[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how to file for insolvency in the Netherlands 2026

How to File for Insolvency in the Netherlands in 2026: Step-by-step Guide for Directors

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: 4 June 2026, includes EU Directive (30 March 2026) updates.

Understanding how to file for insolvency in the Netherlands in 2026 is now more urgent than at any point in the past decade. On 30 March 2026 the Council of the EU adopted Directive (EU) 2026/799, the EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive, which for the first time obliges every Member State to impose either a directors’ duty to file for insolvency proceedings or a directors’ duty to notify creditors publicly, a choice that directly shapes personal liability exposure for every Dutch board member. This guide sets out the eligibility criteria, required documents, procedural steps, costs and critical deadlines that directors, CFOs and in-house counsel must follow when insolvency becomes unavoidable or imminent.

It also explains how the 2026 Directive interacts with the existing Dutch obligation to report an inability to pay taxes and premiums (the melding betalingsonmacht) to the Belastingdienst within 14 days, and maps the practical timeline from the first board discussion to the appointment of a curator by the court.

Overview of the Insolvency Process and Who It Applies To

Dutch insolvency law, codified primarily in the Faillissementswet (Dutch Bankruptcy Act), provides three formal routes when a company can no longer pay its debts as they fall due:

  • Faillissement (bankruptcy). The most common end-state proceeding. A petition is filed at the competent district court, which appoints a curator (court-appointed insolvency administrator) to liquidate assets and distribute proceeds to creditors in statutory priority order. Either the debtor company itself or one or more creditors may file the petition. In rare cases the Public Prosecutor may also request a bankruptcy declaration.
  • Surseance van betaling (suspension of payments). A temporary moratorium intended to give a viable company breathing room to restructure. Only the debtor may apply. The court appoints an administrator (bewindvoerder) who works alongside the existing board. If restructuring fails, surseance usually converts into full bankruptcy.
  • WHOA (Wet Homologatie Onderhands Akkoord). A court-confirmation procedure for an out-of-court restructuring plan, modelled in part on the EU Restructuring Directive. A company or its creditors may propose a plan that binds dissenting classes of creditors once court-approved. The WHOA is designed as a pre-insolvency tool and does not result in the appointment of a curator unless the plan fails.

This procedural guide focuses principally on the bankruptcy (faillissement) route and the directors’ obligations that accompany it, because that is the pathway with the sharpest personal-liability consequences. Directors who believe the company is still viable should consider surseance or the WHOA before filing for bankruptcy, but the preparatory steps, document-gathering and Belastingdienst notifications described below apply regardless of the route chosen. For a broader comparison of international insolvency frameworks, see the Global Law Experts practice-area guide.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Filing

Before any petition is drafted, the board must confirm that the company meets the legal threshold for insolvency and that internal governance requirements have been satisfied. Getting this wrong, filing prematurely, or failing to file at all, can expose individual directors to personal claims.

Financial Indicators Directors Must Check

Under the Faillissementswet, a company may be declared bankrupt if it has ceased to pay its debts. Dutch courts interpret this broadly: it is not necessary to prove total asset deficiency (balance-sheet insolvency). Rather, the practical test centres on cashflow insolvency, the inability to pay debts as they fall due. Directors should assess the following indicators:

  • Cashflow test. Are trade creditors, tax obligations or employee salary payments overdue? Has the company failed to pay two or more creditors whose claims are currently due and payable?
  • Balance-sheet analysis. Do liabilities exceed the realisable value of assets? While not strictly required for a bankruptcy declaration, a negative balance sheet strengthens the evidential case and is relevant to director liability questions.
  • Imminent insolvency. Under the WHOA and under the new Directive framework, proceedings may also be considered where insolvency is likely but has not yet crystallised. Directors should model 30-, 90- and 180-day cashflow scenarios to determine whether the company will be able to meet obligations as they fall due.
  • Tax and premium arrears. Where the company has failed to pay payroll taxes, VAT or social-security premiums, the Belastingdienst expects a formal report of inability to pay, the melding betalingsonmacht, within 14 days of the missed payment date.

