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terminating an agreement under dutch law

Terminating an Agreement Under Dutch Law: Breach vs Convenience, Notice and Compensation

By Global Law Experts
– posted 44 minutes ago

Whether you are an in-house counsel renegotiating a supply deal or a commercial director exiting a joint venture, understanding the rules for terminating an agreement under Dutch law is essential to managing risk and preserving value. The Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek, or BW) provides several distinct pathways for ending a contract, from termination for breach (ontbinding) under Article 6:265 BW to negotiated exit by mutual consent, each carrying different procedural requirements, notice obligations and financial consequences. This guide offers a practical, step-by-step roadmap through those pathways, complete with checklists, sample templates and a compensation-exposure comparison, so that business stakeholders operating in or with the Netherlands can act quickly, lawfully and with full awareness of their exposure.

Can a Commercial Contract Be Cancelled?

Short answer: yes. Dutch law permits the termination of commercial contracts through multiple routes, but each comes with specific conditions that must be satisfied before the contract is lawfully at an end. The principal mechanism for breach-based termination is ontbinding (Article 6:265 BW), which allows the aggrieved party to dissolve the contract when the other side fails to perform. For non-breach scenarios, a contractual termination-for-convenience clause or a mutual termination agreement provides the lawful exit.

Before taking any step, consider the following:

  • Identify the ground. Is the termination triggered by breach, by a clause in the contract, by expiry of the fixed term, or by mutual agreement?
  • Check notice requirements. Most breach-based terminations require a prior ingebrekestelling (notice of default) giving the other party a reasonable cure period.
  • Quantify your exposure. The financial consequences differ dramatically depending on the route chosen, see the compensation comparison table below.
  • Preserve records. Document every instance of non-performance, every communication and every remediation attempt. Courts and arbitral tribunals scrutinise the paper trail.

The sections that follow break down each of these considerations in detail, with templates and worked examples for international commercial contracts.

How Contracts Typically End in the Netherlands

What Are the 5 Major Ways of Terminating a Contract?

Dutch law recognises several routes by which a contractual relationship comes to an end. The five most common are:

  1. Performance or expiry. The contract is fulfilled, or its fixed term expires. No additional action is required beyond settling any outstanding obligations.
  2. Mutual agreement. The parties agree, often in a separate mutual termination agreement, to end the contract on negotiated terms, including a release of future claims.
  3. Contractual termination clause (convenience). A termination clause in the commercial contract allows one or both parties to end the relationship by giving notice, typically without needing to show fault.
  4. Termination for breach, ontbinding (Article 6:265 BW). Where one party fails to perform, the other may dissolve the contract either by written declaration or by court order, provided the breach is sufficiently serious.
  5. Operation of law. Insolvency, impossibility of performance or force majeure may discharge the contract automatically or give a party statutory grounds to terminate.

Each route carries different obligations around notice, financial settlement and post-termination conduct. The critical distinction for most businesses lies between routes 3 and 4, termination for convenience versus termination for breach, which is examined next.

Terminating an Agreement Under Dutch Law: Breach (Ontbinding) vs Convenience

The Ontbinding Procedure (Article 6:265 BW)

Ontbinding is the primary statutory remedy when one party defaults on its contractual obligations. Under Article 6:265 BW, every failure in the performance of an obligation entitles the other party to dissolve the contract in whole or in part, unless the shortcoming, given its minor significance, does not justify dissolution and its consequences.

In practice, the process unfolds as follows:

  1. Identify the breach. The non-performance must relate to a material obligation, not every minor delay or defect will suffice.
  2. Send an ingebrekestelling (notice of default). This written notice must specify the breach, grant the defaulting party a reasonable period to cure, and warn that failure to cure will trigger termination. A template is provided in the annexes below.
  3. Allow the cure period to lapse. If the other party remedies the breach within the stated period, termination is no longer available on that ground.
  4. Declare ontbinding. The aggrieved party may terminate by written declaration (extrajudicial ontbinding) or by requesting the court to dissolve the contract. The extrajudicial route is faster but can be challenged in court afterwards.
  5. Claim damages. Ontbinding does not by itself discharge a damages claim. The aggrieved party may claim full compensation for losses caused by the non-performance under the general liability provisions of the BW.

