Netherlands ☁️ 17°C · Now
★ Best Time Now Amsterdam
Netherlands
Amsterdam at a glance
As of 2026, Amsterdam travel is best in Apr, May, Jun, Sep, from about $110/day (budget, ex-flights), with a 3-day itinerary. Top sight: Canal Cruise (Grachtengordel).
$110+
Budget tier · excl. flights
From major hubs
AMS (Schiphol)
Visa-free 90 days
For most Western passports
$1 ≈ €0.86
EUR · indicative rate
Apr, May, Jun, Sep
Now is ideal!
Temperate oceanic (cool wet
Now ☁️ 17°C
01:23
CET (UTC+1) / CEST (UTC+2 summer)
Dutch
English universally spoken
Why visit Amsterdam?
Amsterdam is one of Europe's most distinctive capitals — 165 canals (more than Venice), 1,500 bridges, and more bicycles than people (881,000 bikes for 821,000 residents). The city's UNESCO-listed canal belt was built 1613-1662 to handle Dutch Golden Age trade. Tolerant culture, world-class art (Van Gogh, Rembrandt, Vermeer), and the most photogenic urban canal system in Europe define the experience.
Anne Frank House is Amsterdam's most-visited site — the secret annex where 13-year-old Anne Frank hid with her family for two years (1942-1944) before being discovered and sent to concentration camps. Her diary, written in this annex, became one of the world's most important books. Pre-book entry online 6+ weeks in advance — sells out months ahead. Plan 1-1.5 hours. Free Friday night bookings (limited) for those at the door.
Van Gogh Museum is the largest Van Gogh collection in the world — 200+ paintings, 500+ drawings, 700+ letters. Sunflowers, Bedroom in Arles, Self-Portrait series, Wheatfield with Crows. $25 entry; pre-book mandatory.
Rijksmuseum is the national museum of the Netherlands — Dutch Golden Age (Rembrandt's Night Watch, Vermeer's Milkmaid, Hals's Laughing Cavalier), 800,000+ objects. The 2013 renovation made it one of Europe's best-organized museums. $25 entry.
Canal cruise is the canonical Amsterdam experience — UNESCO canal system from the water with 165 canals to explore. 1-hour standard cruise $20; private + dinner cruise $80-150. Best at sunset (illuminated canals).
The Jordaan is Amsterdam's most photogenic neighborhood — narrow streets, hidden courtyards (hofjes), independent boutiques, brown cafés (traditional Dutch pubs). Anne Frank House is just east of Jordaan.
Vondelpark is Amsterdam's Central Park equivalent — 47 hectares, free entry, bike-friendly. Open-air theater in summer (Vondelpark Open Air Theatre runs free concerts/performances Wed-Sun).
For real Amsterdam food, try traditional Dutch dishes. Stroopwafels (warm caramel waffles, $2-3 from street stalls), bitterballen (deep-fried beef croquettes, $5-8 at any pub), herring (haring) with onions ($3-5 from herring carts), Dutch pancakes (pannenkoeken, $8-15 at Pancakes Amsterdam), Indonesian rijsttafel (the Dutch-Indonesian fusion meal, $25-40).
Dutch coffee shop culture (where you can buy and consume marijuana legally) is famous for tourists. About 160 coffee shops in Amsterdam — most concentrated in Centrum. The Bulldog (since 1975) is the original; Boerejongens has the highest-rated quality. Strict rules: 5g per person per day max, 18+ only.
For famous traditional Dutch food spots: Café Restaurant De Reiger (Jordaan, traditional Dutch comfort food), Moeders (literally "Mother," Dutch home cooking with eclectic décor), Foodhallen (food court in converted tram depot, 20+ vendors).
Public transport: GVB (Gemeentelijk Vervoerbedrijf) operates trams (16 lines), metro (5 lines), and buses. Single ticket €4 / $4.30, but I amsterdam City Card (24-72 hours, €60-100) includes all transit + museum entry. Best app: GVB Reisplanner.
