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The Netherlands has permanently adopted regulations effective July 1st, allowing B driving license holders (after 2 years) to operate zero-emission commercial vehicles up to 4,250 kg domestically. This change removes the need for a C license and includes an exemption from tachograph requirements for ZEVs operating within a 100 km radius of the base, significantly lowering operational barriers for fleet electrification.
This event has sufficient information for decision-making.
Understanding what changed and why it matters for your decisions.
Operators of commercial vehicles exceeding 3,500 kg Gross Vehicle Weight (GVW), including heavier electric vans, were generally required to employ drivers holding a C license (truck license) and adhere to standard EU tachograph regulations, creating significant administrative and training overhead for transitioning to heavier ZEVs.
B-license holders (with 2 years experience) can now legally drive ZEVs up to 4,250 kg within the Netherlands, and these specific ZEVs are exempt from tachograph mandates when operating within a 100 km radius of the operating base. This regulation is now permanent, replacing a previous 'tolerated' period.
The regulatory barrier for operating heavier electric delivery vans (3.5T to 4.25T) has been drastically reduced by eliminating the mandatory C license requirement and the administrative burden of the tachograph for local deliveries. This makes ZEV adoption economically more viable for last-mile logistics providers in the Netherlands.
Commercial vehicles over 3,500 kg remain legally classified as trucks, meaning drivers must still comply with relevant traffic rules pertaining to trucks and are required to complete a short safety training course specific to operating these heavier vehicles.
Logistics providers operating in the Netherlands should immediately re-evaluate their fleet electrification strategy, specifically targeting ZEVs between 3.5T and 4.25T. Companies can now utilize their existing B-license driver pool for these heavier vehicles, reducing driver training costs and simplifying compliance related to tachographs for local deliveries, accelerating the transition away from diesel.