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Understanding how to dismiss a director in the Netherlands requires navigating two distinct but interconnected legal tracks: the company-law removal of the director from office and the employment-law (or contractual) consequences that follow. Dutch law grants shareholders a powerful, and in principle unrestricted, right to remove a statutory director (statutair bestuurder) at any time, yet procedural errors or a failure to address the employment relationship can expose the company to annulment claims, injunctions and significant compensation awards. With governance scrutiny intensifying in 2026, boards and shareholders need a defensible, step-by-step process that satisfies both corporate and employment requirements. This guide sets out exactly that process, from convening the meeting to registering the change and managing litigation risk.
When any step involves doubt, particularly around employment consequences, conflicts of interest or minority-shareholder objections, engage specialist Dutch corporate or employment counsel before proceeding.
The starting point for the dismissal of directors in the Netherlands is a foundational principle of Dutch company law: the body that appoints a director also has the power to remove that director. For a Dutch B.V. (besloten vennootschap) or N.V. (naamloze vennootschap), this is ordinarily the general meeting of shareholders (algemene vergadering van aandeelhouders, or AVA). This rule is codified in Book 2 of the Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek Boek 2), which provides that the general meeting may at all times suspend or dismiss a director. The removal is a corporate act: it takes effect immediately upon the passing of the resolution and does not require the director’s consent.
Crucially, this power cannot be contracted away entirely. Shareholders cannot agree, whether in a shareholders’ agreement or the articles, to permanently prevent the general meeting from exercising its dismissal right. They can, however, shape the procedural requirements, and this is where careful review of the articles of association becomes essential before any dismissal attempt.
Only a director who has been formally appointed as a statutair bestuurder under the articles falls within the corporate-law removal regime. A de facto managing director, someone who exercises directorial functions without formal appointment, is typically governed solely by their employment or management contract. The distinction matters because the procedural safeguards, employment consequences and litigation risks differ materially between the two categories.
The articles of association may require a qualified majority (for example, two-thirds of votes cast) or a minimum quorum for a valid dismissal resolution. Some articles grant a specific class of shares a binding nomination or veto right. Before convening the meeting, shareholders must verify these requirements to avoid passing a resolution that is later annulled for procedural defect.
| Director Type | Who Can Remove | Notice / Grounds / Employment Overlap |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory (statutair) director appointed by AVA | General meeting of shareholders (appointing body) | Removal is a corporate act; employment consequences depend on a separate employment or management agreement, may trigger termination rules and compensation obligations. |
| Managing director (non-statutory; de facto) | Governed by management agreement and/or board decision; removal typically requires contractual steps | Employment and contractual termination rules normally apply; reasonable grounds under Article 7:669 of the Dutch Civil Code may be required. |
| Board member under supervisory board (structuurregime) model | Depends on entity structure, the supervisory board may appoint and dismiss management board members | Removal may involve supervisory board rules; employment overlap varies by contract and articles. |
After the resolution is passed, the company must register the change in the Trade Register maintained by the Dutch Chamber of Commerce (KvK). Until registration, the former director may still be able to bind the company vis-à-vis third parties who are unaware of the removal. Prompt filing, ideally within days of the resolution, is therefore a critical risk-mitigation step.
Defective notice is the single most common ground on which a dismissed director successfully challenges a shareholders’ resolution for director removal in the Netherlands. Every procedural step must be documented and defensible.
The following is provided for guidance only, seek legal advice before use.
“The management board of [Company Name] B.V. hereby convenes an extraordinary general meeting of shareholders to be held on [date] at [time] at [location]. Agenda item [number]: Proposal to dismiss [Director Name] as statutory director (statutair bestuurder) of the Company, with immediate effect. [Director Name] is hereby invited to attend the meeting and to address the shareholders prior to the vote on this agenda item.”
For guidance only, seek legal advice before use.
“The general meeting of shareholders of [Company Name] B.V., having considered the evidence presented and having heard the advisory opinion of [Director Name], resolves to dismiss [Director Name] as statutory director of the Company with immediate effect. The management board is instructed to file the change with the Dutch Chamber of Commerce (KvK) without delay.”
Dutch law applies different standards depending on whether one is examining the corporate act of removal or the employment-law consequences of that removal. Failing to distinguish between the two is a frequent, and costly, error when dismissing a director of a company in the Netherlands.
Under Book 2 of the Dutch Civil Code, shareholders may remove a statutory director at any time and, strictly speaking, need not demonstrate “grounds” in the employment-law sense. The general meeting’s power is, however, subject to the duty to act reasonably and fairly (redelijkheid en billijkheid). A removal decision that is arbitrary, taken in bad faith or that constitutes an abuse of majority power can be annulled by the court under Section 2:15 of the Dutch Civil Code.
