Unstable income, limited social protection, constant uncertainty.
For many employees in Belgium, becoming self-employed still feels like a major risk.
But is this perception still aligned with today’s reality?
Short answer: the risk exists but it’s often misunderstood, and poorly compared.
Let’s take a clear, honest look.
Why self-employment still feels risky in Belgium
In Belgium, permanent employment contracts remain deeply rooted in the culture.
Being an employee is often associated with:
- financial security
- clear social protection
- long-term stability
On the other hand, self-employed professionals are still perceived as people who:
- live with constant uncertainty
- depend entirely on clients
- lack a safety net
👉 The result: many skilled professionals never seriously explore the option, even when their current job no longer suits them.
The real risk: changing your status… or staying stuck?
The real question isn’t “Is self-employment risky?”
It’s:
What is actually riskier today: changing your status, or not changing anything at all?
Because salaried employment also carries risks:
- restructurings and layoffs
- burnout
- limited salary progression
- loss of meaning
- dependency on a single employer
👉 The difference: these risks have become familiar — so we stop questioning them.
Self-employed does not mean “unprotected”
This is one of the most persistent myths.
In Belgium, self-employed professionals can:
- build a pension
- be covered in case of illness or incapacity
- take out additional insurance (guaranteed income, hospitalisation)
- build financial reserves in a tax-efficient way
👉 The system is different from salaried employment — but it’s far from nonexistent.
Financial risk is often overestimated
Many people assume that becoming self-employed automatically means unstable income.
In reality:
- many independents work on long-term assignments
- some experience more continuity than when switching employers
- having several clients often reduces dependency risk
And above all:
👉 Net income is often badly underestimated by employees.
A higher gross income doesn’t necessarily mean more stress —
often, it means more control and flexibility.
What significantly reduces risk today
The Belgian market has changed.
Risk is much lower when:
- your profile is in demand (IT, digital, data, HR, marketing, project management…)
- you test the transition progressively
- you are properly advised
- you clearly understand the financial impact
👉 The real risk isn’t the status.
The real risk is making a decision without proper information.
Self-employed: risky… or simply different?
Becoming self-employed is not:
- a reckless leap
- an irreversible decision
- an escape at all costs
It is:
- a change in mindset
- a different relationship to work
- another way to manage security
👉 And most importantly: it’s not for everyone — and that’s perfectly fine.
Before deciding, ask the right questions
Rather than deciding based on fear or assumptions, it’s better to:
- objectively compare your options
- understand the real impact on your day-to-day life
- simulate different scenarios
Still unsure?
On Workers, you can:
- talk to the AI Career Coach to clarify your situation
- compare employee vs self-employed based on your profile
- estimate your real net income, without complexity
👉 Not to decide for you.
But to help you decide with clarity.