Maternity and paternity leave in the UK vs Netherlands: What EOR employers must know
Author
James Kelly
Last Updated
29 March 2026
Read Time
14 min
The UK grants up to 52 weeks of maternity leave under the Employment Rights Act 1996, though only 39 weeks are paid. The Netherlands provides 16 weeks at 100% of salary (capped) under the Work and Care Act (Wazo), with no minimum service requirement. Both countries exceed the ILO’s 14-week recommended minimum, but the eligibility rules, funding models, and partner leave structures differ in ways that catch foreign employers off guard.
This guide covers every statutory entitlement, who pays for it, and the compliance risks that Employer of Record employers face when hiring across both markets.
How maternity leave works in the UK
The Maternity and Parental Leave etc. Regulations 1999 entitle all employees to 52 weeks of statutory maternity leave regardless of length of service. This breaks into 26 weeks of Ordinary Maternity Leave (OML) and 26 weeks of Additional Maternity Leave (AML), running back-to-back with no gap.
Leave can start as early as 11 weeks before the expected week of childbirth. A compulsory maternity leave period of 2 weeks applies after birth for all employees (4 weeks for factory workers).
Pay in the UK: SMP vs Maternity Allowance
Statutory Maternity Pay (SMP) requires 26 weeks of continuous employment by the 15th week before the due date, plus average weekly earnings at or above the Lower Earnings Limit of £125/week (2025/26).
The employer pays SMP and reclaims from HMRC. Standard employers recover 92%. Small employers (Class 1 NI contributions of £45,000 or less) qualify for Small Employers’ Relief and reclaim 108.5% from April 2025, rising to 109% from April 2026. That means they recover more than they spend.
Employees who do not qualify for SMP (insufficient service, self-employed, or recently unemployed) may claim Maternity Allowance via Jobcentre Plus at up to 39 weeks at £187.18/week or 90% of AWE, whichever is lower.
Period: First 6 weeks
Rate: 90% of average weekly earnings
Period: Weeks 7–39
Rate: £187.18/week or 90% of AWE, whichever is lower
Period: Weeks 40–52
Rate: Unpaid
Shared Parental Leave in the UK
A mother can curtail her maternity leave early and share the remaining weeks with her partner through Shared Parental Leave (ShPL). Up to 50 weeks of leave and 37 weeks of pay can be split between parents. Statutory Shared Parental Pay matches the SMP flat rate.
Uptake remains very low. Government research found only around 1% of eligible mothers and 5% of eligible fathers take ShPL following birth or adoption. The policy exists, but real-world adoption is minimal.
Adoption, stillbirth, and neonatal care leave in the UK
Adoptive parents receive the same 52-week leave and 39-week pay structure, with Statutory Adoption Pay mirroring SMP rates.
Stillbirth after 24 weeks triggers full maternity leave and SMP entitlements. For pregnancy loss before 24 weeks, there is currently no statutory leave. The government has proposed at least 1 week of unpaid bereavement leave, expected to take effect in 2027.
From 6 April 2025, the Neonatal Care (Leave and Pay) Act 2023 grants parents of babies admitted to neonatal care within 28 days of birth (staying 7+ consecutive days) up to 12 additional weeks of leave. This is a Day 1 right.
Job protection during maternity leave in the UK
During OML, employees have the right to return to the same job. During AML, they have the right to the same job or a suitable alternative on equivalent terms.
Since 6 April 2024, enhanced redundancy protection extends from the moment the employer is notified of pregnancy through to 18 months after the child’s birth. A pregnant employee or new mother must be offered any suitable alternative vacancy ahead of other candidates in a redundancy situation. Failure to comply makes the dismissal automatically unfair.
Keeping In Touch (KIT) days
Employees may work up to 10 KIT days during maternity leave without ending their leave or pay entitlement. Both parties must agree in advance. KIT days cannot fall within the compulsory 2-week post-birth period. Employees on ShPL get an additional 20 SPLIT days.
How maternity leave works in the Netherlands
The Wet arbeid en zorg (Wazo) entitles all employed women to 16 weeks of paid maternity leave with no minimum service requirement. The benefit is funded through the UWV (Employee Insurance Agency), not the employer directly.