Corporate Governance Checks

Dutch corporate law requires that the decision to file for insolvency (or to apply for surseance) is properly authorised within the company’s governance structure. The following steps should be completed before any external filing:

  • Board resolution. A formal board resolution confirming that the company is insolvent or imminently insolvent and authorising the filing of a petition. This resolution should record the financial position, the options considered and the reasons for choosing the selected route.
  • Shareholder notification. While shareholder consent is not legally required to file a bankruptcy petition, best practice, and many articles of association, require that shareholders be informed before or simultaneously with the filing.
  • Delegated authority. If the filing is to be made by external counsel on behalf of the company, a power of attorney or express board authorisation is required. Courts may reject a petition that is not demonstrably filed on behalf of an authorised organ of the company.

Step-by-Step Procedure: How to File for Insolvency in the Netherlands

The steps below represent the typical sequence a Dutch director will follow when filing for bankruptcy. The timeline is compressed, in practice, some steps overlap. The summary table at the end of this section maps each step to the responsible actor and a realistic duration.

Step 1, Take Immediate Director Actions (Day 0–3)

As soon as it becomes clear that the company cannot meet its obligations, the board should act without delay:

  1. Cease all non-essential payments. Prioritise payroll, essential suppliers and secured-creditor obligations only where required to preserve going-concern value or prevent immediate harm.
  2. Convene an emergency board meeting and formally record (in signed minutes) the company’s financial position, the alternatives considered and the decision to move towards a formal proceeding.
  3. Secure the company’s physical and digital records: bank statements, creditor and debtor ledgers, contracts, employment files, and accounting software access credentials.
  4. Prepare a short-term cashflow forecast covering at least 7–14 days, identifying every payment that is due and every receipt that is expected.

The deliverables from this step, signed board minutes and a current cashflow snapshot, form the evidentiary bedrock for every subsequent action. Without them, directors will struggle to demonstrate that they acted promptly and in the interests of creditors.

Step 2, Engage Professional Advisers and Assess Options (Day 1–7)

Directors should instruct specialist insolvency counsel and, where appropriate, an insolvency practitioner or potential curator candidate as early as possible:

  1. Appoint insolvency counsel with experience before the relevant district court (Amsterdam, Rotterdam or The Hague depending on the company’s registered seat).
  2. Instruct counsel to prepare an initial options analysis: is WHOA feasible? Is surseance realistic? Or is the only remaining route a bankruptcy filing?
  3. Begin compiling a creditor spreadsheet listing every known creditor, the amount owed, whether the claim is secured or unsecured, and the date each payment fell due.

The engagement letter and initial creditor list are the key deliverables. Early professional engagement also reduces the risk of inadvertent preference payments or transactions that a curator could later challenge as pauliana (avoidance actions under the Faillissementswet).

Step 3, Complete Notification and Pre-Filing Reporting (Day 3–14)

This step has become significantly more consequential in 2026 because of the new EU Directive framework. Directors must now consider two parallel obligations:

Belastingdienst melding betalingsonmacht. Where the company has failed to pay payroll tax, VAT or social-security premiums by the due date, it must report its inability to pay to the Belastingdienst within 14 days of that missed payment date. The report is made using the official Melding van betalingsonmacht bij belastingen en premies form published by the Belastingdienst. Failure to file this report within the 14-day window creates a rebuttable presumption that any non-payment of those taxes was caused by director mismanagement, placing the burden of proof squarely on the director to demonstrate otherwise. A parallel obligation exists for employee-insurance premiums administered by UWV.

EU Directive duty-to-file or duty-to-notify. Directive (EU) 2026/799 requires each Member State to choose between imposing a strict duty on directors to file for insolvency within a prescribed period, or allowing that duty to be discharged by formal public notification. At the time of writing the Netherlands has not yet published its implementing legislation. Industry observers expect the Dutch government to align its transposition with the existing melding betalingsonmacht framework, but directors should monitor the official gazette (Staatsblad) for the definitive implementing measure.

