B2B ecommerce for Dutch companies: Navigating payment methods, ERP integration, and recurring billing

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  1. Introduction
  2. What is B2B ecommerce for Dutch companies?
  3. How does B2B ecommerce differ from B2C ecommerce in the Netherlands?
  4. Which online payment methods do Dutch business customers expect?
  5. How can ecommerce systems help B2B companies in the Netherlands with invoicing and payments?
  6. How is B2B ecommerce integrated with Dutch systems?
  7. How can Dutch companies digitize recurring billing and contract-based pricing in B2B ecommerce?
  8. How Stripe Payments can help

The Dutch market has specific business-to-business (B2B) ecommerce requirements and expectations. For example, Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) Direct Debit powers recurring transactions, iDEAL | Wero dominates online payments,and B2B payment terms typically default to 30 days.

Below, we’ll explain how B2B ecommerce works in the Netherlands, which payment methods Dutch business customers expect, and how to build infrastructure that supports invoicing, enterprise resource planning (ERP) integration, and recurring billing at scale.

What’s in this article?

  • What is B2B ecommerce for Dutch companies?
  • How does B2B ecommerce differ from business-to-consumer (B2C) ecommerce in the Netherlands?
  • Which online payment methods do Dutch business customers expect?
  • How can ecommerce systems help B2B companies in the Netherlands with invoicing and payments?
  • How is B2B ecommerce integrated with Dutch systems?
  • How can Dutch companies digitize recurring billing and contract-based pricing in B2B ecommerce?
  • How Stripe Payments can help

What is B2B ecommerce for Dutch companies?

B2B ecommerce is when one business sells goods or services to another through digital channels. Every step of a transaction is handled online, from procurement through quoting, ordering, and payment. As of 2026, the Dutch ecommerce industry was worth €36.5 billion.

How does B2B ecommerce differ from B2C ecommerce in the Netherlands?

In the Netherlands, as elsewhere, B2B ecommerce businesses sell to other businesses. B2C ecommerce businesses sell to individual customers. The two pathways are based on different commercial logic.

Here are some notable differences:

  • Order sizes and purchasing patterns: B2B buyers usually restock inventory, source components, or secure long-term supply. For that reason, B2B transactions are often larger, higher in value, and recurring. B2C customers are more likely to make smaller, one-off purchases.

  • Pricing structures: Many Dutch B2B relationships operate on negotiated rates, tiered discounts, contract pricing, or volume-based agreements tied to specific customer accounts. B2C transactions are much more likely to involve static prices.

  • Sales cycles: B2B purchases often involve internal approval chains that stretch across procurement and finance teams. This can add complexity and length to the buying process. B2C transactions usually close near-instantly at checkout.

  • Operational integration: B2B ecommerce systems should connect directly to ERP, accounting, inventory, and tax workflows. This allows the systems to manage contract pricing, credit limits, and post-invoice reconciliation at scale. B2C ecommerce platforms can operate more independently.

  • Customer relationships: B2B commerce is relationship-driven and long-term. Account management, custom catalogs, and service-level expectations are much more important with B2B commerce than in B2C retail.

Which online payment methods do Dutch business customers expect?

Dutch business buyers expect payment methods that match how their finance teams actually operate. B2B ecommerce businesses should provide several options for different use cases.

Here are some common payment methods in the Netherlands, and what they’re used for:

  • iDEAL | Wero for immediate payments: iDEAL | Wero accounts for roughly 72% of ecommerce transactions in the Netherlands. It’s the default choice when B2B buyers pay upfront or settle payment requests that are linked to an invoice.

  • SEPA Direct Debit for recurring charges: SEPA Direct Debit is widely used for subscriptions, retainers, and contract-based services. Buyers authorize a direct debit mandate once, and future payments are collected automatically within the Eurozone.

  • Corporate cards for specific use cases: Credit card use in the Netherlands is lower than in many other countries. But supporting cards is still important, particularly for cross-border B2B transactions. Business credit cards are common for software subscriptions and international purchases.

  • Bank transfers across the board: Many Dutch companies still ask for invoices and pay them using standard bank transfers. Ecommerce platforms should support “pay by invoice” workflows and structured payment references for reconciliation.

Payment timelines tend to be standard regardless of the payment method. Dutch law sets a default 30-day payment term for B2B transactions unless both parties agree otherwise, though many companies negotiate longer terms.

How can ecommerce systems help B2B companies in the Netherlands with invoicing and payments?

