Organisations in Netherlands facing a Microsoft review deal with a measurement-led process, where the most common findings are the most expensive ones drive the number. This page lists the firms covering Microsoft in Netherlands with balanced pros and cons, then sets out the local legal context and how Microsoft findings tend to resolve — a directory, not a ranking.
Last reviewed: 5 June 2026 · Reviewed quarterly · A directory, not a ranking. This page is information, not legal advice.
Dutch entities face the vendor’s audit programme run through its EMEA hub and appointed partners. Dutch contract law (Burgerlijk Wetboek), the GDPR as applied by the Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens, and works-council (ondernemingsraad) rights all shape how — and how fast — you should respond to a data request. The firms below combine Microsoft expertise with coverage of the Netherlands market.
Listed alphabetically with pros and cons — a directory, not a ranking.
Vendor- and tool-agnostic licensing boutique working across Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, Salesforce and IBM optimization. Engagements run buyer-side, from audit response through negotiation and ongoing optimization.
Independent analyst firm specializing solely in Microsoft licensing rules, roadmap and audit defense, widely cited as an authority on how Microsoft's terms actually work.
UK / EMEA independent SAM and licensing boutique offering multi-vendor advisory, audit defense and negotiation across the European market.
Central- and Eastern-European SAM and audit-support boutique with its own SAM tooling, covering Adobe, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP and VMware.
Independent multi-vendor licensing practice covering IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, SAP and Tier-2 publishers, with a stated 100% impartial, buyer-side model.
Buyer-side independent licensing advisory with one of the broadest multi-vendor footprints, covering Oracle, Microsoft, SAP, IBM, Broadcom, Salesforce, ServiceNow and Workday.
Independent Microsoft and Azure specialist covering SAM, SPLA and cloud cost, with no Microsoft partnership and a strong public voice on Microsoft licensing.
Global software reseller and licensing-services provider with a large SAM and advisory practice across Microsoft and other vendors.
Independent UK / EMEA boutique at the convergence of SAM, FinOps and cloud cost, covering Microsoft and multi-vendor estates.
DEMO — listings are compiled from public information and labelled demo until the verified registry is live. Firms are listed alphabetically, never ranked. Independence is shown as a pro; reseller, Big-4 or vendor-side audit ties are shown as a con — each a factual trade-off for you to weigh.
Microsoft audits rarely arrive labelled as an "audit." They often open as a no-cost SAM Engagement or "optimization" review run through an appointed partner, asking you to deploy inventory tooling and confirm your Windows Server, SQL Server, M365 and CAL position. Treat that invitation as the start of a formal process, because it is.
Do not run inventory scripts or accept a SAM-tool deployment before the scope is agreed in writing. A SAM engagement is still an audit in effect, and what you disclose sets the baseline for the true-up.
Dutch contract law under the Burgerlijk Wetboek (BW) governs how audit clauses are construed, and the general limitation period for contractual claims is five years (art. 3:307 BW). The GDPR, enforced by the Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP), constrains personal-data disclosure, and the works council (ondernemingsraad) has rights under the Wet op de ondernemingsraden where employee data or monitoring is involved. Dutch commercial culture is pragmatic and English is widely used in negotiations; contracts frequently route disputes to the Dutch courts or NAI arbitration. This is information, not legal advice.
The firms below are listed alphabetically, not ranked. Read the pros and cons, and weigh independence against a vendor relationship for yourself: a buyer-side independent has no incentive to expand your spend, while a firm that also resells, runs vendor-side audits, or sits inside a sales motion carries a potential conflict of interest with buyer-side defense.
Microsoft findings in Netherlands resolve the way they do elsewhere: the headline number is an opening position, not a settled bill. Microsoft findings resolve through re-measurement (correcting SQL Server core math under virtualization), demonstrating correct Azure Hybrid Benefit application, contesting how CALs and editions were counted, and re-timing the resolution against the Enterprise Agreement renewal — Microsoft has leaned toward incentive-based true-up-to-cloud over punitive enforcement.
Independent advisers report that the gap between the initial claim and the final settlement is frequently substantial, but every figure is case-specific and self-reported — treat any percentage as indicative until independently verified. Around 62% of companies reported a major-vendor audit in the last 12 months, and roughly 52% of buyers now bring in outside help (2025 surveys). Figures are survey-reported for the years shown.
Oracle’s local climate and legal context →
SAP’s local climate and legal context →
IBM’s local climate and legal context →
Salesforce’s local climate and legal context →
In practice, yes. A SAM Engagement is framed as a no-cost optimization review, but the data you disclose establishes your compliance baseline and can lead to a true-up just as a formal audit would. Scope the request before deploying any inventory tooling.
SQL Server is licensed per core with a minimum count, and virtualization can expand the cores Microsoft counts unless the deployment is licensed and configured correctly. Re-measuring the true core position is often where a Dutch defense begins.
Azure Hybrid Benefit lets eligible on-premise licenses cover Azure workloads, but mis-application — or counting the same license on-premise and in Azure — is a common finding. Demonstrating correct application can remove a large part of a claim.
Where an engagement involves data that monitors employees, the ondernemingsraad may have rights under the Wet op de ondernemingsraden. This can affect what data is collected and on what timeline, so scope the request accordingly. This is information, not advice.
Yes. The directory and matching are free for buyers, including in the Netherlands. We take no money from software publishers, add no markup, and no vendor ever sees your brief. We publish no prices; fees are agreed directly with the firm.
Tell us your situation and we route your brief to firms covering Microsoft in Netherlands. The directory and matching are free for buyers — no markup, no referral pressure, and no firm is recommended over another.
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