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Quick summary: TraceX helps chocolate companies in the Netherlands meet EU Deforestation Regulation requirements with automated Due Diligence Statement (DDS) generation, cocoa traceability, and deforestation risk verification across import and EU distribution supply chains.
EUDR Due Diligence Statements (DDS) for chocolate supply chains in the Netherlands are critical to ensuring that all cocoa used in chocolate products is deforestation-free and legally sourced under the EU Deforestation Regulation.
As one of Europe’s leading cocoa import hubs and a key gateway for global cocoa entering the EU, the Netherlands plays a central role in ensuring compliance across chocolate supply chains and downstream distribution networks.
With enforcement deadlines approaching, importers, processors, and chocolate manufacturers must implement farm-level traceability, supplier data validation, and DDS submission workflows before products enter or move within the EU market.
The EUDR Landscape for Chocolate in the Netherlands
The Netherlands sits at the heart of Europe’s cocoa trade ecosystem, particularly through major ports like Amsterdam one of the largest cocoa import hubs globally.
The Netherlands is a major chocolate and cocoa hub, not just a consumer market. It imported about $443M of chocolate in the HS 180631 category in 2024, with major sourcing from Belgium, Germany, Poland, the UK, and Croatia for chocolate blocks/slabs, while broader cocoa imports were $2.21B in 2023 and made the Netherlands the world’s largest importer of cocoa beans.
Netherlands chocolate imports
Main suppliers
For cocoa beans and derivatives, the main suppliers include Côte d’Ivoire, Cameroon, Nigeria, Ghana, and Ecuador. For chocolate products, key suppliers include Belgium and Germany, followed by countries such as Poland, the UK, and Croatia in the HS 180631 trade flow.
Market role
A large share of Dutch cocoa imports is re-exported as beans, derivatives, or finished chocolate products, so the Netherlands functions as a trading and processing gateway for Europe. Dutch chocolate imports are therefore relevant both for consumer market demand and for supply-chain compliance into the EU.
Cocoa used in chocolate production in the Netherlands is primarily sourced from:
These origins dominate global cocoa supply but are also linked to deforestation risks, making compliance critical.
Under EUDR:
Every chocolate product entering or distributed via the Netherlands must be linked to verified farm-level geolocation data.
Given its role as an entry point into the EU, compliance in the Netherlands must happen before import and redistribution.
Master the step-by-step process of submitting Due Diligence Statements under the new EUDR rules.
Read the blog on filing DDS for EUDR compliance
Explore how cocoa importers in Netherlands can achieve traceability, transparency, and compliance under EUDR.
Read the full blog on EUDR Cocoa Compliance
What Are the Challenges Facing Dutch Chocolate Companies
Chocolate companies, traders, and importers in the Netherlands face unique challenges driven by their role in global cocoa trade and EU distribution:
Multi-Country Sourcing Complexity
Manual DDS Preparation
Limited Farm-Level Traceability
Complex Supplier Documentation
High Compliance Risk at Entry
In the Netherlands, compliance failure can disrupt EU-wide distribution, not just domestic markets.
How TraceX Solution Simplifies EUDR DDS for Chocolate
TraceX EUDR Solutions enables chocolate companies in the Netherlands to manage compliance efficiently across import and distribution workflows:
Automated DDS Creation
Blockchain-Based Traceability
Farm-Level Visibility
Risk Assessment Dashboards
AI-Powered Monitoring
This ensures Dutch chocolate companies can achieve compliance before import and maintain it across EU distribution channels.
Turning Compliance into Competitive Advantage in the Netherlands’ Chocolate Industry
EUDR compliance is transforming the Netherlands from a trade hub into a compliance gatekeeper for the EU cocoa and chocolate market.
Companies that:
Will gain:
Those that fail to adapt risk:

Why It Matters for the Netherlands Chocolate Industry
For the Netherlands one of Europe’s primary gateways for cocoa and chocolate trade compliance with the EU Deforestation Regulation is more than a legal requirement; it is a strategic necessity that will shape the future of chocolate supply chains across the EU.
As a leading importer and processor of cocoa, and a critical distribution hub for chocolate products, the Netherlands plays a decisive role in ensuring that only deforestation-free, traceable cocoa enters and circulates within European markets.
By adopting digital traceability and transparency platforms, Dutch chocolate companies can unlock significant long-term value:
Building Consumer Trust Through Verified Chocolate Products
Consumers across Europe increasingly demand transparency in the products they consume. Verified “deforestation-free” and ethically sourced chocolate enables brands to demonstrate accountability and build trust.
Digital traceability ensures that every cocoa input can be traced back to its origin creating end-to-end visibility from farm to final chocolate product.
Meeting ESG and Certification Benchmarks
Traceability systems streamline compliance with ESG goals and certifications such as:
Automated reporting and verified sustainability data allow companies to meet the expectations of retailers, regulators, and investors, especially in highly regulated EU markets.
Data-Driven Sourcing and Risk Management
Chocolate companies operating in the Netherlands gain access to:
This enables proactive decision-making, efficient sourcing, and reduced exposure to compliance failures at import and distribution stages.
Ultimately, aligning with EUDR strengthens the Netherlands’ role as a trusted entry point for sustainable cocoa and chocolate in the EU, balancing trade efficiency with environmental responsibility.
Toward a Sustainable and Compliant Chocolate Future in the Netherlands
As EUDR enforcement deadlines approach, Dutch chocolate companies stand at a critical crossroads between operational complexity and strategic opportunity.
By embracing:
The industry can transition from fragmented, manual systems to a fully transparent, deforestation-free chocolate supply chain.
Platforms from TraceX enable importers, processors, and distributors in the Netherlands to transform complex cocoa sourcing networks into verifiable, data-driven ecosystems.
The result is not just compliance but:
For the Netherlands’ chocolate industry, EUDR is not just a regulation it is an opportunity to lead Europe in traceable, compliant, and future-ready chocolate supply chains.
Understand the key components of EUDR compliance and how to streamline your DDS process efficiently.
Read the blog on EUDR Due Diligence
Learn how AI-driven automation and intelligent workflows simplify data collection, verification, and reporting.
Explore the blog on Agentic AI for EUDR
Unpack the biggest hurdles faced by importers under EUDR and how technology can turn compliance into a competitive edge.
Read blog on Challenges for EU Importers
The EU Deforestation Regulation is a regulation by the European Union aimed at preventing deforestation-linked commodities like cocoa from entering the EU market. It requires full supply chain traceability and submission of Due Diligence Statements (DDS) proving compliance.
A DDS is a formal declaration confirming that cocoa used in chocolate products in the Netherlands is deforestation-free and legally sourced. It must include farm-level geolocation data and risk assessment documentation before chocolate products are imported, distributed, or placed on the EU market.
All Dutch chocolate importers, processors, manufacturers, traders, and distributors handling cocoa-based products must comply. Both large enterprises and smaller operators are required to submit DDS documentation especially those acting as first operators at EU entry points.
Common challenges include:
TraceX Solution digitizes the entire process mapping cocoa farms, verifying deforestation risks using satellite data, and auto-generating compliant DDS reports ready for submission before import and EU distribution.