Industry observers note that Dutch courts are generally reluctant to uphold termination where the breach is trivial or where the terminating party has not followed the notice procedure strictly. The cure period must genuinely allow the defaulting party to remedy the issue.

Termination for Convenience: Clauses and Enforceability

Many B2B contracts include a termination clause for the commercial contract that permits either party to exit by giving notice, irrespective of fault. Under Dutch law, such clauses are in principle enforceable, provided they are clear and do not conflict with mandatory statutory protections (for example, agency law under Article 7:428 BW and beyond).

A well-drafted convenience clause typically covers:

  • Notice period. The minimum period of notice before the termination takes effect.
  • Notice method. How notice must be delivered (registered post, email with confirmation, or via a contractually specified platform).
  • Exit fee or break fee. Any financial compensation payable on termination.
  • Post-termination obligations. Return of property, wind-down procedures, continued confidentiality, and IP assignment or licence terms.

Sample convenience clause (short form):

“Either party may terminate this Agreement for convenience by giving the other party not less than [●] months’ written notice, such notice to be sent by registered post. Upon termination, the provisions of clauses [●] (Confidentiality), [●] (IP) and [●] (Post-termination obligations) shall survive.”

The enforceability of a convenience clause may be challenged where it is ambiguous, where it is invoked in bad faith, or where it produces an unconscionable outcome in the specific circumstances. Dutch courts apply the principles of reasonableness and fairness (redelijkheid en billijkheid, Article 6:248 BW) as a corrective mechanism.

Notice Procedures: Notice of Default and Reasonable Notice for Termination in the Netherlands

When a Notice of Default (Ingebrekestelling) Is Required

A notice of default is a prerequisite for most breach-based termination and damages claims under Dutch law. Under Article 6:82 BW, the debtor is placed in default (in verzuim) by a written notice requiring performance within a reasonable period, unless one of the statutory exceptions applies.

A valid ingebrekestelling must contain:

  • A clear description of the breach. Identify precisely which obligation has not been performed.
  • A reasonable cure period. What is “reasonable” depends on the nature of the obligation. For a simple payment obligation, a period of 14 days is common; for complex deliverables, several weeks or more may be appropriate.
  • A warning of consequences. State that failure to cure within the period will result in termination and/or a claim for damages.

No notice of default is required where: (a) performance is permanently impossible; (b) the debtor has already indicated it will not perform; or (c) a contractually agreed deadline for performance (fatale termijn) has been missed, automatically placing the debtor in default.

Reasonable Notice for Termination: Tests and Business Examples

For termination of long-term commercial contracts under Dutch law, including distributorships, franchise arrangements and rolling service agreements, there is no single statutory notice period. Dutch courts determine what constitutes reasonable notice for termination in the Netherlands on a case-by-case basis, applying a proportionality test that considers:

  • Duration of the relationship. The longer the contract has been in force, the longer the notice period the court is likely to require.
  • Level of dependency. If the other party has made significant relationship-specific investments or restructured its business around the contract, a longer wind-down period is expected.
  • Industry practice. Courts look at what is customary in the relevant sector.
  • Contractual terms. An agreed notice period will generally be respected unless it is manifestly unreasonable.

As a rough practical guide: for short-term or recently established relationships (under two years), one to three months’ notice is commonly considered reasonable. For relationships of five years or more, courts have required notice periods ranging from six months to over a year, and in some cases have awarded additional damages if the notice given was too short.

Compensation and Damages: Calculation, Mitigation and Examples

Financial exposure is the central concern when terminating an agreement under Dutch law. The general rule is that the party responsible for the breach must compensate the other party for the loss suffered as a consequence of the non-performance. Article 6:95 BW provides that damages may include both actual loss (geleden verlies) and lost profits (gederfde winst).

