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can an employer take back your bonus

Can an Employer Take Back Your Bonus? Netherlands 2026 Rules, Article 27 WOR, Unilateral Change Clauses and Enforcement

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Can an employer take back your bonus under Dutch law? The answer depends on several interlocking factors: whether the bonus is contractual or discretionary, whether an enforceable clawback or unilateral change clause exists, whether the payment was made in error, and whether the employer followed the works council consent procedure required by Article 27 of the Works Councils Act (WOR). With financial and tech-sector employers conducting reward reviews throughout 2026, bonus schemes under Dutch employment law face heightened scrutiny, making this compliance question more urgent than ever.

Quick compliance check, before you withhold or reclaim a bonus:

  • Contractual or discretionary? A contractual bonus that has been earned cannot simply be withdrawn.
  • Overpayment? Genuine payroll errors may be recoverable, but strict procedural rules apply.
  • Clawback or unilateral change clause? Check the employment contract and bonus scheme rules for enforceable recovery language.
  • Article 27 WOR consent? Any change to a remuneration system may require works council approval before implementation.
  • Reasonableness? Dutch courts apply a proportionality and good-employment-practice test to employer decisions on bonuses.
  • Litigation risk? Employees can seek injunctions, declaratory relief and damages if an employer withholds a bonus unlawfully.

Types of Bonuses in the Netherlands, Contractual vs Discretionary

Understanding the distinction between a contractual bonus and a discretionary bonus is the essential first step in any recoverability analysis. Dutch employment law does not impose a general statutory obligation on employers to pay bonuses. There is no legal requirement for an employer to provide a bonus, the entitlement arises from the contract, a collective labour agreement (CAO), company policy, or established custom.

A contractual bonus is one where entitlement is triggered automatically when agreed criteria are met, for example, achieving a revenue target or remaining employed on a specified date. Once the conditions are satisfied, the employee has a legally enforceable right to payment. An employer cannot simply retract the promise of a contractual bonus at a later stage; doing so risks a breach-of-contract claim.

A discretionary bonus is one where the employer retains the power to decide whether to award it, and often the amount. However, even discretionary bonuses are not entirely at the employer’s whim. Dutch courts have consistently held that the employer must observe the principle of good employment practices (goed werkgeverschap, Article 7:611 of the Dutch Civil Code) when making bonus decisions.

13th Month, Statutory?

A common question is whether a 13th month is mandatory in the Netherlands. The short answer: no. A 13th-month payment is not automatically required by Dutch statute. Entitlement depends entirely on the employment contract, applicable CAO, or a consistent historical practice that may have created an implied contractual right. Employers who have paid a 13th month for several consecutive years should be aware that Dutch courts may treat it as a vested right, making future withdrawal considerably more difficult.

Performance, Sign-On and Retention Bonuses

Performance bonuses tied to measurable KPIs tend to be treated as contractual once the targets are met. Sign-on bonuses are typically subject to explicit repayment conditions if the employee leaves within a specified period. Retention bonuses usually require the employee to remain employed through a set date. The enforceability of recovery for each type hinges on the clarity and fairness of the contractual terms, a recurring theme throughout Dutch bonus litigation.

Can an Employer Take Back Your Bonus? Legal Test and Compliance Decision

When a Dutch employer considers withholding or reclaiming a bonus, the following five-step legal test provides a structured compliance framework:

  1. Is the bonus contractual? If the employee has met all contractual conditions, the bonus is earned and cannot be unilaterally withdrawn. A discretionary bonus offers more flexibility, but the employer must still act reasonably.
  2. Was the payment made in error? A genuine overpayment, where the employer can demonstrate a clear administrative mistake, may be recoverable under the rules on undue payment (onverschuldigde betaling, Article 6:203 Dutch Civil Code).
  3. Does a clawback or unilateral change clause exist? The employment contract or bonus scheme rules may contain provisions allowing the employer to reclaim sums already paid or to change bonus terms prospectively. The clause must be clearly drafted and not function as a disguised penalty.
  4. Is works council consent required? Under Article 27 WOR, changes to remuneration systems, including the introduction, amendment, or withdrawal of a bonus scheme, require works council consent. Proceeding without consent can render the employer’s decision invalid.
  5. Does the action pass the reasonableness test? Even where a contractual right to claw back exists, Dutch courts assess whether the employer’s action is proportionate and consistent with good employment practices.