Duration and flexibility of Dutch maternity leave
The 16 weeks are split between pre- and post-natal leave with some flexibility.
Pre-natal leave: 4 to 6 weeks before the due date (the employee chooses the start date).
Post-natal leave: Minimum 10 weeks after delivery. If the birth is late, unused prenatal leave transfers to the postnatal period.
Compulsory leave: 4 weeks before and 6 weeks after delivery cannot be waived.
Multiple births: The entitlement extends to 20 weeks (an additional 4 weeks).
Maternity pay in the Netherlands
Maternity pay equals 100% of the employee’s daily wage, capped at the UWV maximum daily wage of €304.25/day (January 2026). The employer applies to UWV, UWV pays the employer, and the employer passes payment to the employee. Employers whose employees earn above the cap are not legally required to top up, though many do voluntarily.
Self-employed women access maternity benefits through the separate ZEZ (Zelfstandig en Zwanger) scheme, capped at 100% of the minimum wage.
Adoption and foster care leave in the Netherlands
Both adoptive parents and foster carers receive up to 6 weeks’ paid leave at 100% of the daily wage (capped), funded by UWV. If both parents are employed, both are individually entitled. The leave window runs from 4 weeks before the child’s arrival to 22 weeks after.
Job protection during maternity leave in the Netherlands
Article 7:670 of the Dutch Civil Code prohibits dismissal from the moment pregnancy begins through to 6 weeks after maternity leave ends. This applies to both fixed-term and permanent contracts. The only narrow exceptions are bankruptcy, instant dismissal for urgent cause, and expiry of a fixed-term contract where non-renewal is genuinely unrelated to pregnancy.
UWV claims process for employers in the Netherlands
The employer must initiate the maternity benefit claim, not the employee. This is a critical step that EOR employers often get wrong.
Log in to the UWV employer portal and use the “Verzuimmelder” (absence reporting) feature. Apply 2 to 4 weeks before the employee’s leave starts, using the due date from the maternity certificate (zwangerschapsverklaring). UWV issues a decision within the first 4 weeks of leave confirming benefit amount and duration.
Late applications delay benefit decisions and leave the employer funding maternity pay from cash flow until reimbursement arrives. Build this timeline into your onboarding process.
Paternity leave in the UK
Statutory paternity leave under the Paternity and Adoption Leave Regulations 2002 (as amended 2024) is 1 or 2 weeks.
2024 amendments to UK paternity leave
The Paternity Leave (Amendment) Regulations 2024 (in force 8 March 2024, applying to births on or after 6 April 2024) introduced two changes. Leave can now be taken as two separate blocks of 1 week each, rather than consecutive weeks. The leave window extended from 56 days to 52 weeks from birth, so fathers can take one week immediately and the second later in the first year.
Notice requirements dropped to 28 days before each block (from the previous 15-week advance notice).
Eligibility and pay for UK paternity leave
Statutory Paternity Pay is £187.18/week (2025/26), rising to £194.32/week from April 2026. The employer pays and reclaims from HMRC at the same rates as SMP.
Current eligibility requires 26 weeks’ continuous employment by the qualifying week. From 6 April 2026, the Employment Rights Act 2025 makes paternity leave a Day 1 right with no service requirement. The Act also removes the restriction on taking paternity leave after Shared Parental Leave.
A separate provision under the ERA 2025 grants bereaved partners up to 52 weeks of paternity leave if the mother dies within the child’s first year.
Paternity and partner leave in the Netherlands
Dutch partner leave operates under a two-tier system introduced through amendments to the Work and Care Act (Wazo) in 2019 and expanded in 2020 by the WIEG (Wet Invoering Extra Geboorteverlof).
Tier 1: Birth leave (geboorteverlof) of 1 week
The partner (father, same-sex partner, or legal co-parent) receives 1 week (5 working days) at 100% of salary, funded by the employer. This must be taken within 4 weeks of the birth. Employers cannot deny this leave.
