What is the situation
CBS confirmed Dutch CPI inflation at 2.8 percent year on year in April 2026, equal to the flash estimate. The regular publication was delayed by a data-centre fire in Almere and placed on StatLine on 20 May. From 2026, CPI and HICP use base year 2025=100. The signal is not the headline alone: energy including motor fuels rose 7.8 percent, services 3.6 percent, non-energy industrial goods 0.3 percent, and food, beverages and tobacco 1.5 percent. Derived CPI, excluding tax and subsidy effects, was 2.4 percent. The first monthly CPI figure is normally provisional.
Analysis
Dutch small businesses should read this as a cost-composition signal, not a blanket 2.8 percent pricing rule. Vans, refrigeration, heating, deliveries, site visits, machinery and outsourced services can feel inflation far above the average. Resellers of stable goods may have little room to use general inflation as an explanation. Thin GDP growth of 0.1 percent in Q1, consumer confidence at -44, and modest retail volume growth make pricing power uneven. The practical control point is the margin file: which invoice lines moved, which contracts permit indexation, which customers can carry an adjustment, and where cash leaves before customers pay.
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Impact
H1
Fuel, energy, delivery and service invoices need separation from general overhead. If they sit in broad ledger accounts, margin leakage appears too late and price corrections become guesswork.
H2
Supplier and customer contracts need precise index language. CBS guidance points to series name, base year, period, indexation date, and provisional or final figure. CPI and HICP are different measures.
H3
Energy-led inflation can change business models quietly. Route density, call-out fees, quote validity, stock decisions, subcontractor pricing and debtor discipline become structural controls, not occasional admin work.
Daily operational takeaway
Within 72 hours, review the ten largest April and May supplier invoices and mark each cost driver: fuel, energy, services, goods, rent, tax component or other.
The data, sourcing, and analysis behind this article were conducted by Paolo Maria Pavan. AI was not used to identify sources, build the factual basis, or produce the analytical judgment contained here. AI was used only as a drafting aid. The final English text was personally reviewed, edited, and approved by the author before publication. Any translated versions are AI-generated from the original English text.