B2B companies in the Netherlands face unique pressures when it comes to invoicing and getting paid. Digital ecommerce systems can help with credit management, visibility, and automation, all of which are important given the larger order values and extended payment terms associated with B2B transactions. Digital invoicing, automated reminders, and structured reconciliation reduce days sales outstanding (DSO) and lower the administrative burden on finance teams.

Specifically, B2B ecommerce systems can automatically create compliant invoices, track due dates, and reconcile incoming payments against open balances. They can also send structured payment links that route directly through the buyer’s bank, so the business doesn’t have to send a static invoice and wait for a manual bank transfer.

How is B2B ecommerce integrated with Dutch systems?

Dutch B2B ecommerce platforms should connect directly to finance, inventory, and banking infrastructure so money can move easily and transparently.

Here are a few ways these platforms should connect to other core business systems and processes:

  • Dutch companies rely on ERP systems to manage inventory, sales orders, accounting, and value-added tax (VAT) reporting. B2B ecommerce platforms need to sync orders, customer records, pricing agreements, and stock levels with these systems in real time to avoid duplicate data entry and reconciliation errors.

  • When a customer makes a purchase, a sale order should automatically generate in the ERP, trigger invoice creation if applicable, and update receivables.

  • iDEAL | Wero should be embedded directly into the payment flow, and confirmation of payment should update the order status in real time. This allows fulfilment to proceed without finance teams manually verifying incoming transfers.

  • When agreements are recurring, ecommerce systems should securely store mandate references and track authorization status. Payment failures, retries, and notifications should be automated.

  • Ecommerce systems should automatically generate compliant invoices that include the VAT details and structured references necessary to match ERP tax reporting.

Modern B2B setups typically rely on application programming interfaces (APIs) to connect ecommerce platforms, ERP systems, and payment infrastructure. This creates a single source of truth across sales, finance, and operations.

How can Dutch companies digitize recurring billing and contract-based pricing in B2B ecommerce?

Recurring revenue is common in Dutch B2B relationships. Digitizing it means translating existing agreements into an automated, reliable billing infrastructure.

The digitizing process should cover the following areas:

  • Keep contract-specific pricing logic: Many B2B relationships involve agreements with precise stipulations, such as negotiated rates, volume tiers, or minimum commitments. Ecommerce systems should store customer-level pricing rules and apply them automatically at checkout or during invoice generation.

  • Build subscription- and usage-based billing models: Recurring billing can either be fixed, with monthly or annual fees, or it can be variable based on usage. A digitized billing platform should accurately calculate charges, generate invoices on schedule, and adjust for any upgrades or downgrades without manual recalculation.

  • Automate invoices and payment tracking: Systems should automatically generate compliant invoices, track due dates, and trigger reminders if payment is delayed. This should happen even when recurring charges are invoiced rather than autocollected.

Providers such as Stripe Billing allow companies to encode contract terms directly into the system so that finance teams don’t have to consult spreadsheets each billing cycle.

How Stripe Payments can help

Stripe Payments provides a unified, global payments solution that helps any business—from scaling startups to global enterprises—accept payments online, in person, and around the world.

Stripe Payments can help you:

  • Optimize your checkout experience: Create a frictionless customer experience and save thousands of engineering hours with prebuilt payment UIs, access to 125+ payment methods, and Link, a wallet built by Stripe.

  • Expand to new markets faster: Reach customers worldwide and reduce the complexity and cost of multicurrency management with cross-border payment options, available in 195 countries across 135+ currencies.

  • Unify payments in person and online: Build a unified commerce experience across online and in-person channels to personalize interactions, reward loyalty, and grow revenue.

  • Improve payments performance: Increase revenue with a range of customizable, easy-to-configure payment tools, including no-code fraud protection and advanced capabilities to improve authorization rates.

  • Move faster with a flexible, reliable platform for growth: Build on a platform designed to scale with you, with 99.999% historical uptime and industry-leading reliability.

Learn more about how Stripe Payments can power your online and in-person payments, or get started today.

Le contenu de cet article est fourni à des fins informatives et pédagogiques uniquement. Il ne saurait constituer un conseil juridique ou fiscal. Stripe ne garantit pas l'exactitude, l'exhaustivité, la pertinence, ni l'actualité des informations contenues dans cet article. Nous vous conseillons de solliciter l'avis d'un avocat compétent ou d'un comptable agréé dans le ou les territoires concernés pour obtenir des conseils adaptés à votre situation.

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