The moment you hire your first employee, “arbo” stops being a vague HR word and becomes part of your cash flow. If someone gets sick, if a complaint lands, if the Labour Inspectorate asks questions, it’s not theory you need, it’s clarity. And that is exactly why the basics matter: they are obligations by law, not preferences, and they shape how much time, money, and trust you lose when real life interrupts your planning.
Start with the one many people still treat as a choice: you must have a written agreement, the basiscontract, with an arbodienst (occupational health service) or a bedrijfsarts (company doctor). This is required for every employer with staff, and it defines the minimum occupational health support you and your employees can rely on. What you get in return is not “extra help,” but a working route: who employees can contact, how absence is handled, how prevention advice is organised, and how medical privacy is protected while you still receive the guidance you need to manage work responsibly.
Then there is the RI&E (Risico-inventarisatie en -evaluatie). In plain language: you must write down what could realistically harm people in your workplace and assess those risks. It must include a Plan van Aanpak (action plan): what you will improve, and when. This isn’t a nice binder for the shelf; it’s a core part of your legal duty to run a safe, healthy workplace.
So what does an arbodienst or bedrijfsarts actually do for you, your business, and your employees? They support verzuimbegeleiding (absence guidance) so you don’t improvise your way through sick leave and reintegration. They also work on the quieter side of prevention: employees have the right to a preventive consultation (often called the open or preventive spreekuur) even before they are off sick, and that can stop small health issues from becoming long absences. And if your RI&E shows ongoing work-related risks, the law expects you to offer a PAGO (Periodiek Arbeidsgezondheidskundig Onderzoek) a periodic work-health check aimed at catching work-related harm early.
Picture one concrete, very normal situation: a small team, one employee with back pain that’s getting worse. Without a basiscontract and a real RI&E, you’ll likely react late, after the sick note, after the work piles up, after the client deadlines start slipping. With them, you have an agreed path: early advice, adjustments at work, clear roles, and documentation that shows you acted like an employer who takes responsibility. That’s not “paper safety.” That’s fewer surprises and fewer arguments when everyone is tired.
If you want a calm way to approach this, keep it simple: treat arbo like invoicing, routine, traceable, and done before it’s urgent. Get the basiscontract in place and make sure it actually covers the mandatory support. Keep your RI&E and Plan van Aanpak realistic and alive: update them when work changes, not when trouble starts. The goal isn’t to build a perfect system. It’s to meet your legal duty and keep everyday business interruptions from turning into expensive, messy weeks.