Contractual Entitlements vs Discretionary Awards

The distinction between contractual and discretionary bonuses has decisive practical consequences. Employment contracts or bonus schemes often state that it is up to the employer to decide whether an employee is entitled to a bonus. However, Dutch courts look beyond the label. If the employer has applied a bonus consistently, with objective criteria, a nominally “discretionary” bonus may be reclassified as a contractual entitlement. In the decision to grant or withhold a bonus, the employer must observe the principle of good employment practices, and a judge will assess whether the employer could reasonably have come to its decision.

Overpayments and Payroll Recovery

Where a bonus has been paid by genuine mistake, for example, a payroll system error that doubled a payment, the employer generally has the right to seek recovery. The employer should contact the worker as soon as the mistake is identified, provide clear documentation of the error, and propose a reasonable repayment plan. Unilateral deductions from future salary are not automatically permitted; the employee’s consent or a court order is typically required unless the employment contract contains an explicit set-off clause.

Resignation, Notice and Bonus Entitlement

Whether an employee retains a bonus entitlement after resigning depends on the scheme’s eligibility rules. If the bonus is contractual and the qualifying period has already been completed, resignation does not extinguish the right. Withholding a bonus solely because an employee has given notice is risky unless the scheme explicitly requires continued employment at the payment date, and even then, courts may scrutinise whether such a condition is reasonable.

Works Council Consent, Article 27 WOR Explained

Article 27 of the Wet op de ondernemingsraden (Works Councils Act, or WOR) is a critical, and frequently overlooked, compliance requirement. It provides that an employer must obtain the prior consent of the works council before establishing, amending, or withdrawing certain schemes, including remuneration systems and bonus arrangements. The provision applies to enterprises that have established a works council (generally those with 50 or more employees).

The rationale is straightforward: changes to how employees are compensated affect the workforce collectively, and the works council exists to represent employee interests in such decisions. Ignoring works council consent Netherlands employers are obligated to obtain can expose the organisation to significant legal risk.

Practical Steps for Employers, When to Notify and What Materials to Share

Employers planning to change or remove a bonus scheme should follow a structured consultation process:

  1. Week 1: Prepare a written proposal describing the proposed change, its rationale (business case or regulatory requirement), and an impact analysis showing how individual employees and groups will be affected.
  2. Week 2: Submit the proposal to the works council, allowing adequate time for review and questions.
  3. Weeks 3–4: Hold a formal consultation meeting. The works council may request additional information, seek external advice, or raise objections.
  4. Weeks 4–6: The works council issues its decision, consent, conditional consent, or refusal. If consent is granted, the employer may proceed with implementation.

What Happens if the Works Council Refuses

If the works council withholds consent, the employer cannot implement the change unilaterally. The employer may apply to the subdistrict court (kantonrechter) for a substitute consent order, but must demonstrate that the works council’s refusal was unreasonable or that the proposed change is justified by compelling business reasons. Alternatively, the employer may appeal to the Enterprise Chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal. Proceeding without consent, or without a court order, can result in the decision being declared null and void, and employees can seek injunctive relief to maintain the existing bonus scheme.

Unilateral Change Clauses and Clawback Clauses, Drafting and Enforceability

Dutch employers frequently rely on two types of contractual provisions to manage bonus risk: a unilateral change clause (allowing the employer to amend employment terms prospectively) and a clawback clause (requiring repayment of bonuses already received). Both require careful drafting to be enforceable under Dutch law.

A unilateral change clause Netherlands employers include in contracts is governed by Article 7:613 of the Dutch Civil Code, which permits an employer to change employment conditions only if the employer has reserved this right in writing and can demonstrate a sufficiently weighty interest (zwaarwichtig belang) that outweighs the employee’s interest in maintaining existing terms. The threshold is high, routine cost-savings will rarely suffice.