Until transposition is complete, the conservative approach is to treat any sustained inability to pay debts as they fall due as an immediate trigger for both the Belastingdienst notification and for engaging insolvency counsel to evaluate whether a formal filing is required.

Deliverables at this step: completed and sent melding betalingsonmacht form (retain proof of delivery), any creditor notice required under the chosen Directive route, and a log recording the date and manner of each notification.

Step 4, File the Insolvency Petition at the Competent Court (Day 7–21)

Once the decision to proceed with bankruptcy is confirmed, the petition must be prepared and filed at the district court (rechtbank) that has jurisdiction over the company’s registered seat:

  1. Draft the petition. The petition is typically prepared by counsel and signed by a director or other authorised representative of the company. It must set out the grounds on which the company contends it has ceased to pay its debts and attach supporting financial evidence.
  2. Attach exhibits: the creditor list, the most recent annual accounts, management accounts, the cashflow forecast, bank statements, and the board resolution authorising the filing.
  3. Pay the court filing fee. The fee varies by court and case type, directors should confirm the current schedule directly with the relevant district court registry before filing.
  4. The court will schedule an initial hearing. At this hearing the judge considers the petition and, if satisfied, declares the company bankrupt and appoints a curator (and a supervisory judge, the rechter-commissaris).

In straightforward debtor-filed cases, courts can process petitions rapidly, sometimes within days. Complex or contested petitions may take longer.

Step 5, Fulfil Post-Filing Duties Toward the Curator (Day 0 – Ongoing)

From the moment of the bankruptcy declaration, directors lose the authority to manage company assets. All management power transfers to the curator. Directors are obliged to:

  1. Hand over all books, records, digital systems and access credentials to the curator promptly.
  2. Cooperate fully with the curator’s investigations, including providing information on transactions entered into during the period prior to bankruptcy.
  3. Refrain from entering into any new obligations on behalf of the company.
  4. Notify key counterparties (landlords, major suppliers, licensors) of the bankruptcy, to the extent the curator requests or permits.

Step 6, Creditor and Public Notices (Curator and Court Responsibility)

Publication of the bankruptcy is handled by the court and curator. The bankruptcy declaration is entered in the Central Insolvency Register (Centraal Insolventieregister) maintained by the Rechtspraak and published in the Staatscourant. The curator sets a deadline for creditors to submit their claims, convenes creditor meetings and begins the process of asset realisation and distribution.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Immediate director actions (stop non-essential payments, secure records) Board / CEO / CFO Day 0–3
2. Engage counsel and insolvency practitioner; assess options Directors (with counsel) Day 1–7
3. Report betalingsonmacht to Belastingdienst / UWV; assess Directive notification duty Directors / tax representative Within 14 days of missed payment
4. File insolvency petition at district court Debtor company (board signs) or creditor Day 7–21 (depends on preparation)
5. Court hearing and appointment of curator / rechter-commissaris Court (judge) 1–4 weeks from filing
6. Asset inventory, creditor claims period, distribution Curator / administrator 4–12 weeks (varies considerably)

Required Documents and Information

Gathering the documents needed for a Dutch insolvency filing is one of the most time-consuming elements of the process. Directors who have these items assembled before counsel is engaged will materially reduce both cost and delay. The table below serves as a practical checklist.

