[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
equal pay temporary workers netherlands

Equal Pay for Temporary Workers in the Netherlands (2026): an Employer's Compliance Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

Last reviewed: 17 June 2026

The rules governing equal pay for temporary workers in the Netherlands have undergone significant tightening, and 2026 marks the year employers and staffing agencies face real enforcement exposure. Under changes to the ABU and NBBU collective labour agreements (CLAs) that took effect on 1 January 2026, temporary agency workers must receive the same total remuneration package, including bonuses, allowances, and benefits, as comparable direct employees at the hirer’s organisation. This guide walks HR directors, general counsels, and staffing-agency compliance leads through the scope of the obligation, the key dates and transitional rules, a step-by-step compliance checklist, and worked calculation examples to help organisations close any remaining pay gaps before claims arise.

What Equal Pay for Temporary Workers Means, Scope and Who It Covers

Equal pay for temps, in the Dutch context, means that a temporary agency worker placed at a hirer’s site must be compensated on the same terms as a comparable employee hired directly by that hirer for the same or equivalent role. The principle is not new, it is rooted in Article 8 of the Wet allocatie arbeidskrachten door intermediairs (Waadi) and reinforced by the EU Temporary Agency Work Directive, but the 2026 CLA revisions eliminate most of the exceptions that previously allowed agencies to deviate during the first phase of a placement.

Who Is a Temporary or Agency Worker Under Dutch Law?

A temporary agency worker (uitzendkracht) is someone employed by a temporary employment agency (uitzendbureau) and placed at a third-party hirer to perform work under the hirer’s supervision. The employment contract exists between the worker and the agency, but the work is carried out at and directed by the hirer. This triangular relationship is the defining feature. The definition covers workers engaged under both Phase A (the initial flexible period) and Phase B (the fixed-term contract phase) of the ABU CLA system, as well as workers placed through payroll companies that operate under the NBBU CLA.

Which Employment Conditions Are Covered?

The equal-pay obligation extends well beyond the base hourly wage. Under the revised ABU and NBBU CLAs, the following elements must match those of comparable direct hires:

  • Gross base wage. The applicable periodic salary scale, step, and any automatic increments.
  • Allowances. Shift differentials, overtime premiums, unsociable-hours payments, and travel or expense allowances.
  • Bonuses. Performance bonuses, annual bonuses, thirteenth-month payments, and one-off project incentives, confirmed by Dutch case law as falling within the scope of equal pay for agency workers.
  • Holiday allowance. The statutory minimum of 8% of gross annual salary, or the hirer’s higher rate if applicable.
  • Working hours and rest periods. Including access to minimum-hours guarantees and scheduling protections.
  • Pension contributions. Although pension parity follows a separate timeline under the StiPP industry pension scheme, employers should monitor convergence requirements.

Industry observers expect the inclusion of bonuses and one-off payments to generate the most compliance friction, because many hirers have historically excluded temps from discretionary bonus pools.

Differences: Posted Workers, Secondments, and Contractors

The equal-pay regime for temporary agency workers is distinct from, though overlapping with, the posted-workers framework. Workers posted to the Netherlands from another EU member state are entitled to the “hard core” terms of employment under the Wet arbeidsvoorwaarden gedetacheerde werknemers in de Europese Unie (WagwEU), which include minimum pay rates and working conditions. However, the agency-worker equal-pay obligation goes further by requiring full parity with comparable direct employees, not merely compliance with statutory minimums. Independent contractors (ZZP/zelfstandigen zonder personeel) fall outside the temporary-agency framework entirely, although misclassification risk remains a separate enforcement priority in 2026.

Key Dates, Transitional Rules, and Legal Basis for Equal Pay 2026 Netherlands

The equal-pay obligation for agency workers did not appear overnight. It has evolved through successive rounds of CLA negotiations, legislative amendments, and court decisions. What makes 2026 the critical compliance year is the removal of the so-called “dispensation” route and the narrowing of Phase A exemptions under the renewed ABU and NBBU CLAs.

Timeline of Key Legislative and CLA Dates

Rule / Development Effective Date Practical Impact
Waadi Article 8, statutory equal-treatment principle for agency workers In force (longstanding) Establishes the baseline right to equal treatment; allows deviation only via CLA
ABU CLA, Phase A remuneration system revised; equal-pay obligations tightened 1 January 2026 Agencies must apply hirer pay scales from day one of Phase A placements (previously allowed own pay scales for initial weeks)
NBBU CLA, aligned revisions to match ABU equal-pay standards 1 January 2026 Eliminates the competitive gap between ABU and NBBU agencies; uniform standard applies
Bonus and one-off payment parity confirmed Effective under 2026 CLA cycle Agencies must include bonuses, thirteenth month, and performance payments in the parity calculation
Proposed legislative reform, Wet verduidelijking beoordeling arbeidsrelaties en rechtsvermoeden (VBAR) Expected 2026 (parliamentary process ongoing) Broader labour-market reform package; may further restrict deviations and tighten enforcement

The most significant change from an employment law perspective is the elimination of the extended Phase A pay-scale exemption. Previously, agencies applying the ABU CLA could use their own remuneration tables during the early weeks of a placement, delaying full pay parity. From 1 January 2026, the hirer’s remuneration must be applied from the first day of the assignment.