Key principles governing compensation include:

  • Causation. The loss must be a sufficiently direct consequence of the breach.
  • Foreseeability. Damages that were not reasonably foreseeable at the time the contract was concluded may be excluded.
  • Mitigation. The aggrieved party has a duty to take reasonable steps to limit its losses. Failure to mitigate can reduce the award.
  • Liquidated damages. If the contract includes a penalty clause (boetebeding), the agreed amount replaces the need to prove actual loss, although a court may moderate the penalty if it is manifestly excessive (Article 6:94 BW).

Compensation Exposure by Termination Type

Termination Type Typical Financial Exposure Key Legal Test
Termination for breach (ontbinding) Damages for loss caused by non-performance, plus statutory interest Non-performance + prior notice of default; foreseeability and causation (Article 6:82 BW)
Termination for convenience (contract clause) Exit fee as agreed in the clause, or a negotiated settlement amount Enforceability depends on clause clarity; unconscionability reviewed under Article 6:248 BW
Mutual termination Agreed settlement amount (negotiated between the parties) Contractual agreement; future claims barred via full mutual release
Expiry / end of fixed term None beyond outstanding obligations Contract terms govern; no additional compensation absent a specific clause
Termination due to impossibility / force majeure Possible compensation for the part already performed; limited damages Force majeure clause and general BW principles (Article 6:75 BW)

Early indications from recent commercial disputes suggest that Dutch courts are increasingly willing to scrutinise whether terminating parties have genuinely mitigated losses, particularly in sectors with readily available alternative suppliers or customers.

Immediate Termination: When It Is Permitted and a Business Checklist

How to Terminate a Contract Immediately?

Immediate termination, without granting a cure period, is the exception rather than the rule under Dutch law. It is permitted in limited circumstances:

  • The breach is so fundamental that performance has become permanently impossible. If the other party has already indicated it will not perform, or if the nature of the obligation means the deadline was essential and has passed, no notice of default is needed.
  • A contractual right to immediate termination exists. Some contracts include a clause allowing summary termination on specific trigger events, such as insolvency, change of control, or criminal conduct by a director.
  • Temporary impossibility or force majeure. Where a temporary impediment makes timely performance impossible, and the delay is such that the contract’s purpose can no longer be achieved.

Business checklist for immediate termination:

  1. Verify the legal ground. Confirm that the circumstances genuinely fall within one of the recognised exceptions to the notice-of-default requirement.
  2. Gather and preserve evidence. Assemble all correspondence, delivery records, internal memos and third-party evidence that supports the claim that the breach is fundamental.
  3. Issue a formal written termination notice. Even where no cure period is required, a clear written declaration of termination is essential. State the legal ground, reference the relevant contract clauses and BW articles, and confirm the effective date.
  4. Consider interim measures. If the counterparty is likely to dissipate assets or continue to use your IP or premises, consider applying for interim relief (a kort geding) from the Dutch court.
  5. Notify stakeholders. Alert internal teams, customers, regulators and insurers as appropriate to manage operational continuity.

Negotiated and Mutual Termination: Settlement Strategy

A mutual termination agreement in the Netherlands is often the most pragmatic route to ending a commercial relationship, particularly where both parties recognise that the contract is no longer commercially viable. This approach avoids the uncertainty and cost of litigation, and allows both sides to control the narrative and the timing.

A robust mutual termination agreement should address:

  • Effective date. When the contract ceases to have effect.
  • Transition and wind-down. Obligations during any handover period, including data migration, stock returns and customer notifications.
  • Financial settlement. Any exit payment, reimbursement of costs, or allocation of outstanding receivables.
  • Full release. A reciprocal release of all claims arising from or in connection with the contract, to avoid future disputes.
  • Surviving obligations. Confidentiality, non-compete, IP ownership or licence provisions that continue beyond termination.
  • Governing law and dispute resolution. Confirm Dutch law and the agreed forum (court or arbitration) for any disputes arising from the termination agreement itself.

Industry observers expect mutual termination to remain the dominant resolution mechanism in long-term B2B relationships, where the commercial cost of protracted litigation typically outweighs any tactical advantage of a unilateral exit.

