Your Insider’s Guide to HR Tech Europe 2026 Amsterdam

April 22-23, 2026 | RAI Amsterdam

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Your Insider's Guide to HR Tech Europe 2026 Amsterdam
Talent and HCM PlatformsGuide

Published: March 16, 2026

Kristian McCann

Look, we know you’re busy. Your inbox is a disaster, you’ve got back-to-back calendar blocks named “quick sync” (spoiler: nothing about them is quick), and someone just pinged you asking if you’ve “had a chance to look at that doc yet” (you haven’t).

But here’s the thing: you’re about to invest serious time, money, and energy getting yourself to Amsterdam. If you’re committing to flights, accommodation, two days away from your desk, and all the mental bandwidth that goes with it — surely you can invest 15 minutes now to make sure you actually get the most out of it, right?

Bookmark this page. Seriously. You’ll want it when you’re:

  • Building your two-day session plan
  • Deciding which new format to try first
  • Explaining to your leadership team why this trip is worth it

Standing in RAI Amsterdam on Wednesday morning thinking “where do I even start?”

Think of this as your HR Tech Europe insurance policy. Fifteen minutes of reading now = two days of maximum value later. Plus, we’ll make it worth your while — if you’re going to read a conference guide, it might as well have personality.

Still with us? Good. Let’s make sure you absolutely crush HR Tech Europe 2026.

Must Reads:

HR Tech Europe is going all-in on Amsterdam this year, and if you’re heading to RAI Amsterdam on 22–23 April, you’re in for the most ambitious edition yet. We’ve pulled together everything you need to know — the sessions, the new formats, the speakers, the networking — so you can walk in with a plan and walk out with something to actually act on.

Spoiler alert: this isn’t your typical “sit through a keynote and collect a tote bag” conference. HR Tech Europe 2026 is where the industry confronts its most urgent question: Can HR technology actually help HCM leads manage workflows and workers, or do they just add more complexity?

Why HR Tech Europe 2026 is Different This Year

The Location: RAI Amsterdam

RAI Amsterdam is a top-tier European conference and exhibition venue, featuring over 116,000 m² of flexible space, 12 multi-functional halls, and 70+ meeting rooms — and the city around it isn’t bad either. Two full days in one of the world’s most liveable cities, surrounded by 2,400+ HR professionals from 86 countries. The energy here is different to your average industry event.

The Scale

Previous editions have brought together:

  • 2,400 HR professionals
  • 86 countries represented
  • 110 HR tech solution providers
  • 134 moments of insight and shared journeys

What to Expect for 2026

This year’s programme is seeing some welcome additions, with four formats worth highlighting:

  1. AI Lab — A dedicated space to get hands-on with AI tools and explore what’s actually deployment-ready
  2. HR Tech Intensives — Deep-dive learning sessions designed to sharpen your thinking and go beyond the surface
  3. Pitchfest 2026 — Watch emerging HR tech companies pitch live, compete for prizes of up to €20,000, and make their case to a room full of decision-makers
  4. Get Connected — A structured networking format built for making the right connections, not just collecting business cards

And for every referral share through the Share for Good campaign, €1 is donated to charity. The more the community spreads the word, the greater the collective impact.

The Big Themes Dominating HR Tech Europe 2026

1. AI: From Pilot to Practice

The novelty has worn off. HR leaders aren’t impressed by demos anymore — they want proof. The big questions this year: Which AI tools are actually in production, and what do the results look like? How do you build an AI strategy without betting everything on one vendor? What does responsible AI in HR actually mean — and who’s enforcing it? There’s a reason Responsible AI and Automation in HR is one of the marquee discussion topics this year. The industry knows the risks. The question is whether it’s being honest about them.

2. The Talent Architecture Rethink

Workforce planning, skills-based hiring, internal mobility — the traditional talent model is being dismantled and rebuilt. Sessions will push beyond theory into operational reality. How do you move from job-based to skills-based talent management? What does a modern talent marketplace look like inside a large enterprise? Where does technology enable the shift, and where does it just add noise?

3. HR’s Changing Role in the Business

HR is no longer a support function waiting to be consulted. The CHROs and CPOs speaking this year are sitting at the executive table, driving transformation. Topics will explore how HR technology enables strategic rather than administrative work, how to build the business case for investment, and what it actually means to be a data-driven people function.

4. Employee Experience as a Retention Strategy

Engagement, recognition, wellbeing, career development — companies winning the talent war are winning on experience. Sessions will interrogate what actually moves the needle: the tools and approaches that shift culture rather than just measure it, how to personalise EX at scale, and what the workforce of the next five years actually expects.

