The Netherlands: Europe’s Quiet Startup Powerhouse
While London, Berlin, and Paris dominate headlines about European tech, the Netherlands has quietly built one of the continent’s most resilient startup ecosystems. In the first half of 2026, Dutch startups raised over €2.1 billion in venture capital, putting the country on track for a record year despite a broader European funding slowdown.
Amsterdam remains the epicentre, but the ecosystem now extends well beyond the capital. Eindhoven’s High Tech Campus has become a magnet for deep-tech and semiconductor startups, while Rotterdam is carving out a niche in climate tech and sustainable logistics. The Hague, home to the ICC and Europol, is seeing growth in legal-tech and cybersecurity startups leveraging proximity to international institutions.
What Makes the Dutch Ecosystem Different
Several factors give Dutch startups an edge. The country’s digital infrastructure is world-class — the AMS-IX internet exchange makes Amsterdam one of the most connected cities on the planet. English proficiency is near-universal, removing the language barrier that hampers startups in France or Germany. And the government’s startup visa programme and R&D tax incentives (WBSO) make it relatively easy for international founders to set up shop.
Notable Dutch success stories are multiplying. Mollie, the Amsterdam-based payments platform, reached a €6 billion valuation. VanMoof, despite its well-publicised bankruptcy, was acquired and relaunched, and its story has become a case study in the risks and rewards of hardware startups. MessageBird (now Bird) continues to scale its communications platform globally.
The Challenges Ahead
Yet the ecosystem faces headwinds. Talent competition with Big Tech is fierce, and Amsterdam’s housing crisis makes it difficult for startups to attract international hires. The Dutch government’s proposed cuts to innovation funding have drawn criticism from industry groups. And while Dutch pension funds are slowly increasing allocations to venture capital, access to late-stage growth capital remains a bottleneck compared to the United States.
Still, with strong fundamentals, a collaborative culture, and a growing track record of exits, the Netherlands is proving that you do not need to be the biggest ecosystem to be among the best.







