Funded Commerce and Shopping Startups in Netherlands
Amsterdam (Noord-Holland) accounts for 29 of the 50 companies shown, with Rotterdam as a distant second at eight companies and smaller clusters in Arnhem,…
Amsterdam (Noord-Holland) accounts for 29 of the 50 companies shown, with Rotterdam as a distant second at eight companies and smaller clusters in Arnhem, Nijmegen, Eindhoven, and Utrecht. The dataset spans rounds from early 2022 through October 2025, and seed-stage deals make up the largest share — indē wild ($5M, Amsterdam, March 2025), Blooming Good ($1M, Rotterdam, January 2025), and Pulse4all ($5M, Amsterdam, November 2024) are representative of recent activity at that stage.
The largest disclosed raises sit at higher stages. In3 (Eindhoven) closed an $85M Series B in May 2022 and Crisp (Amsterdam) raised $73M at Series C in October 2022. More recently, Recharge.com (Amsterdam) raised $46M in January 2025 and Billink (Rotterdam) closed $32M in January 2024 — both payments-adjacent platforms, and two of the stronger signals that commerce infrastructure continues to attract larger checks even as early-stage deal volume stays active. A meaningful share of rounds, particularly those labeled Series Unknown, list amounts as undisclosed.
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Frequently asked
What are the largest disclosed rounds among these Netherlands commerce startups?
In3 (Eindhoven) raised $85M in a Series B in May 2022, and Crisp (Amsterdam) raised $73M at Series C in October 2022. After those two, Recharge.com (Amsterdam) raised $46M in January 2025 and Billink (Rotterdam) closed $32M in January 2024.
Which Dutch cities have the most funded commerce and shopping companies in this dataset?
Amsterdam (Noord-Holland) accounts for 29 of the 50 companies shown, spanning sectors from beauty platforms like indē wild and Parfumado to circular commerce companies like Excess Materials Exchange and Renewaball. Rotterdam is the next most concentrated city, with eight companies including Billink, Skoon Energy, Valyuu.com, Passionfruit, and Blooming Good.
How many 2025 rounds appear in this data, and which are the most notable?
Seven of the 50 rows carry 2025 round dates through October 2025. The largest disclosed raise is Recharge.com's $46M in January, followed by indē wild's $5M seed in March and Whoppah's $1M seed in October. Two of the seven 2025 rounds — transferz and Salesupply — list amounts as undisclosed.
What funding stages are most common in this segment?
Seed is the most frequent stage across the 50 rows. Seven companies closed Series A rounds, including Levenue ($9M, Breda, November 2023), NOWATCH ($9M, Amsterdam, June 2022), and Excess Materials Exchange ($5M, Amsterdam, December 2024). Only in3 (Series B, $85M) and Crisp (Series C, $73M) represent later-stage deals in this set.
Which sub-sectors within Netherlands commerce are attracting the most capital?
Payments and BNPL infrastructure commands the largest individual checks — in3 ($85M), Billink ($32M), Sprinque ($21M), and Levenue ($9M) are the clearest examples. Sustainability-oriented commerce (Excess Materials Exchange, Renewaball, Valyuu.com, Phycom) appears at multiple stages. Beauty and personal care — indē wild, Parfumado, Skins Cosmetics, We Are Eves — clusters primarily at seed and Series Unknown.
How many of the 50 rounds have undisclosed funding amounts?
At least 11 of the 50 rows list amounts as undisclosed, concentrated in the Series Unknown category — including Funda, Skins Cosmetics, MatchWornShirt, Salesupply, and Conversation24. Disclosed round sizes in the dataset range from $50K (Getplace.io, pre-seed) up to $85M (in3, Series B).
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