the NZa expects documented, auditable evidence that capacity planning is actively managed, not merely aspirational. The interplay between zorginstelling aansprakelijkheid (provider liability) and insurer duty creates a dual accountability structure that boards must navigate carefully.
Hospital liability in the Netherlands for waiting-list delays arises principally through two legal routes: breach of the WGBO treatment agreement (contractual liability) and tort under Article 6:162 of the Dutch Civil Code (unlawful act). In practice, most patient claims combine both bases.
A patient bringing a civil claim must establish four elements: (1) the provider owed a duty of care; (2) the provider breached that duty by failing to deliver timely access; (3) the patient suffered quantifiable harm; and (4) a causal link exists between the delay and the harm. The causation requirement is often the most contested element. Dutch courts apply a condicio sine qua non test, but where precise medical causation is uncertain, the doctrine of proportional liability or the reversal of the burden of proof may apply, particularly where the provider has failed to keep adequate records of its triage and capacity decisions.
Typical clinical scenarios that generate claims include cancer diagnostics where a delay moves the patient from an operable to an inoperable stage, orthopaedic conditions that deteriorate during prolonged waits, and mental-health crises that escalate because a first GGZ appointment was not offered within the sector-agreed norm. In each case, the critical question is whether a reasonably competent provider, facing the same resource constraints, would have organised its services differently, and whether the patient was informed of the delay and offered alternatives.
Patients may pursue a complaint through the hospital’s internal Wkkgz procedure, escalate to a recognised disputes committee (geschilleninstantie), or file a civil action in court. Disputes committees can award damages up to €25,000, while court claims are uncapped. Remedies typically include compensation for additional treatment costs, loss of income, pain and suffering, and, in rare cases, future care costs. Industry observers expect the volume of waiting-list-related complaints reaching disputes committees to increase materially through 2026 and 2027, given the current public attention and the precedent effect of the State liability proceedings.
The standard limitation period for medical-negligence claims in the Netherlands is five years from the date on which the patient became aware (or should reasonably have become aware) of the harm and the responsible party. An absolute longstop of twenty years from the harmful event applies. Hospitals should note that for claims arising from systemic waiting-list failures, the “awareness” trigger may be delayed, a patient may not connect their deterioration to the original access delay until years later. This makes robust recordkeeping during the waiting period itself critical for any future defence, as records produced contemporaneously carry significantly more evidentiary weight before Dutch courts, as documented in judicial practice on the Rechtspraak platform.
The legal exposure tied to mental healthcare waiting lists has become the single most urgent waiting lists liability Netherlands issue for providers in 2026. The combination of sector-specific benchmarks, publicly reported breaches of those benchmarks, and live litigation against the State creates a heightened-risk environment that demands immediate board attention.
The Dutch mental-healthcare sector operates with agreed maximum acceptable waiting times, known as Treeknormen. For GGZ services, the benchmark for a first intake appointment is four weeks from referral, and the benchmark for the start of treatment is ten weeks from referral. These norms are embedded in the contracting framework between insurers and providers and are used by the NZa as reference points when assessing market functioning. Health insurers such as HollandZorg publish guidance confirming these benchmarks and offer mediation services (zorgbemiddeling) to redirect patients to alternative providers when a particular hospital’s waiting list exceeds the norm.
Academic analysis from the Erasmus School of Law has raised serious concerns that a significant proportion of patients on GGZ waiting lists exceed these acceptable thresholds, prompting the question of whether insurers themselves are failing their duty of care in purchasing sufficient capacity.
For hospitals, the practical consequence is straightforward: any patient on a GGZ waiting list beyond the Treeknorm threshold represents a documented, measurable deviation from the agreed standard. If that patient suffers harm, a psychiatric crisis, self-harm, deterioration of an existing condition, the hospital will face the question of what it did to prioritise, escalate, communicate and offer alternatives. Providers treating children, patients with suicidal ideation, or individuals with acute psychotic presentations face the most acute risk, as the foreseeability of harm in these groups is particularly high.
On 7 April 2026, NL Times reported that a Dutch foundation had filed proceedings against the State, alleging that persistently long waiting lists in mental healthcare constituted a systemic failure of the government’s duty to ensure adequate access to care. The proceedings argued that the State, through its policy choices, funding decisions and regulatory inaction, bore responsibility for the structural capacity shortfall that left patients without treatment for months beyond the Treeknorm standards.
While the outcome of these proceedings remains pending, the likely practical effect for hospitals is significant. If the State is found to bear some degree of responsibility, it may seek to share that responsibility with providers and insurers through indemnification claims or revised regulatory requirements. Conversely, even an unsuccessful claim will generate extensive judicial commentary on the acceptable standards of access, commentary that patient-side lawyers will undoubtedly deploy in individual negligence claims against hospitals. Early indications suggest that hospitals with well-documented triage protocols and evidence of proactive capacity management will be best positioned to distinguish themselves from any systemic failures attributed to the State.
Effective healthcare governance around waiting lists is not merely a compliance obligation, it is the single most important determinant of whether a hospital can defend itself against a liability claim. Boards and general counsel who treat waiting-list management as an operational matter delegated entirely to clinical departments are exposing their institutions to avoidable risk.