Transitional Arrangements and Temporary Exemptions

The 2026 CLA changes include limited transitional provisions for placements that were already in progress on 1 January 2026. Agencies that had existing Phase A workers on assignment before the effective date were generally permitted a short adjustment window, typically the remainder of the current pay period, to align remuneration with the new requirements. However, no open-ended grandfather clause applies: all placements must be fully compliant with the revised equal-pay standards as they enter a new pay period or contract extension.

Employers and agencies should note that the transitional rules do not exempt them from backpay exposure. Where a temporary worker can demonstrate that they were underpaid relative to a comparable direct employee during the transition window, the likely practical effect will be that the agency remains liable for the differential, even if it was technically within the grace period. Early indications suggest that unions and worker advocacy organisations intend to test the boundaries of transitional protections through litigation.

Responsible Parties, Employer vs Staffing Agency Obligations

Staffing agency compliance is the primary obligation under the CLA framework: the agency, as the legal employer, bears the duty to ensure that the temporary worker receives equal pay. However, the hirer is not a passive bystander. The obligation structure works as follows:

  • Temporary employment agency. Must determine the comparable position at the hirer, obtain the relevant pay and benefits data, calculate the correct remuneration, and pay the worker accordingly. The agency is the first party liable in any equal-pay claim.
  • Hirer (client company). Must provide accurate, complete, and timely information about the pay scales, bonus structures, allowances, and benefits that apply to comparable direct employees. Failure to supply this data can create contractual liability and may expose the hirer to joint claims.
  • Payroll and finance teams. Must implement the correct pay codes, maintain auditable records, and be prepared to produce documentation demonstrating parity for at least the statutory retention period.

The practical reality is that agency workers equal pay obligations create a shared compliance burden. Hirers who refuse to share remuneration data, or who provide incomplete information, risk contractual indemnity claims from their agency partners and, potentially, direct claims from workers under the Waadi.

Practical Employer and Agency Compliance Checklist, HR Checklist Equal Pay

Compliance with equal pay for temporary workers in the Netherlands requires coordinated action across HR, legal, payroll, and procurement functions. The following step-by-step checklist is designed for organisations that use temporary agency workers and for the agencies that supply them.

Audit: Data to Collect

The first step is a thorough pay-equity audit covering all current temporary placements. Organisations should gather the following:

  1. Job descriptions and classifications. For every role filled by a temp, identify the comparable direct-hire position and its CLA pay scale or internal salary band.
  2. Total remuneration data. Collect the gross base wage, shift differentials, overtime rates, holiday allowance percentage, bonus eligibility and amounts, and any allowances (travel, meals, tools) paid to comparable direct hires.
  3. Benefits inventory. Map non-wage benefits including pension contributions, training budgets, and minimum-hours guarantees.
  4. Current agency-worker pay records. Obtain from the agency (or your own payroll if you operate an in-house staffing function) the current pay breakdown for each temp on assignment.
  5. Gap analysis. Compare temp remuneration to direct-hire remuneration element by element and identify any shortfalls.

Contract Review and Amendment Priorities

Once the audit reveals any gaps, contract updates must follow in two directions, the agreement with the staffing agency and any internal policies governing temporary worker terms:

  1. Agency framework agreements. Ensure contracts contain an explicit equal-pay warranty from the agency, an obligation to recalculate pay when hirer conditions change, and a clear data-sharing protocol.
  2. Hirer data-provision obligations. Insert clauses requiring the hirer to supply updated pay-scale information within a defined period (e.g., 14 days) whenever CLA rates, bonus pools, or allowance structures change.
  3. Indemnity and liability allocation. Clarify which party bears the financial risk of backpay claims: the agency (as employer), the hirer (where it failed to provide data), or both jointly.
  4. Audit rights. Both parties should have the right to audit the other’s records to verify compliance.