Dispute Pathways: Litigation, Injunctions, Arbitration and Enforcement

When negotiations fail, businesses must choose between court proceedings, arbitration and other forms of alternative dispute resolution (ADR). The Netherlands offers a well-developed framework for each.

  • Civil courts. Dutch district courts (rechtbanken) handle contract disputes at first instance. Appeals lie to the Court of Appeal (gerechtshof) and, on points of law, to the Supreme Court (Hoge Raad). Proceedings are conducted in Dutch, and legal representation by a Dutch-qualified advocate is mandatory.
  • Summary proceedings (kort geding). For urgent interim relief, such as injunctions to prevent asset dissipation or to enforce a non-compete, the summary-proceedings judge can issue orders within days or weeks.
  • Arbitration. Many B2B contracts designate arbitration under the NAI (Netherlands Arbitration Institute) or ICC rules. Arbitral awards rendered in the Netherlands are enforceable domestically and, under the New York Convention, in over 170 jurisdictions.
  • Mediation. While not mandatory, mediation is increasingly encouraged by Dutch courts and can be a cost-effective preliminary step before formal proceedings.

Cost exposure in litigation can be significant: court fees, legal fees and expert costs can accumulate rapidly, and the losing party is typically ordered to contribute to the prevailing party’s costs (though the Dutch costs regime is far less aggressive than, for example, the English system). Businesses considering termination should factor in the potential dispute costs from the outset.

For businesses seeking specialist legal guidance on commercial contract termination in the Netherlands, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory provides access to experienced Dutch contract litigation practitioners.

Practical Annexes: Templates, Timeline and Decision Tree

Template 1: Notice of Default (Ingebrekestelling)

[Letterhead / Sender details]

To: [Name and address of the defaulting party]
Date: [●]
Re: Notice of default, Agreement dated [●] (the “Agreement”)

Dear [●],

We refer to the Agreement between [Party A] and [Party B] dated [●]. Under the Agreement, you were obliged to [describe the obligation, e.g., deliver [●] goods / complete [●] services / pay the invoice dated [●]] by [date].

We note that, as of today’s date, this obligation has not been fulfilled. Accordingly, we hereby place you in default and grant you a period of [●] days from the date of this letter to cure the above non-performance in full.

If the above obligation is not fulfilled within the stated period, we reserve the right to terminate (ontbinden) the Agreement and to claim full damages for any loss suffered as a result of your non-performance, in accordance with the Burgerlijk Wetboek.

Yours faithfully,
[Signature]

Template 2: Termination for Convenience Letter

[Letterhead / Sender details]

To: [Name and address of the counterparty]
Date: [●]
Re: Termination notice, Agreement dated [●]

Dear [●],

Pursuant to Clause [●] of the Agreement between [Party A] and [Party B] dated [●], we hereby give notice of termination of the Agreement for convenience. This termination shall take effect [●] months from the date of this letter, i.e., on [●].

During the notice period, both parties shall continue to perform their respective obligations under the Agreement. We propose to discuss transition arrangements at your earliest convenience.

Yours faithfully,
[Signature]

Template 3: Mutual Termination Agreement (Short Form)

The undersigned:

1. [Party A], and
2. [Party B],

Hereby agree as follows:

1. The Agreement dated [●] between the Parties (the “Agreement”) shall terminate with effect from [●] (the “Termination Date”).

2. [Party A] shall pay to [Party B] the sum of EUR [●] as a final settlement payment, due within [●] days of the Termination Date.

3. Each Party hereby irrevocably and unconditionally releases the other from all claims, demands, actions and liabilities of any kind arising from or in connection with the Agreement.

4. Clauses [●] (Confidentiality) and [●] (IP) of the Agreement shall survive termination.

5. This agreement shall be governed by Dutch law. Any disputes arising from this agreement shall be submitted to [the competent court in [●] / arbitration under [●] rules].

Signed on [●] in two originals.