Tier 2: Additional birth leave (aanvullend geboorteverlof) of up to 5 weeks
Partners may take up to 5 additional weeks within the first 6 months. This is paid at 70% of the daily wage by UWV (not the employer).
The employer can request postponement only in cases of serious business necessity, with at least 2 weeks’ notice.
Who qualifies for Dutch partner leave
The entitlements cover all partners: biological fathers, same-sex partners, and non-biological co-parents, provided they hold an employment contract. Self-employed (ZZP) workers are not entitled to birth leave or additional birth leave, as these flow through the employer social insurance scheme.
Parental leave (ouderschapsverlof) as a separate entitlement
Beyond birth leave, all parents are entitled to 26 weeks of parental leave per parent (per child, until the child turns 8). The first 9 weeks are paid at 70% via UWV (capped at €203.47/day in 2026) and must be taken in the child’s first year. The remaining 17 weeks are unpaid but job-protected. This is entirely separate from maternity and birth leave.
CAO top-ups in the Netherlands
Many sector collective labour agreements (CAOs) require employers to supplement the 70% UWV benefit to 100% for both additional birth leave and paid parental leave. This is standard in financial services, technology, healthcare, and civil service. Employers entering the Dutch market must check the applicable CAO before making any commitments on pay.
UK vs Netherlands maternity and paternity leave compared
Factor: Maternity leave (total)
United Kingdom: 52 weeks
Netherlands: 16 weeks (20 for multiple births)
Factor: Maternity leave (paid)
United Kingdom: 39 weeks
Netherlands: 16 weeks (fully paid)
Factor: Compulsory maternity leave
United Kingdom: 2 weeks post-birth (4 for factory workers)
Netherlands: 4–6 weeks pre-birth + 6 weeks post-birth
Factor: Maternity pay rate
United Kingdom: 90% AWE (6 wks), then £187.18/wk (33 wks)
Netherlands: 100% of daily wage, capped at €304.25/day
Factor: Who funds maternity pay
United Kingdom: Employer pays, reclaims 92–108.5% from HMRC
Netherlands: UWV pays employer, who passes to employee
Factor: Minimum service required
United Kingdom: 26 weeks for SMP. Day 1 right for leave
Netherlands: None
Factor: Paternity/birth leave
United Kingdom: 1–2 weeks
Netherlands: 1 week (employer) + up to 5 weeks (UWV at 70%)
Factor: Paternity pay
United Kingdom: £187.18/wk (SPP)
Netherlands: Week 1 at 100% employer-funded. Weeks 2–6 at 70% via UWV
Factor: Shared/transferable leave
United Kingdom: ShPL: up to 50 wks leave / 37 wks pay
Netherlands: Separate parental leave: 26 wks per parent
Factor: Adoption leave
United Kingdom: 52 weeks (SAP mirrors SMP)
Netherlands: 6 weeks at 100% (both parents eligible)
Factor: Stillbirth leave
United Kingdom: Full entitlement if 24+ weeks
Netherlands: Full entitlement if 20+ weeks
Factor: Job protection
United Kingdom: Same job (OML). Suitable alternative (AML). 18-month redundancy priority
Netherlands: Dismissal ban from pregnancy to 6 weeks post-leave
Factor: Self-employed
United Kingdom: Maternity Allowance (£187.18/wk, 39 wks)
Netherlands: ZEZ scheme via UWV. No paternity leave
Factor: KIT / return-to-work
United Kingdom: Up to 10 KIT days
Netherlands: No KIT equivalent. Wet flexibel werken on return
Two structural contrasts stand out. The UK offers far more total leave (52 weeks vs 16) but the Netherlands pays at a higher rate for the full duration. The Dutch system also funds maternity centrally through UWV with no service requirement, while the UK places the administrative burden on employers who must then work through the HMRC reclaim process.
On partner leave, the Netherlands’ tiered system (1 week employer-paid + 5 weeks UWV-funded + 9 weeks paid parental leave) provides more structured support than the UK’s statutory 2 weeks. The UK’s Shared Parental Leave theoretically allows up to 50 weeks if the mother curtails early, but uptake is extremely low.
