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Wage Growth in the Netherlands Slows to 5.3% in Q2 2025

What the numbers mean for small businesses and their teams.
August 29, 2025 by
Wage Growth in the Netherlands Slows to 5.3% in Q2 2025
Laura De Troia

Q: Why does it feel like my boss keeps saying wages are going up, but I don’t really see that much extra on my payslip?

"Because the “raise” is only part of the story. Yes, your hourly wage went up about 5%, but your boss also has to pay extra hidden costs on top, things like unemployment and disability contributions. That money never shows up on your payslip, but it’s real money leaving the company. So while you get a bit more in your pocket, your employer feels the pinch twice: once in your raise, and again in the extra costs."

Laura De Troia


Numbers are never just numbers. They are mirrors. They reflect not only our economy but also the daily choices we make in our companies, in our teams, and in the way we balance giving and receiving.

So when we read that in the second quarter of 2025, collective bargaining agreement wages rose by 5.3%, it may sound like a dry statistic. But let’s pause. What does this really mean for you, whether you’re an employer keeping the lights on in a small office in Utrecht, or an employee checking your payslip at the kitchen table in Amersfoort?

The Decline After the Peak

In the third quarter of 2024, we saw something historic: a 6.8% jump in collectively bargained wages, the highest increase in over forty years. That was a tidal wave, powered by inflation, cost-of-living struggles, and years of postponed adjustments.

But as with every wave, what follows is the retreat. The first half of 2025 already shows the growth slowing, one full percentage point lower than at the end of 2024.

For entrepreneurs, this matters: not because costs suddenly “stabilize,” but because pressure shifts. Last year, you were forced to “keep up.” This year, you need to plan with more nuance. The steep climb may have eased, but wage expectations haven’t gone away.

The Hidden Layer: Employer Costs

It’s easy to think: “5.3% wage growth, okay, I’ll calculate that into my payroll.”

But here’s the deeper truth: contractual wage costs actually rose 5.4%.

Why the difference? Employer contributions.

  • Disability insurance (AOF) and unemployment funds (AWF) became more expensive in 2025.
  • Health insurance contributions, on the other hand, decreased slightly.

So yes, your people earn more, but you, as an employer, also contribute more in ways that never appear on the employee’s payslip.

This is the part employees rarely see but entrepreneurs must constantly juggle: the invisible costs of trust, safety, and continuity.

Sector Differences: Not All Boats Rise the Same

If we look closer:

  • Private companies: +5.7%
  • Government: +4.9%
  • Subsidized institutions: +4.3%

Now, some will look at these numbers and immediately jump to comparisons. “Why does the government lag?” or “Why do private companies stretch more?”

But the real story is cultural:

  • Subsidized institutions often struggle with budget ceilings, their increases are capped by policy, not ambition.
  • Government raises balance stability with fiscal discipline.
  • Private companies, though more exposed to risk, often act faster when competition and retention pressures knock at their doors.

For micro and small enterprises, the lesson is clear: your agility is your advantage. You don’t have the bureaucratic weight of a ministry, nor the rigid budget of a subsidized foundation. You can move faster, but you also bear the risk more directly.

Looking Back to See Ahead

Between 2020 and today, wages have climbed steadily:

  • Government: +25.1%
  • Private companies: +24.2%
  • Subsidized institutions: +23.5%

That’s a quarter more in just five years. And while employees feel this in their wallets, entrepreneurs must feel it in their cash flow, their margins, and sometimes in the difficult decisions about hiring, automating, or delaying investments.

And here lies the heart of the matter: wage growth isn’t just about fairness or inflation. It’s about trust. Trust that employees are rewarded fairly. Trust that employers can carry the load without collapsing under it.

What This Means for You, Employer and Employee

For employees:

  • That extra percent matters, but understand: your employer is carrying more than what shows up on your payslip.
  • When you see investment choices being made, fewer perks, slower hiring, know that wage costs are part of that balancing act.

For employers:

  • Don’t treat these numbers as a burden only. See them as a mirror of resilience. Your people stayed with you through inflation, uncertainty, and market shocks. Paying them fairly isn’t just compliance, it’s culture.
  • Plan beyond the clickbait figures. Wage increases are slowing, yes, but social security contributions will always shift the real costs. Build in buffers.

A Final Reflection

Wages are not just percentages on a CBS chart. They are lived realities. They’re what allow a young family to buy groceries without stress, and what force a small business owner to sit late at night with spreadsheets, calculating how to make payroll and still invest in growth.

So when you see +5.3%, don’t just shrug it off or panic. Ask yourself:

  • What story is this number telling about my company?
  • What trust is it building, or risking, between me and my team?

Because in the end, wages are not just costs. They are the most human number in your business.

SOURCE : https://www.cbs.nl/nl-nl/visualisaties/dashboard-arbeidsmarkt/ontwikkeling-cao-lonen

AUTHOR : Laura De Troia

Head of HR-Salarisadministratie

Laura De Troia leads Xtroverso’s payroll and contract practice with a dual focus: technical mastery and human fairness. With extensive experience in HR and compliance, she ensures that salaries, contracts, and employee records are not just managed, but safeguarded.

Laura De Troia

Wage Growth in the Netherlands Slows to 5.3% in Q2 2025
Laura De Troia August 29, 2025
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