5. The Startup Disruption Factor

Legacy HR tech is being challenged from every direction. Some of the most important conversations at this event won’t happen on the main stage — they’ll happen in the Startup Park and the AI Lab, where the companies building the next generation of HR tools are showing their work in real time.

Must-See Speakers

The Headliners

Josh Bersin, Global Industry Analyst and CEO, The Josh Bersin Company

If there’s one person whose take on HR technology carries the most weight in this industry right now, it’s Josh Bersin. He’ll be bringing his latest research and analysis to the main stage on Thursday, and his perspective on AI, skills, and the future of work is essential listening. His session draws on global research and real-world examples to set out where AI is genuinely reshaping work, what’s working, what isn’t, and where HR leaders need to focus over the next 12–24 months. He doesn’t do vendor fluff. He does data, pattern recognition, and plain speaking.

Byron Clayton, CHRO, Pandora

Byron opens the conference on Wednesday morning with a keynote on how Pandora is using predictive analytics and next-generation HR technology to tackle attrition and unlock workforce productivity. He’s led at the intersection of people, strategy, and change across retail, consumer goods, life sciences, consulting, logistics, and technology. This isn’t theory — it’s a live case study from one of the world’s most recognisable consumer brands.

Lucy Adams, CEO, Disruptive HR

Lucy built her reputation tearing apart HR orthodoxy and replacing it with something that actually works. Her sessions challenge the assumptions that hold most people functions back, and she delivers with the kind of clarity that makes you want to rethink your entire operating model on the spot.

The Practitioners (Your Peers)

These are the people actually doing the work inside large, complex organisations. Their sessions carry a different kind of weight — no vendor agenda, no polished pitch, just real implementation experience:

  • Seline Berns-Oost Lievense, Chief People Officer, Samskip
  • Kris Dunn, CHRO US and Canada, Marriott International
  • Kishore Krishnan, Sr. HR Partner, Amazon.com
  • Isha Smith, Global VP Total Rewards, SoundCloud
  • Melissa Shelley Höjwall, Manager of Digital People Life Cycle, H&M
  • Anna Gullstrand, Chief People and Culture Officer, Mentimeter
  • Tom Hughes, Global Digital Experience Lead People and Culture, Sanofi
  • Hester Van Oene, HR Director, Wieden and Kennedy

These are your peers. People managing people functions inside organisations you recognise, dealing with the same pressures you’re dealing with. What worked, what didn’t, and what they’d do differently — that’s the conversation you can’t get anywhere else.

  • The Analysts and Advisors
  • Trish Steed, Co-Founder and Principal Analyst, H3 HR Advisors
  • Anna Carlsson, HR Tech Analyst, HR Digi
  • Dieter Veldsman, Chief HR Scientist, The Academy to Innovate HR

No vendor agenda. Pure analysis and insight. If you see any of these names on the agenda, prioritise them.

The 2026 Programme: What’s On and How to Navigate It

The Conference Programme

The backbone of the event. Two full days of expert-led sessions combining strategic thinking and practical application across HR technology, workforce strategy, talent management, AI adoption, and the future of the people function. No generic talks — every session is built around real-world impact. Pro tip: the agenda has competing sessions running simultaneously. Plan your day in advance and know your non-negotiables before you arrive.

HR Tech Talks

TED Talk-format sessions tackling the hottest topics in HR technology. Fast-paced, punchy, and designed to energise. Ideal for picking up a sharp new perspective quickly — or finding a new angle on a problem you’ve been stuck on. Perfect for the 20-minute gaps between longer sessions.

Ask the Experts

One of the most underrated features of the whole event. During designated times across both days, industry experts are available for informal, one-to-one or small group conversations. No formal presentation. No sales pitch. Just direct access to some of the brightest minds in HR and technology. Come with a specific problem. Leave with a perspective you couldn’t get anywhere else. These slots fill up — have your questions ready before you arrive.

HR Executive Think Tanks

Peer-to-peer discussions for senior HR leaders. No lectures, no presentations — just structured open dialogue with people working through the same challenges you are. Focused on key challenges, innovative strategies, and actionable solutions tailored to today’s HR landscape. If you’re a senior HR leader, this is where your most valuable conversations of the two days are likely to happen. The no-vendor format creates a quality of conversation you won’t find anywhere else at the event.