Compliance mistakes EOR employers make
These are the errors we see most often from Employer of Record providers and the companies using them.
1. Confusing total UK maternity leave with paid leave
The UK’s 52-week entitlement is frequently cited without noting that only 39 weeks are paid and the final 13 weeks are unpaid. Offer letters and policies that reference “full entitlement” without this distinction lead to employee disputes and incorrect payroll calculations.
2. Mishandling the Dutch two-tier partner leave system
Dutch partner leave involves 1 week at 100% paid by the employer and up to 5 additional weeks at 70% paid by UWV. EOR providers that conflate these into a single 6-week entitlement either underpay in week one (where the employer, not UWV, must fund full salary) or miss the UWV application deadline for the additional weeks.
3. Failing to reclaim SMP from HMRC correctly
Small employers who do not claim Small Employers’ Relief forfeit the 100% + 8.5% compensation (from April 2025). All claims run through payroll software via the Employer Payment Summary and generally cannot be claimed retrospectively after year-end.
4. Submitting UWV applications late in the Netherlands
The employer must apply to UWV 2 to 4 weeks before maternity leave starts. Late applications delay benefit decisions and force the employer to fund leave from cash flow without a clear reimbursement timeline. EOR onboarding workflows must build in this lead time.
5. Applying home-country leave policies without localisation
US-headquartered companies accustomed to 12 weeks of unpaid FMLA leave routinely assume their corporate policy covers Europe. It does not. Both the UK and the Netherlands set mandatory statutory minimums that cannot be contracted out of, and the Dutch system further layers CAO obligations on top of statute.
6. Ignoring the 2024 UK redundancy protection extension
Since 6 April 2024, redundancy protection runs from the moment the employer is notified of pregnancy through to 18 months after birth. Failing to offer a pregnant employee or new mother priority access to suitable alternative vacancies makes the dismissal automatically unfair and discriminatory.
7. Overlooking neonatal care leave in the UK
The Neonatal Care (Leave and Pay) Act 2023 has been in force since April 2025. EOR payroll and HR systems must accommodate this leave type of up to 12 additional weeks for eligible parents, entirely separate from maternity and paternity entitlements.
8. Conflating Dutch parental leave with birth leave
Ouderschapsverlof (26 weeks per parent, 9 weeks paid at 70%) is a separate entitlement from maternity leave and geboorteverlof. Foreign employers who treat these as a single “parental leave” bucket incorrectly cap what employees can take.
9. Missing CAO obligations in the Netherlands
Many Dutch sector CAOs require employers to supplement 70% UWV benefits to 100% of salary. An EOR covered by a relevant CAO that fails to check and apply the top-up rate faces both underpayment liability and breach of the collective agreement.
What EOR employers should verify before onboarding
Determine which UK pay model applies. Check whether the employee qualifies for SMP (26 weeks’ service, earnings above £125/week) or whether they will need to claim Maternity Allowance independently. Confirm whether your business qualifies for Small Employers’ Relief and the 108.5% reclaim.
Initiate UWV registration early for Dutch hires. The maternity benefit application must be filed 2 to 4 weeks before leave starts. For partner leave, the employee must give 4 weeks’ written notice before the employer notifies UWV. Build both timelines into your onboarding process.
Check the applicable Dutch CAO. Determine whether a sector or company collective agreement covers the role. If it does, verify whether the CAO mandates top-ups beyond statutory rates for additional birth leave and paid parental leave.
Reference statutory entitlements in employment contracts. UK employers must provide a Section 1 statement on or before the employee’s first day. EOR contracts should explicitly reference parental leave entitlements, and update for Day 1 paternity rights from April 2026.
Update policies for recent UK legislative changes. The 2024 redundancy protections, 2024 paternity leave amendments, 2025 neonatal care leave, and upcoming Day 1 paternity right (April 2026) all require policy and system updates.
Set enhanced leave benchmarks for UK hires. Statutory paternity pay (£187.18/week) sits below half the National Living Wage for a full-time worker. In a market where leading employers offer 26 weeks at full pay, the statutory minimum is increasingly a talent disadvantage.
