The Netherlands is a two-name AI cohort by tracked funding — Weaviate's $50M Series C in October 2025 led by Battery Ventures and Refact.ai's self-hosted coding play — but ASML's chip-equipment monopoly makes Eindhoven structurally important to every other country's AI ambitions. Weaviate's October 2025 round, joined by Zetta Venture Partners, took total funding past $168M and placed its open-source vector database alongside Pinecone and Qdrant in the late-stage RAG infrastructure tier. The country's loudest 2025 signal was political: in February 2025, Bird (formerly MessageBird) — the Netherlands' most valuable private tech company — announced relocation across the US, Singapore, Dubai, Istanbul, and Thailand, with CEO Robert Vis publicly blaming the EU AI Act regime as a structural drag. The Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens still pushes sovereign and self-hosted deployments, the exact lane Refact.ai targets for regulated teams that cannot ship code to external endpoints. Around them, ASML's €80M decade-long research commitment at TU Eindhoven and the EAISI–Brainport cluster anchor an industrial-AI axis distinct from Amsterdam's software scene, with Philips and Fizyr-style robotics inside it. TU Delft drives human-centric AI and governance research, and Booking, Adyen, Mollie, and Bird alumni continue feeding the next 2026 spinout wave.
Bird's exit reframed Dutch AI policy
Bird quit the Netherlands in February 2025 across the US, Singapore, Dubai, Istanbul, and Thailand with CEO Robert Vis citing the EU AI Act — the country's loudest 2025 tech-policy signal and one Dutch buyers and regulators are still pricing into 2026.