AI Lab (NEW for 2026)

A dedicated hands-on space to explore what AI-powered HR tools actually look like in practice. Not a demo theatre — an active learning environment where you can get up close with cutting-edge solutions, gain real-time insights into transformative technologies, and connect directly with the tools shaping the future of HR. If AI adoption is on your agenda for 2026, this is essential.

HR Tech Intensives (NEW for 2026)

For HR leaders who want more than just good sessions. Three structured Intensives run across the two days, each designed as a guided full-day journey through the event with a shared focus:

  • Culture Intensive
  • Leading HR Forward Intensive
  • HR Technology Strategy Intensive

These aren’t sessions you drop into between other things. They’re immersive, peer-level experiences designed to sharpen your thinking, compare perspectives with peers, and move through the event with structure and purpose. Think of it as a masterclass format built into the conference itself.

Pitchfest 2026 (NEW for 2026)

Emerging HR tech companies take the stage, pitch live, and compete for cash prizes of up to €20,000. This is where you’ll find the tools that aren’t in your vendor shortlist yet — but probably should be.

The schedule:

Round 1: 22 April, 11:15 – 12:15

Round 2: 22 April, 16:00 – 17:00

Final: 23 April, 11:00 – 11:30

The Pitchfest Final on Thursday morning is unmissable. You’ll see what early-stage innovation looks like before it lands on the analyst radar — and the conversations sparked in that room tend to be among the most forward-looking of the whole event.

Get Connected (NEW for 2026)

Structured networking, done properly. This is the hub that brings together Ask the Experts, AI Labs, Think Tanks, and interactive peer experiences in one place — designed to spark conversation, enable hands-on learning, and create the kind of connections you’ll actually follow up on. Not a drinks reception with awkward small talk. A purposeful environment for making the right connections.

HR Tech Startup Park

Meet the entrepreneurs building the next generation of HR solutions. These aren’t polished enterprise vendors — they’re founders solving real problems with new approaches. The conversations are usually the most energetic of the event, and if you want to get ahead of what’s coming before it becomes mainstream, this is where to look. Do it on Day One while you have energy.

HR Tech Marketplace

The main exhibition space, with 130+ HR tech solution providers ranging from global platforms to specialist tools. Confirmed for 2026: Workday, Personio, Culture Amp, HiBob, Rippling, Cornerstone, UKG, Mercer, G-P, Indeed, and Sana — alongside dozens more. This is where you research, compare, and get direct answers from the people who built the products.

Marketplace Strategy: How to Work the Floor

Don’t wander. Go in with a plan.

Day One — scout and prioritise. Walk the floor with fresh eyes, identify the conversations worth having, and book time with your shortlist for Day Two. Don’t commit to anything before you’ve seen what else is there.

Day Two — go deep. Return to your shortlist with specific questions. Ask about deployment, integration, ROI evidence, and real customer references. Don’t let vendors control the conversation.

The Startup Park — do it on Day One. The startup conversations are energising and often the most interesting of the whole event. Don’t leave them until you’re exhausted on Day Two afternoon.

Questions to Ask Every Vendor

For AI and Automation Tools:

  1. “Show me a live customer deployment — not a demo environment.”
  2. “What’s your average time to ROI, and how do you measure it?”
  3. “What happens when the AI gets it wrong? What’s the fallback?”
  4. “Where is our data stored and how is it used for training?”
  5. “Can you connect me with a reference customer in a similar organisation?”

For Core HR Platforms:

  1. “How does this integrate with our existing stack?”
  2. “What’s in the base contract versus what’s an add-on?”
  3. “Show me the admin experience — not just the employee interface.”
  4. “What does implementation actually require from our side?”
  5. “What does your customer success model look like after go-live?”
  6. For Talent Acquisition and Management Tools:
  7. “How do you handle bias in your AI recommendations?”
  8. “What compliance frameworks are you built around, and for which geographies?”
  9. “What are your customers replacing when they buy you?”
  10. “What’s the most common reason customers leave?”

Hot Topics to Track

These are the debates worth following across both days.

  1. “Is Our HR Tech Stack Actually Working?” Many organisations have spent the last five years acquiring tools. Now they’re asking whether any of it is delivering. The ROI question is everywhere this year — in the sessions, in the Marketplace, and in the Think Tanks.
  2. “What Does Responsible AI in HR Actually Look Like?” Bias in hiring algorithms. Explainability in performance management. Data governance. These are no longer theoretical concerns — they’re employment law risks. This conversation is front and centre.
  3. “Skills-Based Organisations: Real or Fantasy?” Everyone’s talking about the shift from job-based to skills-based talent models. A smaller number have actually done it. The sessions featuring real practitioners — not consultants selling the concept — are the ones worth attending.
  4. “Who Owns the Employee Experience?” HR? IT? The line manager? The answer increasingly seems to be “all of the above, and nobody in particular.” Sessions exploring cross-functional ownership of EX will be worth tracking.
  5. “What Are Startups Solving That Enterprise Vendors Aren’t?” Pitchfest and the Startup Park will surface the answer. Go in with specific gaps in your current stack and see what’s been built to fill them.

