Skip to Content

A Small Wage Rise That Still Hits the Till

Minimum wage moves again on 1 January 2026 and for small employers, the real work is in the knock-on effects
December 27, 2025 by
A Small Wage Rise That Still Hits the Till
Laura De Troia


When wages move, your business feels it in very ordinary places: the weekly cash flow, the timing of invoices, the price you dare to quote, and the quiet trust inside your team that “payday will be fine.” That’s why even a modest legal change deserves a calm look, before it turns into an admin scramble in the first week of January.

Here’s the headline: from 1 January 2026, the Dutch statutory minimum hourly wage (minimumuurloon) for employees aged 21 and over rises from €14.40 to €14.71 gross per hour, an increase of 2.15%. The government also publishes the youth minimum hourly wages for ages 15–20 for example, €11.77 at age 20 and €8.83 at age 19. Since 2024, the minimum wage is set as an hourly amount (not a fixed monthly figure), which matters when hours vary month to month. 

For many micro-employers, the first thought is: “Only my youngest staff are on the minimum.” But wage changes rarely stay neatly at the bottom. If one role rises, the role just above it suddenly feels “too close,” and you get pressure on your whole pay ladder, especially in sectors where pay is guided by a cao (collective labour agreement). The minimum wage is the legal floor; your cao floor can be higher, and some agreements link increases to dates like 1 January. Even when you don’t have to lift other wages, you may decide you need to, to keep fairness, retention, and momentum.

Then there’s the part small businesses underestimate: the cost isn’t only the hourly rate. Holiday allowance, paid leave, sick pay obligations, pension arrangements, and payroll administration all sit on top of that number. A small café with two weekend workers at youth rates won’t go bankrupt because of January’s adjustment, but it can feel the pinch if pricing stayed frozen, supplier costs already climbed, and invoices are paid later than promised. This is where risk shows up: not as one big shock, but as lots of tiny shortfalls that quietly eat your buffer.

So treat this as a short, practical reset. Before January payroll runs, check who is close to the legal minimum by age, and whether any pay scales in your cao need updating to avoid slipping below the new floor. If you sell hours, revisit your hourly rates and the wording in quotes and service contracts, especially around indexation, overtime, and what happens when the scope grows. If you sell projects, tighten your milestone invoicing so cash arrives closer to the work, not weeks after the fact. And if you rely on late-paying clients, this is your reminder to be firmer with payment terms: wage costs don’t wait for “end of month.”

None of this is a reason for drama. A 2.15% minimum-wage step is not a crisis; it’s a predictable rhythm in Dutch labour policy, updated every January and July. The calm move is to absorb it deliberately: adjust a few prices with a steady hand, shorten the gap between work and invoicing, and keep payroll clean and correct. In a small business, that’s what resilience looks like, not grand strategies, just small, well-timed corrections that keep trust intact on both sides of the payslip.

A Small Wage Rise That Still Hits the Till
Laura De Troia December 27, 2025
Share this post
Entrepreneurship and employment: adjustments for self-employed professionals, employers and employees
Less fiscal advantage for self-employment, more targeted support for earlier exit from physically demanding work, and stricter boundaries for tax-free reimbursements