A clawback clause operates differently: it requires the employee to repay amounts already received upon the occurrence of specified trigger events (e.g., dismissal for cause, voluntary departure within a defined period, or financial restatement). In most cases, an employer will not be entitled to claw back any part of a bonus unless such an entitlement is provided for in the bonus arrangement from the outset.

Sample Clause, Acceptable

An enforceable clawback clause should be specific, proportionate and transparent. Industry observers expect Dutch courts to uphold clauses along the following lines:

“If the Employee voluntarily terminates employment within 12 months of the Bonus Payment Date, the Employee shall repay to the Employer a pro-rata portion of the Bonus, calculated as 1/12th of the Bonus for each full month remaining in the 12-month retention period. The Employer shall provide written notice before initiating any recovery.”

Clawback Wording, Enforceability Checkpoints

Courts will scrutinise clawback provisions against the following criteria:

  • Specificity: The trigger events must be clearly defined, vague references to “unacceptable conduct” without further specification are unlikely to hold.
  • Proportionality: The repayment obligation must be proportionate to the employer’s legitimate interest. Full repayment of a multi-year bonus for a minor infraction may be struck down.
  • No penalty function: If a clause effectively operates as a penalty rather than a genuine pre-estimate of loss, it may be recharacterised and reduced by the court.
  • Transparency: The employee must have been informed of the clause at or before the time the bonus was awarded. Retroactive introduction of a clawback is extremely difficult to enforce.

Withholding a Bonus, Lawful Payroll Deductions and Overpayment Recovery

Dutch law imposes strict limits on an employer’s ability to withhold bonus Netherlands payments through payroll deductions. The general rule is that an employer may only make deductions from wages where the employee has given explicit written consent, where a court order permits it, or where a statutory provision authorises it. Set-off against future wages is subject to the same restrictions.

For genuine overpayments, the employer’s right to recover is well established in principle, an employer has the right to claim back money if it has overpaid someone. However, the process matters as much as the right.

Payroll Checklist, Employer Steps to Recover Amounts

  1. Identify and document the overpayment with supporting payroll records.
  2. Notify the employee in writing as soon as the error is discovered, providing a clear breakdown of the amounts involved.
  3. Propose a reasonable repayment plan, lump-sum or instalments, and seek the employee’s written agreement.
  4. If the employee disputes the overpayment or refuses to agree, do not deduct unilaterally from wages without legal authority.
  5. Escalate to legal proceedings if necessary, seeking a court order for repayment.

Enforcement and Litigation Risk, Likely Outcomes in NL Courts

Dutch courts approach bonus disputes pragmatically, balancing contractual rights against principles of reasonableness and fairness. Employers who follow documented procedures, respect works council rights, and communicate transparently face substantially lower litigation risk.

Where an employer has unlawfully withheld a bonus in breach of an employment contract, the employee is entitled to be put into the position that they would have been in had the contract been properly performed, meaning full payment plus statutory interest. Courts may also award legal costs and, in urgent cases, grant injunctive relief through summary proceedings (kort geding).

Quick Risk Matrix, Employer Action vs Likely Outcome

Employer action Legal risk level Likely court outcome
Withholding a contractual bonus without legal basis High Court orders payment plus interest; possible legal cost award
Changing bonus scheme without Article 27 WOR consent High Decision declared null and void; injunction to restore original scheme
Enforcing a clear, proportionate clawback clause Low–Medium Generally upheld if clause meets enforceability checkpoints
Recovering a documented payroll overpayment with employee consent Low Recovery permitted; repayment plan enforced
Unilateral deduction from wages without consent or court order High Deduction reversed; employer may face additional claims
Using a unilateral change clause for future bonus amendments with works council consent Low–Medium Upheld if employer demonstrates sufficiently weighty interest

Practical Employer Playbook, Step-by-Step Before Reclaiming or Changing a Bonus

The following playbook provides a compliance-first approach for Dutch employers considering reclaiming a paid bonus or changing a bonus scheme in 2026. Each step should be documented and retained in HR records.