Quick Timeline: Breach-Based Termination

Step Typical Timeframe Notes
Breach occurs Day 0 Document immediately
Send ingebrekestelling Day 1–7 By registered post or agreed method
Cure period expires Day 15–45 Length depends on nature of obligation
Declare ontbinding Day 15–50 Written declaration or court application
Claim damages Day 15 onwards Can be combined with ontbinding claim
Interim relief (kort geding), if needed 1–4 weeks from filing For urgent injunctions or asset preservation

Decision Tree: Choosing Your Termination Route

Use this logic to identify the optimal exit pathway:

  1. Has the other party breached the contract?
    • Yes → Is the breach fundamental or is cure impossible? If yes → consider immediate ontbinding. If no → send ingebrekestelling, allow cure period, then declare ontbinding if uncured.
    • No → Proceed to step 2.
  2. Does the contract contain a termination-for-convenience clause?
    • Yes → Follow the clause (notice period, method, exit fee). Send a formal termination letter.
    • No → Proceed to step 3.
  3. Is the other party willing to negotiate a mutual exit?
    • Yes → Negotiate and execute a mutual termination agreement with full release.
    • No → Consider whether the contract is for a fixed or indefinite term. For indefinite-term contracts, reasonable notice must be given. Seek specialist advice on contractual interpretation and enforceability.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jeroen Burger at The Legal Group Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Business.gov.nl, Dismissal Procedures / Termination with Consent
  2. MAAK Advocaten, Terminating an Agreement Under Dutch Law
  3. Viotta Law, Termination of Long-Term Commercial Contracts Under Dutch Law
  4. Fennek Advocaten, Termination of Agency Agreements in the Netherlands
  5. Business Netherlands, Chamber Guidance on Agency and Distributorship Termination

FAQs

Can a commercial contract be cancelled?
Yes. Under Dutch law, commercial contracts can be ended by mutual agreement, expiry of the fixed term, termination under a convenience clause, or termination for breach (ontbinding) under Article 6:265 BW. For breach-based termination, you must generally give a notice of default (ingebrekestelling) and a reasonable opportunity to cure, unless the breach justifies immediate termination.
A termination clause sets out the conditions, procedures and consequences for ending the contract. It typically covers the grounds for termination, the required notice period, the method of delivery, any exit fee, and post-termination obligations such as confidentiality, return of property and intellectual property rights. Clarity and precision in drafting are essential to enforceability.
Immediate termination is permitted where the breach is so fundamental that performance is permanently impossible, where the defaulting party has expressly refused to perform, or where the contract includes a clause allowing summary termination on specific trigger events (such as insolvency). You should preserve evidence, issue a clear written termination notice referencing the legal ground, and consider applying for interim relief if necessary.
The five principal ways are: (1) performance or expiry of the fixed term; (2) mutual agreement between the parties; (3) exercise of a contractual termination-for-convenience clause; (4) termination for breach (ontbinding under Article 6:265 BW); and (5) by operation of law, including insolvency or force majeure.
There is no single statutory notice period for general B2B contracts in the Netherlands. “Reasonable” depends on the duration of the relationship, the level of dependency, industry practice and the terms of the contract itself. For short-term arrangements, one to three months is common; for long-standing relationships (five years or more), courts have required six months to over a year. Agency and distributorship agreements may also attract specific statutory notice rules.
Send it as soon as the other party has failed to meet its contractual obligation, unless the breach is so serious that immediate termination is justified. The notice must identify the breach, set a reasonable cure period, and warn of the consequences of non-cure. Use the template included in this guide as a starting point, and adapt it to the specifics of your contract and jurisdiction.
Yes. Dutch courts may set aside or modify termination clauses on grounds of ambiguity, bad faith, or unconscionability. The principles of reasonableness and fairness under Article 6:248 BW act as a corrective mechanism. Where statutory protections apply, for example, in agency agreements, contractual terms that derogate from mandatory provisions may be struck down. Courts also interpret ambiguous clauses against the drafter (contra proferentem).

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Terminating an Agreement Under Dutch Law: Breach vs Convenience, Notice and Compensation

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