Document Notes
Board minutes authorising the filing and confirming the insolvency position Issued by the company; signed by all directors; retain original and PDF copy
Most recent annual accounts (filed with KvK) Prepared by finance team; audited if available; courts expect the latest filed set
Management accounts and cashflow forecast (30 / 90 / 180 days) Prepared by CFO or external accountant; must show liquidity stress scenarios
Bank statements (last 3–6 months, all accounts) Bank-issued PDF; identify any blocked or seized accounts
Complete creditor ledger with outstanding obligations Company records; include creditor name, address, amount, due date, and security status
Signed insolvency petition (if debtor files) Drafted by counsel; includes exhibits and a summary of grounds
Tax and payroll records; evidence of unpaid taxes and premiums From Belastingdienst / payroll provider; required for melding betalingsonmacht proof
Employment contracts and employee list For UWV insolvency-benefit claims; include salary details and notice periods
Leases, security documents, and charge-register extracts To identify secured creditors and encumbered assets; check public registers
Proof of notification to Belastingdienst / public register (if Directive notification route used) Retain stamped copy, email confirmation or registered-post receipt as evidence of timely compliance

Missing or incomplete documentation is one of the most common causes of delay. Courts and curators will request these items shortly after the filing, and any gaps will reflect poorly on director conduct, potentially increasing personal-liability exposure.

Timeline and Key Deadlines

Dutch insolvency procedure is notable for its speed once proceedings begin. The critical deadlines sit in the pre-filing phase, where director action (or inaction) has the most severe personal consequences. The table below summarises the deadlines every director must observe.

Action Deadline Consequence of Missing It
Melding betalingsonmacht to Belastingdienst Within 14 days of the missed tax or premium payment date Rebuttable presumption of director mismanagement; increased personal-liability risk for unpaid tax debts
Directors’ duty-to-file or duty-to-notify window (Directive (EU) 2026/799) To be set by Dutch implementing legislation (Directive provides for a prescribed period following onset of financial distress) Potential personal liability for worsening the position of creditors; sanctions as determined by transposing law
Filing of insolvency petition at court No fixed statutory deadline, but delay increases director exposure Prolonged trading while insolvent may ground wrongful-trading / director-liability claims by the curator
Initial court hearing after filing Typically 1–3 weeks from the date of filing (court-dependent) Not director-controlled; but incomplete petitions may be adjourned, adding further delay
Creditor claims submission window Set by the curator after the bankruptcy declaration (varies) Late claims may be rejected; creditors should monitor the Central Insolvency Register

Because the Netherlands has not yet published the formal implementing legislation for Directive (EU) 2026/799, the precise duty-to-file or duty-to-notify window remains subject to confirmation. Directors should monitor the Staatsblad (official gazette) for publication of the transposing act. Until that instrument is in force, the prudent course is to treat any sustained inability to pay debts as they fall due as an immediate trigger for professional advice and for filing the melding betalingsonmacht within 14 days.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Filing for insolvency in the Netherlands involves several categories of cost. Some are paid by the company (or the director personally, in limited circumstances); others are charged against the insolvent estate and paid from realisation proceeds.

Item Typical Amount (Indicative) Notes
Court filing fee for bankruptcy petition Varies by court and case type Confirm the current fee schedule with the registry of the relevant district court before filing
Insolvency counsel initial retainer € 2,500 – € 15,000 (range) Depends on complexity, urgency and firm; larger cross-border cases sit at the upper end
Curator / insolvency-practitioner fees Paid from the estate; variable Charged at senior-practitioner rates; approved by the supervisory judge
Urgent payroll bridge (if required) Depends on payroll size and arrears UWV may pay employee insolvency benefits covering unpaid wages, holiday pay and notice-period compensation

Where the company has employees, UWV can step in to pay outstanding wages, accrued holiday pay and salary during the statutory notice period through the insolvency-benefit scheme (loongarantieregeling). Employees must apply directly to UWV. VAT and payroll-tax obligations continue to accrue during surseance (if that route is chosen) and any unpaid taxes rank as preferential claims in the subsequent bankruptcy.

What Changes in 2026: The EU Directive and Its Effects on Dutch Directors

Directive (EU) 2026/799, adopted by the Council on 30 March 2026, represents the most significant EU-level reform of insolvency law in over two decades. The Directive introduces harmonised minimum rules across five pillars: avoidance actions, pre-pack sales, a directors’ duty to file (or notify), creditors’ committees and cross-border asset tracing. For Dutch directors, the most immediately consequential pillar is the duty-to-file framework.