  1. Verify the contract and scheme rules: Review the employment contract, bonus scheme documentation, applicable CAO and any side letters for bonus entitlement conditions, clawback language and unilateral change clauses.
  2. Compute the amount: If recovering an overpayment, calculate the exact sum with supporting payroll evidence. If changing the scheme, model the financial impact on affected employees.
  3. Confirm clause enforceability: Assess whether any clawback or unilateral change clause meets the enforceability criteria outlined above. Seek legal advice if the wording is ambiguous.
  4. Consult the works council (Article 27 WOR): If the change affects the remuneration system as a whole, initiate the formal consultation process. Prepare a written proposal and impact analysis.
  5. Draft employee communication: Prepare clear, factual correspondence explaining the action, its legal basis and the employee’s rights. Avoid unilateral language, frame recovery requests as a proposal.
  6. Offer a repayment plan: For recoveries, propose reasonable instalment options and seek written consent.
  7. Secure a waiver where appropriate: If the employee agrees to a revised bonus structure or repayment, obtain a signed waiver or amendment letter.
  8. Maintain HR and finance records: Retain all correspondence, calculations, works council minutes and employee responses for a minimum of five years.
  9. Escalate to litigation if necessary: If the employee refuses to cooperate and the employer’s legal position is sound, initiate proceedings through the subdistrict court.
  10. Review and update policies: After resolution, update bonus scheme documentation and template contracts to prevent recurrence.

Template Wording, Employee Notification

“Dear [Employee], following a review of our payroll records, we have identified an overpayment of [€ amount] relating to [bonus type/date]. We enclose a detailed breakdown. We propose repayment in [number] monthly instalments of [€ amount], commencing [date]. Please confirm your agreement in writing within 14 days. Should you wish to discuss this matter or propose alternative arrangements, please contact [HR contact].”

Works Council Communication Template

“To the Works Council: In accordance with Article 27 WOR, we hereby submit for your consent a proposed amendment to [bonus scheme name]. The attached document sets out the proposed changes, the business rationale, and an impact analysis. We invite you to a consultation meeting on [date] and welcome any questions in advance.”

Clawback and Unilateral Change by Entity Type, Comparison Table

Entity type When unilateral change / clawback more likely to be enforceable Practical safeguards employers should use
Regulated financial institutions Subject to regulator guidance; often stricter controls and pre-approved clawback policies; higher scrutiny Use explicit contractual clauses, involve compliance/regulator early, run works council process, keep documentation
Large tech / scale-ups May use discretionary schemes with performance conditions; unilateral changes can be contested if retrospective Publish scheme rules in advance; clear performance metrics; formal consultation with works council if applicable
SMEs / private companies Fewer formal schemes; courts focus on contract wording and reasonableness Use clear written agreements; avoid retrospective changes; negotiate waivers when necessary

Conclusion, Navigating Bonus Recovery and Changes in the Netherlands

The question of whether an employer can take back your bonus in the Netherlands has no single answer, it depends on the interplay of contractual terms, statutory requirements and judicial standards of reasonableness. As Dutch employers in the financial and technology sectors undertake reward reviews in 2026, understanding the compliance landscape around Article 27 WOR consent, unilateral change clauses and clawback enforceability is essential. Employers who document their decisions, respect works council procedures and draft clear contractual provisions are best positioned to manage bonus-related risk. Those who act without a solid legal foundation risk injunctions, court-ordered payment, and reputational harm.

For tailored guidance on bonus scheme design, works council strategy or clawback enforcement, consult a compensation and investment plans specialist through the Netherlands lawyer directory at Global Law Experts.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Constant van Tuyll at Vesper Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Access NL, Can your employer refuse to pay your bonus? A recent Dutch court decision explained
  2. GMW advocaten, Bonus: a favor or a right?
  3. McCann FitzGerald, Bonus season: factors employers should consider
  4. Torque Law, Can an employer claw back a paid bonus?
  5. Fox Williams, Clawing back bonuses: when is it enforceable?
  6. Acas, Entitlement to a bonus
  7. Acas, Handling overpayments

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Can an Employer Take Back Your Bonus? Netherlands 2026 Rules, Article 27 WOR, Unilateral Change Clauses and Enforcement

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