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From EU Directive to National Law: Understanding the Netherlands’ Dutch Implementation Act and the European Accessibility Act (EAA)

By: skyneteditorone
8 mins
500
Dutch implementation act

The European Accessibility Act (EAA) represents a major milestone in harmonising accessibility requirements across the European Union. Its goal is simple yet powerful: to ensure that people with disabilities can access key products and services on an equal basis across member states.

In the Netherlands, the EAA has been transposed into national law through the Dutch Implementation Act. This legislation translates the EU directive into concrete, enforceable obligations for Dutch businesses and public-facing service providers.

The article explains the alignment of the Dutch Implementation Act with the EAA in the Netherlands.

The European Accessibility Act (EAA): Fundamental information

The European Accessibility Act (Directive (EU) 2019/882) establishes common accessibility requirements for digital products and services across the EU. Rather than focusing only on public sector websites (as earlier directives did), the EAA significantly expands accessibility obligations to the private sector.

Core objectives of the EAA:

  • Remove accessibility barriers in the internal EU market.
  • Improve access to essential digital and physical products and services.
  • Ensure consistent accessibility requirements across member states.
  • Support the rights of persons with disabilities under the UN CRPD.

The EAA applies to products and services placed on the market after June 28, 2025. However, products and services released before June 2025, are also expected to comply with the act; not immediately but gradually.

The Dutch Implementation Act: Purpose and legal context

The Dutch Implementation Act is the Netherlands’ formal transposition of the EAA into national legislation. It integrates accessibility requirements into existing Dutch regulatory frameworks, ensuring legal enforceability at the national level.

Key characteristics of the Dutch approach:

  • Closely follows the wording and intent of the EAA.
  • Emphasises legal certainty for businesses.
  • Integrates supervision and enforcement into existing authorities.
  • Aligns accessibility with consumer protection and market surveillance.

The Act ensures that accessibility is not treated as a voluntary best practice, but as a mandatory compliance requirement.

Scope of the Act: Products and services covered

Under the Dutch Implementation Act, the following products must be accessible when placed on the Dutch market:

  • Computers, tablets, and operating systems.
  • Smartphones and communication devices.
  • Payment terminals and self-service kiosks (e.g., ticketing machines, ATMs).
  • E-readers.

The following services are also covered:

  • Ecommerce services (websites and mobile apps)
  • Banking and financial services
  • Electronic communications services
  • Transport-related digital services (ticketing, travel information)
  • E-books and related software

For digital services, accessibility typically means alignment with WCAG 2.1 Level AA or equivalent European harmonised standards.

Entities that ought to comply with the act

The Dutch Implementation Act applies to:

  • Private companies offering covered products or services.
  • Manufacturers, importers, and distributors.
  • Service providers operating in the Netherlands.
  • EU and non-EU companies targeting Dutch consumers.

Exemptions:

Micro-enterprises (fewer than 10 employees and annual turnover below €2 million) may be exempt only for services, not products.

Disproportionate burden: There must be a legitimate reason to launch a complaint. Annex VI of the EAA says that the cost of compliance should not be outweighing the benefits for persons with disabilities.

Compliance should not change the basic nature of a digital service.

The act does not apply to B2B services.

However, the Dutch law encourages voluntary compliance even for exempt organizations, recognising accessibility as a societal responsibility.

Please note: If an organization is getting external funding, they cannot claim disproportionate burden.

Accessibility requirements in practice

The Act does not prescribe design aesthetics, but it does require functional accessibility. This includes:

  • Perceivable content (e.g., text alternatives, sufficient contrast)
  • Operable interfaces (keyboard access, accessible navigation)
  • Understandable content (clear language, predictable interactions)
  • Robust compatibility with assistive technologies

Organizations must also provide:

  • Accessibility information
  • Instructions in accessible formats
  • Feedback mechanisms for users with disabilities

Market surveillance and enforcement in the Netherlands

Enforcement of the Dutch Implementation Act is handled through existing market surveillance and supervisory authorities, depending on the sector.

Enforcement mechanisms include:

  • Accessibility audit and inspections
  • Requests for technical documentation
  • Corrective actions and remediation timelines
  • Administrative fines or product withdrawal in severe cases

This makes accessibility a compulsion for organizations.

Relationship with other Dutch and EU accessibility laws

The Dutch Implementation Act complements existing legislation, such as:

  • The Dutch Equal Treatment Act based on disability or chronic illness.
  • The EU Web Accessibility Directive (public sector websites and apps).
  • The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN CRPD).

Together, these frameworks create a layered accessibility ecosystem covering public, private, digital, and physical environments.

Read more: VPAT requirements in the SaaS accessibility

In a nutshell

The Netherlands’ Dutch Implementation Act transforms the European Accessibility Act from an EU directive into a practical, enforceable reality. By aligning accessibility with market regulation and consumer rights, the Netherlands reinforces the idea that accessibility is not an optional – it is a fundamental requirement for participation in the digital and economic life of society.

For businesses, compliance is not just about avoiding penalties; it is an opportunity to create inclusive products and services that reach wider audiences and reflect modern European values.

Preparing for EAA compliance in the Netherlands? We work with global and EU-focused organizations according to European Accessibility Act into clear, actionable steps under the Dutch Implementation Act. Through comprehensive website accessibility audits and accessibility remediation services aligned with WCAG and EU requirements, we help to reduce compliance risk, close accessibility gaps, and support accessible digital experiences across websites, apps, and digital platforms. Reach out hello@skynettechnologies.com for more information.

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