The DO’s and DON’Ts of HR Tech Europe 2026

DO:

  • Plan your agenda before you arrive — the programme fills fast and session conflicts are real
  • Try at least one new format — AI Lab, Pitchfest, or Get Connected are all worth your time
  • Go to Ask the Experts with a specific problem — the more precise your question, the better the answer
  • Visit the Startup Park on Day One — don’t save it for when you’re flagging on Day Two afternoon
  • Follow up within 48 hours — connections go cold fast after a conference
  • Use the Share for Good campaign — it costs you nothing and contributes to charity

DON’T:

  • Don’t try to attend everything — you’ll burn out before lunch on Day One. Pick your priorities and commit.
  • Don’t skip the Think Tanks if you’re eligible — peer discussion with no vendor agenda is genuinely rare
  • Don’t ignore the smaller exhibitors — the most interesting tools are often from companies you’ve never heard of
  • Don’t treat the Marketplace as the whole event — the sessions and new formats are where the real value lives
  • Don’t collect business cards and never follow up — 80% of conference connections go nowhere because nobody follows through first

The Post-Conference Action Plan

Within 24 hours: Block two hours to process notes while everything is still fresh. Send personalised follow-up messages — not generic “great to meet you” notes. Share your key takeaways with your team.

Week of 27 April: Schedule follow-up calls with vendors on your shortlist. Connect with peers you met on LinkedIn. Brief your leadership on what you learned and what you’re recommending.

Week of 4 May: Build business cases for any investments you’re considering. Create a 90-day action plan based on your two days in Amsterdam. Follow up with any speakers or experts you connected with.

Pro tip: Write a trip report — even a short one. Three takeaways, two vendors to evaluate, one thing you’re changing. Share it with your team. It justifies the trip, creates accountability, and means you actually act on what you learned rather than letting Amsterdam become a fond memory and nothing more.

The Unwritten Rules of HR Tech Europe

The corridor track is real — some of the best conversations happen between sessions, not in them

Vendors are more forthcoming on Day Two afternoon — they’re keen to make an impression before you leave

The opening hours set the tone — arrive early, get oriented, make your first connections before the noise picks up

Independent analysts know everything — if you encounter Josh Bersin, Stacey Harris, or Trish Steed in a casual setting, ask them something real

Evening events are where the honest conversations happen — informal environments break down the formality fast

The startup founders are often the most interesting people in the room — they’re solving problems the incumbents haven’t noticed yet

Ask the dumb question — everyone is figuring this out. The people who pretend they have it sorted are the ones to be most sceptical of

Bring your real problems — the more specific and honest you are about what you’re trying to solve, the more useful every conversation becomes

The Bottom Line: What HR Tech Europe 2026 is Really About

Strip away the agenda, the Marketplace, and the Dutch canal views, and HR Tech Europe 2026 is asking one fundamental question:

“How do we build people functions that are genuinely fit for the decade we’re actually in — not the one we planned for?”

Every keynote, session, Think Tank, and hallway conversation will orbit around some version of this. The industry is at a genuine inflection point:

  • AI is demanding proof, not just patience
  • Skills-based talent models are moving from concept to execution
  • Employee experience is becoming a competitive differentiator
  • HR technology investment is under more scrutiny than ever
  • The next generation of tools is already being built in startup parks like this one

HR Tech Europe 2026 is where you’ll find answers — not from vendors trying to sell you, but from peers who’ve walked the path, analysts who’ve studied the data, and practitioners who’ve learned the hard way.

Go to Amsterdam with clear goals. Ask hard questions. Challenge your assumptions. Network with intention. And come home with something worth doing.

See you at RAI Amsterdam.

Stay Connected

Website: www.hrtechnologyeurope.com

Event dates: 22–23 April 2026

Social Media: #HRTechEurope

UC Today will be on the ground across both days with live coverage, interviews, and insights. Follow us for real-time updates, speaker highlights, and the stories behind the announcements.

Now go register, sort your travel, and get ready for two days that will genuinely shape how you think about your people function.

Amsterdam is calling. The future of HR is waiting.

Let’s go.

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