Cycling is the local mode of transport. Bike rental from MacBike or A-Bike $15/day. Amsterdam has the world's most cyclist-friendly infrastructure — separated bike lanes on every major street, cyclist-priority traffic signals.
Day trips: Zaanse Schans (windmills, 30 min by train, $50 day tour) — traditional Dutch windmill village. Keukenhof Gardens (tulip season, mid-March to mid-May, 90 min, $80 day tour) — world's largest flower garden. Den Haag (1 hour, $40 each way) — political capital + Mauritshuis with Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring.
A few practical realities. Amsterdam is hilly with steep narrow stairs in canal houses — accommodation in older buildings often has 4-5 floor walk-ups. Lift-equipped hotels cost 15-30% more. Tipping not mandatory but appreciated (10% restaurants, round up taxis).
Safety: Generally safe but pickpocketing in Centrum and on trams is real. Front pockets only. The Red Light District is well-policed but feels safer in groups. Don't take photos of sex workers (illegal, fine €100+).
The 2024 tourism overcrowding measures: Amsterdam has banned new hotels in Centrum, increased tourist tax to 12.5% (highest in Europe), restricted day-tripper buses. May feel less crowded than pre-2020.
Bottom line: Amsterdam is one of Europe's most distinctive cities — canals, art, cycling culture, and tolerance in one walkable footprint. 4-5 days is the sweet spot. Add Keukenhof in tulip season (mid-March to mid-May).
Things to do in Amsterdam
Canals & Old Center
Canal Cruise (Grachtengordel)
UNESCO-listed canal belt from the water — 165 canals dug between 1613-1662 during the Dutch Golden Age. Standard 1-hour glass-roof boat covers Prinsengracht, Herengracht, Keizersgracht. Sunset and dinner cruises available.
Anne Frank House
Secret annex (Achterhuis) where 13-year-old Anne Frank hid with her family from 1942-1944. Her diary became one of the most-read books of the 20th century. The hidden bookcase entrance and the original room layout are preserved.
Royal Palace + Dam Square
17th-century palace originally built as Amsterdam's city hall (1648-1665), now used by the Dutch royal family for state functions. Dam Square is the city's symbolic heart with the National Monument and New Church (Nieuwe Kerk) adjacent.
Begijnhof + Bloemenmarkt
Begijnhof is a hidden 14th-century courtyard (one of the oldest hofjes) once home to a lay sisterhood — quiet garden, two surviving chapels, original wooden house from 1528. Bloemenmarkt is the world's only floating flower market on Singel canal.
Museums & Art
Rijksmuseum
National museum of the Netherlands and the definitive Dutch Golden Age collection. Rembrandt's Night Watch (recently restored under live conservation), Vermeer's Milkmaid and Little Street, Hals's Laughing Cavalier. 800,000+ objects across 80 galleries.
Van Gogh Museum
Largest Van Gogh collection in the world — 200+ paintings, 500+ drawings, 700+ letters. Sunflowers, Bedroom in Arles, Self-Portrait series, Wheatfield with Crows, Almond Blossom. Chronological layout traces his evolution from dark Dutch period to vivid Arles years.
Stedelijk Museum
Netherlands' national museum of modern and contemporary art. Mondrian, Malevich, Chagall, De Kooning, Warhol, Koons. The 2012 'Bathtub' extension by Benthem Crouwel is itself architecturally significant.
Moco Museum
Boutique modern art museum in a small Museumplein townhouse — Banksy, Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst, Keith Haring, KAWS, Yayoi Kusama. Smaller and more Instagram-friendly than the major museums.
Neighborhoods & Lifestyle
Jordaan Walk + Hidden Hofjes
Most photogenic Amsterdam neighborhood — narrow 17th-century streets, hidden courtyards (hofjes) once built as almshouses, independent boutiques, brown cafés (bruin café). Karthuizerhof, Sint-Andrieshof and Claes Claeszhofje are the standouts.
De Pijp + Albert Cuypmarkt
South-Amsterdam neighborhood with a young, multicultural energy — Albert Cuypmarkt is the city's largest daily street market (260+ stalls), the Heineken Experience is here, and Sarphatipark anchors the residential side.