The Directive gives each Member State a binary choice. It may require directors to file for insolvency proceedings within a prescribed period after the onset of financial distress (the duty to file). Alternatively, it may permit directors to discharge that obligation by making a formal public notification of the company’s distressed state (the duty to notify). Both options must be backed by effective sanctions, including, at a minimum, the possibility of personal liability for directors who fail to comply.

The likely practical effect for the Netherlands will depend on the model the Dutch legislature selects. Industry observers expect that Dutch lawmakers will seek to build on the existing melding betalingsonmacht infrastructure rather than create an entirely new obligation, but the precise mechanism and timeline are not yet confirmed. Directors should therefore adopt a conservative approach: treat the Belastingdienst 14-day reporting deadline as a minimum standard and simultaneously prepare for a broader filing or notification duty once the transposing legislation is published.

Practical Director Checklist for 2026 Changes

  • If the Netherlands implements a strict duty to file: consult insolvency counsel immediately upon the onset of financial distress; preserve liquidity; avoid preferential payments; document all board decisions contemporaneously.
  • If the Netherlands implements a duty to notify: prepare a register-notification template in advance; maintain a proof-of-notification log (date, method, recipient); still preserve evidence of timely action through signed board minutes and professional advice records.
  • In either case: file the melding betalingsonmacht with the Belastingdienst within 14 days of any missed tax or premium payment; monitor the Staatsblad for the implementing act; and do not rely on informal creditor discussions as a substitute for formal compliance.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Late or missing melding betalingsonmacht. Failing to report an inability to pay taxes within 14 days creates a presumption of director mismanagement. Mitigation: diarise the 14-day window from the first missed payment date and file the report immediately, even if the company is still exploring restructuring options.
  • Continuing to trade when insolvency is inevitable. Directors who incur new liabilities when bankruptcy is inevitable risk personal claims by the curator under the Faillissementswet. Mitigation: once the board recognises that the company cannot be rescued, cease non-essential trading and file promptly.
  • Inadequate record-keeping. A curator who finds incomplete or missing accounts in the three years prior to bankruptcy may invoke the statutory presumption of director mismanagement. Mitigation: ensure all annual accounts are filed with the Chamber of Commerce (KvK) on time and that management accounts are maintained monthly.
  • Failing to document board decisions. Oral discussions about the company’s financial position are difficult to prove. Mitigation: record every material board decision in signed minutes, including the date, attendees, information available and reasoning.
  • Confusing informal creditor negotiations with formal restructuring. An agreement reached informally with some creditors is not a court-sanctioned restructuring plan and does not offer the same protections. Mitigation: if formal protection is needed, use the WHOA or surseance procedure.
  • Making selective payments to connected parties. Payments to shareholders, group companies or related parties in the run-up to bankruptcy are prime targets for pauliana avoidance actions. Mitigation: obtain independent legal advice before making any payment to a connected party once insolvency is in prospect.

Conclusion

Understanding how to file for insolvency in the Netherlands in 2026 requires directors to integrate long-standing Dutch obligations, the melding betalingsonmacht, the Faillissementswet filing procedure and the corporate-governance requirements for board authorisation, with the new framework introduced by Directive (EU) 2026/799. The procedural steps, document requirements, deadlines and cost structures set out in this guide provide a practical roadmap from the first indication of financial distress through to the appointment of a curator. Directors who act promptly, document their decisions and seek specialist advice at the earliest possible stage will be in the strongest position to manage their personal-liability exposure and to achieve the best available outcome for creditors.

