What is the situation?
Dutch wholesale revenue grew 0.9% in 2025 after two weak years. In Q4, growth reached 2.5%. Yet business confidence stayed negative for 16 straight quarters.
That is the urgent warning. Revenue is improving, but trust inside the sector is not. This usually signals that businesses are resuming trade without gaining real strength.
The picture is uneven. ICT wholesale rose 12.1% in Q4, while agricultural wholesale fell 12.6%. At the same time, 31.1% of wholesale firms report staff shortages, and bankruptcies fell from 394 to 352.
This selective recovery introduces both new opportunities and risks for different types of wholesalers, warranting closer analysis below.
Analysis
Micro and small wholesalers: misreading growth as stability is a serious risk now.
If orders rise while confidence stays weak, many founders loosen discipline too early. Documentation slips, approvals become informal, and supplier checks are skipped. Growth then increases exposure instead of resilience.
The sector split changes impact and strategies. ICT wholesalers benefit from customer digitisation and compliance, leading to more specialized demand. Agricultural wholesale, by contrast, reveals risk for intermediaries that add only distribution, showing that the lack of differentiation invites disintermediation.
Treat the labour shortage as permanent. Business plans assuming you can just hire more later are now obsolete. Adapt or face rapid failure.
One important limit: some claims in the source, especially on ICT market growth and long-term labour shortages, go beyond the CBS-style revenue snapshot and should be treated as directional, not definitive for every subsector.
Impact
H1
Do not treat higher revenue as proof that your operation is under control. Separate invoice approval from payment execution, properly verify new suppliers, and clear any documentation backlog before volume rises further.
H2
If your value remains just moving goods, your margin will soon collapse. Customers will abandon wholesalers that do not add compliance support, technical advice, reliability, or process quality. Act now or lose ground.
H3
Wholesale is now brutally selective. Sectors and firms that cannot digitise, document, and operate with fewer staff will be bypassed, absorbed, or left powerless. Move quickly or accept decline.
Daily operational takeaway
In the next 72 hours, audit a core process supplier onboarding, invoice approval, or order handoff. Immediately close control gaps before growth turns them into costly disasters.