Where the statutory director also holds an employment contract, the corporate removal will, in most cases, simultaneously terminate the employment relationship. This is the consequence of the Hoge Raad’s landmark 15 April 2005 ruling, which established that the removal of a statutory director as a corporate act in principle also ends the employment agreement, unless the parties have expressly agreed otherwise or a statutory prohibition on termination applies (such as during illness). However, the employment termination must still comply with the notice requirements and reasonable grounds for dismissal under Article 7:669 of the Dutch Civil Code.
If the company cannot demonstrate reasonable grounds, the director may be entitled to a billijke vergoeding (equitable compensation) in addition to the statutory transition payment.
Courts will scrutinise the removal process for procedural fairness. Industry observers expect continued judicial attention to cases where majority shareholders use their removal power to circumvent minority protections or to extract concessions unrelated to the director’s performance. Maintaining a robust evidence pack and transparent minutes is the strongest defence against such challenges.
The intersection of corporate removal and employment law is the area of greatest financial exposure when appointing and removing a director of a Dutch B.V. company. Getting this wrong can turn a lawful corporate decision into a six- or seven-figure compensation claim.
Following the Hoge Raad‘s 15 April 2005 line of jurisprudence, the removal of a statutory director by the general meeting of shareholders terminates both the corporate appointment and the employment agreement simultaneously. The statutory director does not have access to the usual UWV (Uitvoeringsinstituut Werknemersverzekeringen) or subdistrict court route to challenge the dismissal as an “ordinary” employee would, the corporate removal is decisive. However, the employment-law protections are not extinguished entirely:
The likely practical effect of the current case-law trend is that companies will increasingly seek to negotiate separation agreements before or immediately after the shareholders’ vote. A well-drafted separation agreement can provide certainty on the severance amount, include non-compete and confidentiality undertakings, and avoid the unpredictability of a billijke vergoeding claim.
Not every managing director under Dutch law has an employment contract. Some directors, particularly those appointed via a personal holding company, operate under a management agreement (managementovereenkomst). In such cases, the employment-law protections described above do not apply. The termination is governed by the terms of the management agreement and general contract law. However, courts have on occasion “pierced” the management agreement structure and reclassified the relationship as employment, particularly where the director performs work exclusively for one company, is subject to instructions, and has no genuine entrepreneurial risk. The dismissal of statutory directors engaged via management agreements therefore still requires careful contractual analysis.
In many cases, it is neither practical nor prudent to leave the director in office during the period between the decision to pursue removal and the shareholders’ meeting. Dutch law permits interim measures, but these must be executed correctly to avoid creating additional claims.
The general meeting of shareholders, or, in some corporate structures, the supervisory board, may suspend a statutory director pending investigation. The suspension should be communicated in writing, state the reasons, and specify its duration. The director remains entitled to remuneration during suspension.
Warning: An improper or disproportionate suspension, for example, one that is publicly humiliating or imposed without any factual basis, can itself give rise to a damages claim by the director. Always document the justification and keep the suspension proportionate to the risk.
A director who has been removed from office has several legal avenues to challenge the decision. Shareholders and companies should prepare for these scenarios proactively. Understanding the litigation landscape is essential to the question of how to dismiss a director in the Netherlands without undue exposure.
Under Section 2:15 of the Dutch Civil Code, a director (or any interested party) may petition the court to annul a shareholders’ resolution on the grounds that it was taken in conflict with the law, the articles of association, or the principles of reasonableness and fairness. Common annulment grounds include:
Separately, the director may claim damages in the subdistrict court for wrongful termination of the employment relationship, seeking the transition payment and, where the employer’s conduct was seriously culpable, equitable compensation.
A director who learns of an impending dismissal may seek urgent injunctive relief in summary proceedings before the preliminary relief judge (voorzieningenrechter). The court can order the company to postpone the shareholders’ meeting, prohibit the vote, or set conditions for the dismissal process. Early indications suggest that courts will grant interim relief where there is a clear procedural defect or imminent irreparable harm, but will be reluctant to interfere with a properly convened meeting on substantive grounds.
Litigation over director removal in the Netherlands can be protracted and expensive, particularly where the director combines a corporate annulment petition with an employment claim and a request for summary relief. Industry observers expect that in most cases, a negotiated settlement, whether before or shortly after the vote, will be more cost-effective than full litigation, provided the company has maintained a defensible record. Courts have limited power to order reinstatement of a statutory director, and in practice, reinstatement is rare; the remedy is almost always monetary compensation.
To support a lawful and well-documented dismissal process, the following templates and tools should be prepared in advance. All templates are provided for guidance only, seek legal advice before use.
The question of how to dismiss a director in the Netherlands sits at the intersection of corporate governance and employment law, and getting either dimension wrong carries substantial financial and reputational risk. By following a structured process, verifying authority, gathering evidence, convening a properly noticed meeting, passing a defensible resolution and addressing employment obligations, shareholders can remove a director lawfully while minimising exposure to annulment claims and compensation awards.
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.
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