To connect with an experienced insolvency practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martijn Dellebeke at De Vos & Partners Advocaten N.V., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. EUR‑Lex, Directive (EU) 2026/799 (EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive)
  2. Council of the EU, Press Release (30 March 2026)
  3. Faillissementswet (Dutch Bankruptcy Act), wetten.overheid.nl
  4. Belastingdienst, Melding van betalingsonmacht bij belastingen en premies
  5. De Rechtspraak, International Insolvency
  6. UWV, Applying for an Insolvency Benefit
  7. Matheson, EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive Approved: Practical Implications

FAQs

When must directors file for insolvency (or notify) under the new 2026 rules?
The precise obligation depends on how the Netherlands transposes Directive (EU) 2026/799. The Directive requires Member States to choose between imposing a duty to file within a prescribed period of financial distress or allowing directors to discharge that duty by public notification. Until the Dutch implementing legislation is published, directors should follow a conservative approach: if the company is unable to pay debts as they fall due or insolvency is imminent, consult specialised counsel immediately and complete the melding betalingsonmacht to the Belastingdienst within 14 days of any missed tax or premium payment.
For bankruptcy, prepare a petition setting out the grounds (inability to pay debts), attach supporting financial documentation (annual accounts, management accounts, creditor list, bank statements), and file the petition at the district court with jurisdiction over the company’s registered seat. For surseance (suspension of payments), only the debtor may apply, and the petition follows a similar format but must include a draft restructuring proposal or at least evidence that restructuring is a realistic prospect. The step-by-step procedure and required documents are set out in detail in the sections above.
The core requirements include: signed board minutes authorising the filing, the most recent annual accounts, management accounts with a 90-day cashflow forecast, bank statements covering the last three to six months, a complete creditor ledger with amounts and due dates, the signed insolvency petition itself (if the debtor files), tax and payroll records, an employee list, copies of leases and security documents, and proof of any notifications to the Belastingdienst or public register. A comprehensive checklist is provided in the required-documents table above.
Dutch insolvency law follows a strict priority hierarchy. Estate claims (costs of the curator, post-bankruptcy obligations) rank first. Preferential creditors, principally employees (for unpaid wages, holiday pay and pension contributions) and the tax authorities (for certain tax debts), rank next. Secured creditors (holders of a right of pledge or mortgage) may enforce their security largely outside the bankruptcy estate, subject to a cooling-off period that the court may impose. Unsecured creditors receive a pro rata distribution from any remaining proceeds, and shareholders rank last.
Yes. Under the Faillissementswet, any creditor, whether Dutch or foreign, may petition the court for a bankruptcy declaration, provided the company has its centre of main interests (COMI) or an establishment in the Netherlands and the creditor can demonstrate an unpaid, due and payable claim. Cross-border insolvency proceedings are governed by the EU Insolvency Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2015/848), and the Dutch courts have established processes for recognising foreign proceedings and vice versa. Foreign creditors should obtain Dutch legal advice on jurisdiction and procedure before filing.
The consequences are significant. Failing to file the melding betalingsonmacht within 14 days triggers a presumption that the failure to pay taxes was caused by mismanagement, potentially making the director personally liable for those tax debts. Under the Faillissementswet, a curator may bring a claim against directors for kennelijk onbehoorlijk bestuur (manifest mismanagement) where inadequate administration or untimely action contributed to the insolvency. Directive (EU) 2026/799 requires Member States to back the new duty to file (or notify) with effective sanctions, which may include additional personal-liability exposure once the Dutch implementing legislation is in force. The remedy in every case is immediate professional advice and meticulous contemporaneous documentation of every decision taken.
Timescales vary considerably. A straightforward, asset-light bankruptcy may be concluded within three to six months. Complex cases involving disputed claims, litigation by the curator, or cross-border assets can take several years. The initial phase, from filing the petition to the appointment of a curator, is comparatively fast, often resolved within one to four weeks. The bulk of the time is consumed by asset realisation, claim adjudication and distribution.

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

How to File for Insolvency in the Netherlands in 2026: Step-by-step Guide for Directors

Send welcome message

Custom Message