The following ten-point checklist provides a structured framework for board-level governance of waiting-list risks:
Board minutes should include language demonstrating active oversight. A recommended template is: “The board reviewed the Q[X] waiting-list report, noting that [Department] currently exceeds the Treeknorm benchmark by [X] weeks. The board resolved to [specific action: e.g., authorise additional locum capacity / direct management to activate the insurer mediation protocol / commission an external triage audit]. The board noted the associated patient-safety risk and directed the quality department to report back at the next meeting on [date].”
Escalation triggers should be codified in a board-approved policy document. Recommended triggers include: any individual patient waiting beyond the Treeknorm benchmark who has been clinically flagged as high-risk; any service line where the average waiting time exceeds 150% of the benchmark; any formal complaint or legal letter received from a patient alleging harm from delay; and any IGJ or NZa communication indicating an inspection or data request related to access.
Compliance with waiting lists requirements at the operational level demands a suite of concrete, documented controls. Hospitals that can demonstrate these controls were in place, and functioning, at the time a patient alleges harm are in a fundamentally stronger defensive position than those relying on informal or undocumented processes.
Every service line should maintain a triage log that captures, at minimum, the following fields for each patient on the waiting list:
Patient communication about waiting times must be proactive, documented and honest. A hospital that informs a patient at the point of referral acceptance that the expected waiting time is twelve weeks, that alternative providers exist, and that the patient may request insurer mediation (zorgbemiddeling) has materially reduced its liability exposure compared to one that places the patient on a list without communication. Standardised templates should be approved by legal counsel and should include: the expected waiting time, the clinical urgency classification, the patient’s right to request referral to an alternative provider, the insurer’s mediation service contact details, and a request that the patient notify the hospital immediately if their condition changes.
Informed-consent documentation should also address scenarios where a patient declines an offered alternative. If a patient chooses to remain on a hospital’s waiting list rather than accept a transfer, this decision, and the patient’s reasons, must be recorded in the EHR. This record is essential evidence that the hospital fulfilled its duty to offer timely alternatives.
Under Dutch law, medical records must be retained for a minimum of twenty years from the last treatment date. For waiting-list records specifically, hospitals should ensure that triage logs, appointment-offer communications and capacity-planning documents are stored within or linked to the patient’s EHR and are subject to the same retention schedule. Given the five-year awareness-based limitation period and the twenty-year longstop, records created during a waiting period may be called upon many years after the patient was eventually treated. Regular internal audits of EHR completeness, with specific attention to waiting-list documentation, should be conducted at least annually.
When a complaint, regulatory inquiry or legal claim materialises, the first thirty days are decisive. Hospitals that respond with a structured, pre-planned process preserve their legal position; those that react ad hoc risk making irreversible evidentiary and communications errors.
Within 48 hours of receiving a formal complaint, IGJ or NZa communication, or legal letter alleging waiting-list harm, hospitals should execute the following steps:
Hospitals should engage external healthcare-litigation counsel who are experienced in defending wachttijden aansprakelijkheid (waiting-time liability) claims. The external counsel’s role is to advise on evidence strategy, manage the relationship with the liability insurer’s claims team, and, if necessary, represent the hospital before a disputes committee or court. Close coordination between the hospital’s in-house legal department, external counsel and the insurer’s claims handler is essential. Any disagreement about litigation strategy or settlement authority should be resolved early and documented in writing.
Hospitals seeking to build a defensible compliance posture on waiting lists should adopt the following roadmap:
Recommended downloadable templates include: a triage-log spreadsheet with the fields specified above; a board waiting-list checklist in PDF format; a patient-communication letter template; a litigation-hold notice template; and a policy-update memo for distribution to clinical departments. Hospitals requiring bespoke versions of these templates, tailored to their specific service lines, insurer contracts and governance structures, should seek specialist legal advice from a qualified Netherlands healthcare lawyer.
| Entity | Key Obligation Regarding Waiting Lists | Typical Legal Exposure and Immediate Action |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital / Zorginstelling | Triage patients according to clinical urgency; maintain auditable waiting-list records; inform patients of expected delays, rights and alternatives; comply with Treeknorm benchmarks and insurer contracts | Civil negligence claims (contractual and tort); IGJ enforcement; NZa market-supervision action, Immediate: preserve records, escalate to board, audit triage protocols |
| Health Insurer | Purchase sufficient capacity to ensure timely access; offer mediation (zorgbemiddeling) to redirect patients; reimburse care within contracted timeframes; report to NZa on access performance | Duty-of-care disputes with patients and providers; NZa enforcement for inadequate purchasing, Immediate: document all mediation offers and case-management actions |
| State / Regulator | System-level planning and resource allocation; statutory oversight of healthcare provision through IGJ and NZa; policy-setting on access standards | Litigation risk for systemic capacity failures (April 2026 proceedings); political accountability, Immediate: coordinate public response, accelerate policy remediation |
The legal landscape around waiting lists liability in the Netherlands has shifted decisively in 2026. The combination of live State litigation, intensified IGJ and NZa scrutiny, and growing academic and public awareness of insurer duty-of-care failures means that hospital boards can no longer treat waiting-list governance as a secondary concern. The following six actions should be treated as urgent priorities:
Hospitals that act now, with the structured, evidence-based approach outlined in this guide, will be in the strongest possible position to defend against claims, satisfy regulators and, most importantly, protect their patients.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Bob van der Kamp at Coupry B.V., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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