UWV’s 2026 forecast is a sober signal for wages, sickness records, premiums and small-company cash.
A small employer meets the social-security system in ordinary places. It shows up after payroll, in an absence message, in the occupational health file, or in a Whk letter that changes the numbers. It also shows up when a quote no longer covers the hours behind the work.
Proof now opens the door
UWV’s Juninota 2026, published on 29 June, belongs in that same drawer. UWV expects Dutch disability benefit spending to rise from €18.9 billion in 2025 to €20.4 billion in 2026 and €22.0 billion in 2027. WIA is the main driver. UWV expects WIA spending to rise by €1.5 billion in 2026 and again by €1.5 billion in 2027. It also expects 32,000 more WIA benefits in 2026 and 31,000 more in 2027.
For a founder with seven employees, that is not a distant number. It becomes real when an absence lasts, when replacement hours appear, and when the owner has to decide what to do with cash, price and planning at the same time.
Payroll is where the bill lands
Higher national spending reaches employers through payroll, not through one single invoice. Employers pay social premiums over wages. Belastingdienst rates for 2026 set the AWf low contribution at 2.74 percent and the high contribution at 7.74 percent. The differentiated Aof premium is 6.27 percent at the low rate and 7.63 percent at the high rate. Whk differs per employer. It depends on the employer’s situation and notification.
For WGA and Ziektewet, employers can work through public UWV insurance or own-risk-bearing status. That choice changes the control question, but not the need for clean records and realistic cash planning. The Wko surcharge is 0.50 percent for 2026. From 1 July 2026, several benefit amounts move with the minimum wage. The adult gross minimum hourly wage rises from a derived €14.71 to €14.99.
Think of a nine-person care provider. One planner is ill for several weeks. The owner keeps wages moving, covers shifts, calls the occupational health service, protects the client schedule and tries not to overload the rest of the team. That is where the national line becomes a company problem.
Sickness is where the file begins
CBS reported employee sickness absence of 5.8 percent in the first quarter of 2026. That was equal to the first quarter of 2025 and above the long-term average of 5.0 percent since 1996. In firms with fewer than 10 employees, sickness absence rose from 2.6 percent to 2.8 percent. Healthcare and welfare had the highest rate, at 8.2 percent.
Wages, hours and work identity
CBS also cites 2025 NEA figures in which psychological complaints, stress or burnout were the main reason for the most recent absence for 8.8 percent of employees who were absent.
These are business figures before they become HR figures. Sickness first removes hours. Then it changes owner days, delivery promises, overtime, replacement work, team pressure and customer service. A long sickness case can move toward WIA assessment. Reintegration records are the bridge between human care and financial clarity.
UWV’s 2025 annual report shows why that clarity matters. WIA applications rose from 93,100 in 2024 to 96,700 in 2025. WIA claim assessments fell from 83,700 to 74,500. At the end of 2025, 26,700 WIA clients had waited more than eight weeks for a claim assessment, up from 14,000 a year earlier. Those waiting more than six months rose to 7,900.
For an employer, that can keep a staffing question open for longer. For the employee, it can mean income uncertainty at a hard moment. Good HR is disciplined evidence with decent manners.
Older workers need planning, not suspicion
UWV links WIA growth partly to an ageing workforce, long-term psychological complaints, post-covid syndrome and the renewed 60-plus measure. That measure may be used from 1 September 2025 to 1 September 2027 for people aged 60 or older at the end of the sickness waiting period. UWV expects about 10,000 extra people per year to be assessed because of it.
The business reading is simple. Older workers are not the problem. Weak role design is the problem. In the small care provider, the most experienced employee may also be the person everyone calls when the roster breaks. If that person struggles, the company loses hours and memory. A sensible response avoids single points of failure.
Payroll data is worker security
UWV’s Juninota picture also includes WIA correction and compensation work. In its 2025 annual report, UWV refers to possible day-wage errors, wage-free periods and indexation errors in defined historical groups. It also says the compensation arrangement is meant to limit chain effects through taxable income and was considered executable from 1 September 2026.
The practical lesson is plain. Later income security can depend on earlier wage data. Payroll declarations, contracts, wage components, absence dates and role changes need to be clean. A small error in the ledger can echo later in benefit calculations, recovery work and employee trust.
The small employer risk
The same discipline helps when a worker is sick and later needs a WIA advance. Rijksoverheid says sick employees do not have to repay a WIA advance if it later turns out they have no or less entitlement, and that UWV has already forgiven such advances since mid-2021 while legal change is prepared for 1 January 2027.
Labour market pressure is still there
WW adds a second layer. UWV expects WW spending to rise from €4.0 billion in 2025 to €4.5 billion in 2026 and €5.1 billion in 2027.
At the same time, CBS reported unemployment of 3.9 percent in May 2026, with 399,000 unemployed people. UWV counted 199.4 thousand ongoing WW benefits at the end of May, down 1.8 percent from April. CBS also counted 378,000 open vacancies at the end of the first quarter and 559,000 underemployed part-time workers. The labour market is cooling, but not loosening enough to make hiring easy.
Tomorrow morning’s test is not whether premiums move. It is whether the company can see fragile roles, recurring absence, payroll settings, the Whk notice, cash buffer, debtor days, prices and contracts in one picture. That is roster survival, written in numbers.
Quotes need the same discipline. If a service hour is priced as if nobody becomes ill, nobody trains, no premium moves and no replacement is needed, the quote is too thin. The market may resist every increase. Still, refusing to price reality only moves the cost into the founder’s evenings and the company’s cash.
UWV’s forecast supports calm control and humane discipline. The Dutch social-security system protects people when work, health or employment breaks. Employers pay into that system, administer the early stages and depend on its decisions.
The stronger small company keeps records clean, treats sickness early and humanely, prices labour honestly and avoids roles that depend on one person. Rising benefit spending is a national number. Payroll discipline is where it becomes tomorrow morning’s decision.
Referenced in the article
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