Payroll and Benefits Changes

Payroll system updates are frequently the most resource-intensive element of staffing agency compliance projects:

  1. Create parallel pay codes. For each hirer where temps are placed, the agency payroll must mirror the hirer’s pay structure, including separate codes for base wage, overtime, bonuses, and allowances.
  2. Automate parity checks. Where possible, build automated alerts that flag when a temp’s pay rate diverges from the comparable direct-hire rate by more than a de minimis threshold.
  3. Backpay reserves. Establish a financial reserve for potential backpay claims relating to the pre-2026 period or any identified shortfalls during the transition window.
  4. Record retention. Maintain all payroll records, agency invoices, and supporting calculations for a minimum of seven years, consistent with Dutch fiscal record-keeping obligations and the statutory limitation period for wage claims.

Communication, Notice, and Workforce Engagement

Inform all temporary workers in writing of any changes to their remuneration resulting from the equal-pay alignment. Brief line managers at hirer sites on the practical implications, including the requirement not to exclude temps from bonus or allowance schemes without a documented legal basis. Consider engaging works councils where the changes affect a significant portion of the workforce or alter existing policies on temporary labour.

How to Calculate Equal Pay in the Netherlands, Worked Example

To calculate equal pay for a temporary worker, agencies and hirers must compare the total employment conditions, not just the headline hourly rate. The following table illustrates the pay components that must be included in the equivalence calculation:

Pay Component Direct Hire (Comparable Role) Temporary Worker (Current) Action Required
Gross base hourly wage €18.50 €17.00 Increase to €18.50
Holiday allowance (8%) €1.48/hr €1.36/hr Recalculate on new base
Shift premium (15% for evening shifts) €2.78/hr (when applicable) €2.55/hr Align to hirer rate
Annual bonus (pro-rated) €2,400/year (€1.15/hr equivalent) €0 Include pro-rated bonus
Travel allowance €0.23/km €0.21/km Match hirer rate
Pension contribution (employer share) Hirer scheme: 6% of gross StiPP basic: lower rate Monitor convergence timeline

Worked example: A temporary warehouse operative works 36 hours per week, including 8 evening-shift hours. Under the hirer’s CLA, a comparable direct employee earns €18.50 base, receives a 15% evening premium, an 8% holiday allowance on all earnings, and a pro-rated annual bonus of €2,400. The agency must ensure the temp receives identical rates for each component. Where the agency previously paid a “blended” rate that folded some elements into the base wage, it must now unbundle each component and demonstrate line-by-line equivalence.

Industry observers expect that the element generating the most disputes will be the pro-rated bonus calculation, particularly where hirers apply discretionary performance criteria. The safest approach is to apply a formulaic pro-rata method (hours worked divided by full-time equivalent hours, multiplied by the standard bonus amount) unless the hirer can document objective, non-discriminatory reasons for a different assessment.

Contract Drafting and Sample Clause Bank

Sample Agency Clause: Equal-Pay Warranty and Indemnity

The following illustrative clause can be adapted for inclusion in agency framework agreements:

“The Agency warrants that it shall remunerate each Temporary Worker in accordance with the equal-pay provisions of Article 8 Waadi and the applicable CLA, ensuring that the total employment conditions, including but not limited to base wage, allowances, bonuses, holiday allowance, and working-hours arrangements, are no less favourable than those applicable to a comparable employee of the Hirer. The Agency shall indemnify the Hirer against any claim, loss, or expense arising from a breach of this warranty, save to the extent that the breach results from the Hirer’s failure to provide accurate remuneration data in accordance with Clause [X].”

Client/Hirer Clause: Verification, Reporting, and Audit Rights

“The Hirer shall, within 14 calendar days of each request by the Agency and within 14 days of any change to its CLA, pay scales, bonus structures, or allowance policies, provide the Agency with complete and accurate details of the remuneration applicable to comparable direct employees. The Agency shall have the right, upon reasonable notice, to audit the Hirer’s records to verify compliance with this obligation. Where the Hirer fails to provide timely or accurate data, the Hirer shall bear the financial consequences of any resulting underpayment to Temporary Workers.”

These clauses should be tailored to the specific commercial relationship and reviewed by qualified employment law practitioners in the Netherlands. The key principle is mutual accountability: the agency must pay correctly, and the hirer must supply the data that makes correct payment possible.

Liability, Enforcement Risks, and Dispute Options

Temporary workers who believe they have been underpaid can pursue claims through the Dutch civil courts, typically via a subdistrict court (kantonrechter) wage-claim procedure. The statutory limitation period for wage claims is five years, meaning that backpay exposure can accumulate significantly. Trade unions, particularly FNV and CNV, have signalled increased attention to agency-worker pay parity and may bring collective actions on behalf of groups of affected workers.

