The Hague’s Innovation District is Quietly Building the Netherlands’ Next Tech Hub
The Hague is best known internationally as the city of peace and justice — home to the International Court of Justice, Europol, and over 130 international organisations. But in 2026, a different identity is taking shape: the city is emerging as one of the Netherlands’ most promising tech startup ecosystems.
The transformation centres on the Central Innovation District (CID), a triangular zone spanning 229 hectares between the three main railway stations: Den Haag Centraal, Hollands Spoor, and Laan van NOI. The municipality has invested over €200 million in the district’s infrastructure since 2023, with a specific focus on attracting AI, cybersecurity, and govtech startups.
Why The Hague?
Founders point to three structural advantages. First, proximity to government — the Dutch national government is headquartered here, creating a dense customer base for govtech and regtech startups. Second, the presence of NATO’s communications agency (NCIA) and Europol’s cybercrime centre has seeded a deep cybersecurity talent pool. Third, real estate costs run roughly 30-40% below Amsterdam, while still offering direct train connections to Schiphol Airport in under 30 minutes.
Security Delta (HSD), the national security cluster, anchors the ecosystem. Its campus on the edge of the CID houses over 70 companies working on everything from quantum encryption to critical infrastructure protection. In April 2026, HSD announced a new €15 million acceleration fund specifically for early-stage security startups, matching investments from the Dutch Security TechFund.
Notable Companies and Trends
Several Hague-based startups have crossed the €10 million valuation threshold this year. Cybersprint, a digital footprint mapping company acquired by KPMG in 2025, spawned at least four new ventures from its alumni network. Sensor, an AI-driven regulatory compliance platform, raised €8 million in Series A funding in February 2026 from a consortium led by TIIN Capital.
The municipality is also piloting a “regulatory sandbox” programme — a controlled environment where startups testing AI applications in public services can operate with temporary regulatory flexibility. It’s a model borrowed from the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority, but applied horizontally across administrative domains. Early participants include two companies building large language model interfaces for citizen services and one deploying computer vision for urban traffic management.
Challenges Remain
The ecosystem is still young. Total venture capital flowing into Hague-based startups in 2025 was roughly €180 million — a fraction of Amsterdam’s €1.2 billion. International visibility lags, with many foreign investors still associating the city exclusively with international law. And competition for AI talent is fierce, with ASML and major Amsterdam tech firms offering compensation packages that young startups struggle to match.
But the trajectory is clear. With sustained municipal investment, a specialised talent pool in security and govtech, and a cost advantage over Amsterdam, The Hague’s innovation district is building something genuine — not a copy of Silicon Valley, but a distinct ecosystem shaped by the city’s unique institutional DNA.