Quick reference
Category: Maternity statute
United Kingdom: Employment Rights Act 1996 + Regulations 1999
Netherlands: Wazo (Work and Care Act)
Category: Maternity duration
United Kingdom: 52 weeks (39 paid)
Netherlands: 16 weeks (all paid)
Category: Paternity statute
United Kingdom: Paternity Leave Regs 2002 (amended 2024)
Netherlands: Wazo + WIEG (2020)
Category: Paternity leave
United Kingdom: 1–2 weeks (Day 1 right from April 2026)
Netherlands: 1 week (100%) + 5 weeks (70% UWV)
Category: Funding model
United Kingdom: Employer pays, reclaims from HMRC
Netherlands: UWV funds via employer
Category: Key compliance risk
United Kingdom: Missing HMRC reclaim. Ignoring 2024 redundancy protections
Netherlands: Late UWV applications. Missing CAO top-ups
Hire compliantly in the UK and the Netherlands with Boundless
Getting parental leave wrong costs money. Missed HMRC reclaims, late UWV applications, and overlooked CAO top-ups all hit the bottom line before anyone notices. And the reputational cost of underpaying an employee on maternity or paternity leave is harder to recover from than the financial one.
Boundless employs people on your behalf in the UK, the Netherlands, and over 100 other countries. We handle every employment contract, payroll calculation, and statutory entitlement in full compliance with local law, so your team never has to become overnight experts in SMP reclaim rates or Dutch partner leave tiers. Talk to our team about hiring in either market.
The EU Work-Life Balance Directive (2019/1158) sets minimum standards for parental leave, paternity leave, and flexible working across EU member states. The Netherlands transposed the Directive in August 2022, implementing paid parental leave and enhanced flexible working rights. The UK, having left the EU, is not bound by the Directive. This creates a widening area of policy divergence on parental leave payment rates and flexible working that EOR employers must track when managing employees in both countries.
An employer may request that a partner postpone aanvullend geboorteverlof only in cases of serious business necessity, with at least 2 weeks’ notice and a written justification. The employee is not obligated to accept the postponement if the reasoning is insufficient. The initial 1-week geboorteverlof cannot be denied under any circumstances.
In the UK, employees continue to accrue statutory annual leave (5.6 weeks) throughout the full 52-week maternity leave period, including the 13 unpaid weeks. In the Netherlands, holiday entitlement continues to accrue during maternity leave and the paid portion of parental leave. Employers in both countries must track accrued but untaken holiday and manage return-to-work scheduling accordingly.
An EOR becomes the legal employer in each country, taking on responsibility for compliant contracts, correct payroll, statutory benefit enrolment, and all leave administration. In the UK, the EOR manages SMP calculations, HMRC reclaims, and KIT day tracking. In the Netherlands, the EOR files UWV maternity benefit applications, monitors CAO obligations, and processes the two-tier partner leave system. The company retains full control of the working relationship while the EOR handles every compliance requirement.
UK Shared Parental Leave allows a mother to curtail maternity leave early and share up to 50 weeks of leave and 37 weeks of pay with her partner. Dutch parental leave (ouderschapsverlof) is a separate, individual entitlement of 26 weeks per parent per child. The first 9 weeks are paid at 70% via UWV if taken in the child’s first year. The Dutch system gives each parent their own allocation rather than requiring one parent to give up leave for the other to use it.
All statutory provisions are current as of March 2026. Proposed legislation is clearly labelled as unenacted. Employers should consult qualified legal counsel in each jurisdiction for specific compliance advice.
The making available of information to you on this site by Boundless shall not create a legal, confidential or other relationship between you and Boundless and does not constitute the provision of legal, tax, commercial or other professional advice by Boundless. You acknowledge and agree that any information on this site has not been prepared with your specific circumstances in mind, may not be suitable for use in your business, and does not constitute advice intended for reliance. You assume all risk and liability that may result from any such reliance on the information and you should seek independent advice from a lawyer or tax professional in the relevant jurisdiction(s) before doing so.
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