For employers and agencies, practical mitigation strategies include maintaining thorough audit trails, using the contract clauses described above to allocate risk clearly, and engaging early with any worker complaints before they escalate to formal proceedings. Alternative dispute resolution, including mediation through sector bodies, can be faster and less costly than litigation. Where a claim does proceed to court, the burden of proof effectively shifts to the employer to demonstrate that the pay differential was justified.

Implementation Timeline, Who Does What

Entity Key Obligation Deadline / Action Required
Temporary employment agency Ensure total employment conditions for temps equal those of comparable direct staff (including bonuses and allowances) Ongoing from 1 January 2026; complete first full audit by end of Q2 2026
Hirer (client company) Provide accurate pay-scale, bonus, and benefits data to agency; allow audit access Within 14 days of agency request and upon any CLA or pay-scale change
Payroll / Finance Implement parity pay codes, produce auditable records, calculate equivalence for all active placements System updates completed; records preserved for minimum 7 years
Legal / Compliance Update agency framework agreements, insert equal-pay warranties, review indemnity provisions Contract amendments executed before next renewal cycle or by end of Q3 2026

Conclusion, Immediate Next Steps for Equal Pay Temporary Workers Netherlands Compliance

The 2026 equal-pay regime for temporary workers in the Netherlands leaves little room for delay. Agencies that have not yet aligned their pay structures to hirer conditions face mounting backpay exposure, and hirers that have not shared complete remuneration data with their agency partners are creating their own contractual liability. The steps to take now are clear: conduct the pay-equity audit, update agency and hirer contracts with equal-pay warranties and data-sharing obligations, reconfigure payroll systems to track line-by-line parity, and establish record-keeping practices that can withstand scrutiny.

Organisations that treat this as a box-ticking exercise risk costly claims; those that build genuine parity into their workforce strategy will find themselves better positioned to attract and retain temporary talent in an increasingly competitive Dutch labour market.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nadia Adnani at Adnani & Van den Eeckhout Advocaten (AvdE), a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Business.gov.nl, Employing temporary staff
  2. Loyens & Loeff, Important changes regarding remuneration of agency workers
  3. PostedWorkers.nl, Terms of employment for posted workers
  4. van Bladel Advocaten, Equal pay for agency workers also includes bonuses
  5. Level One, New rules for temporary agency workers in the Netherlands
  6. Dutch-law.com, Employment law overview

FAQs

What does equal pay for temporary workers mean in the Netherlands?
Equal pay means that a temporary agency worker must receive the same total remuneration, including base wage, bonuses, allowances, holiday pay, and working-hours conditions, as a comparable employee directly employed by the hirer for the same or equivalent role. The principle is established in Article 8 of the Waadi and enforced through the ABU and NBBU CLAs.
The tightened equal-pay provisions under the revised ABU and NBBU CLAs took effect on 1 January 2026. Limited transitional arrangements applied for placements already in progress on that date, generally allowing agencies to align pay by the end of the current pay period. There is no open-ended grandfather clause, and backpay exposure can arise even during the transition window.
The bonus must be pro-rated based on the hours or period the temporary worker has been on assignment relative to a full-time equivalent. The safest method is a formulaic pro-rata calculation: divide the temp’s hours worked by full-time equivalent hours, then multiply by the standard bonus amount. Document the calculation and retain records for at least seven years.
HR teams should retain: the comparable direct-hire job description and pay-scale classification; the full remuneration breakdown provided by the hirer; the agency’s parity calculation for each placement; payroll records showing each pay component; the agency framework agreement with its equal-pay warranty; and any correspondence relating to bonus eligibility or pay adjustments. Records should be kept for a minimum of seven years.
The staffing agency, as the legal employer, is the primary liable party for any pay shortfall. However, the hirer can face contractual claims from the agency (via indemnity clauses) and, in some circumstances, direct claims from the worker under the Waadi if the hirer failed to provide accurate data. Clear contractual allocation of risk is essential.
Pension parity follows a separate trajectory under the StiPP industry pension scheme, which has its own contribution rates and convergence timeline. Non-monetary benefits such as access to company facilities, training, and job vacancies should also be offered to temps on equal terms under the broader equal-treatment principle, although the CLA primarily focuses on monetary remuneration components.
Backpay claims can cover up to five years of underpayment under the statutory limitation period. Early settlement is generally preferable where the pay gap is clearly documented, as litigation costs and statutory interest can significantly increase the total exposure. Mediation through sector bodies offers a faster resolution path. Employers should seek specialist legal advice before entering settlement negotiations to accurately quantify the claim and assess any available defences.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Equal Pay for Temporary Workers in the Netherlands (2026): an Employer's Compliance Guide

Send welcome message

Custom Message