Vondelpark + Museumplein
Amsterdam's 'Central Park' — 47 hectares, free entry, bike-friendly. Open-air theater in summer (Vondelpark Open Air Theatre runs free concerts/performances Wed-Sun, May-Sep). Museumplein is the green plaza in front of Rijksmuseum/Van Gogh/Stedelijk with the famous 'I amsterdam' letters (officially removed but a smaller version remains).
Red Light District + De Wallen (Cultural Context)
Oldest neighborhood in Amsterdam (13th century) — narrow alleys, red-windowed shopfronts that have been a legal, regulated workspace for 400+ years. Oude Kerk, Amsterdam's oldest building (1213), sits in the middle. Tone is shifting under city policy.
Day Trips & Unique
Keukenhof Gardens (Tulip Season Only)
World's largest flower garden — 7 million tulips, daffodils, hyacinths planted annually. Open mid-March to mid-May only. Located in Lisse, 35 minutes by bus from Amsterdam.
Zaanse Schans Windmills
Open-air heritage village 20 minutes north of Amsterdam — 8 working historic windmills (sawmill, paint mill, oil mill), wooden green houses from the 18th century, cheese-making demos, wooden clog workshop. Free to walk; individual mills charge €5-7 to enter.
Haarlem (Day Trip)
15 minutes by train from Amsterdam — smaller, quieter, more authentic Dutch city. Grote Markt central square, Sint-Bavokerk church where Mozart played the organ at age 10, Frans Hals Museum (Dutch Golden Age master), windmill De Adriaan on the river.
Giethoorn (Dutch Venice)
Car-free village 2 hours northeast of Amsterdam — 18th-century thatched-roof farmhouses connected by canals and wooden footbridges, no roads. Whisper boats (electric, no engines) glide through the canals. Often called 'Venice of the North' though it's more a quiet rural variant.
Travel cost
Per person, per day (excludes flights)
Hostel + local food + public transport
$110
≈ €94.60 EUR
Per person / day (excl. flights)
📅 Total cost by trip duration (incl. flights)
3 days
$480
≈ €412.80
5 days
$720
≈ €619.20
7 days
$950
≈ €817.00
Flight estimate: $400-1,200 from US/Asia (AMS direct from major hubs via KLM) (round-trip estimate)
Monthly weather
Currently in Amsterdam: ☁️ 17°C
Amsterdam now (Jun)
High 20°C / Low 12°C· Mild★ Best Time
Jan 🍂
High 6°C / Low 1°C
Cold
Feb 🍂
High 7°C / Low 1°C
Cold
Mar 🌥️
High 10°C / Low 3°C
Cool
Apr 🌥️
High 14°C / Low 5°C
Cool
★ Best time to visit
May ⛅
High 18°C / Low 9°C
Mild
★ Best time to visit
Jun 🌤️
High 20°C / Low 12°C
Mild
★ Best time to visit
Jul 🌤️
High 22°C / Low 14°C
Pleasant
Aug 🌤️
High 22°C / Low 14°C
Pleasant
Sep ⛅
High 19°C / Low 11°C
Mild
★ Best time to visit
Oct 🌥️
High 14°C / Low 8°C
Cool
Nov 🌥️
High 10°C / Low 5°C
Cool
Dec 🍂
High 7°C / Low 2°C
Cold
Jan
🍂
6°
1°
Cold
Feb
🍂
7°
1°
Cold
Mar
🌥️
10°
3°
Cool
Apr
🌥️
14°
5°
Cool
★Best
May
⛅
18°
9°
Mild
★Best
Jun
🌤️
20°
12°
Mild
★Best
Jul
🌤️
22°
14°
Pleasant
Aug
🌤️
22°
14°
Pleasant
Sep
⛅
19°
11°
Mild
★Best
Oct
🌥️
14°
8°
Cool
Nov
🌥️
10°
5°
Cool
Dec
🍂
7°
2°
Cold
Practical information
Getting there
Getting around
Money & payments
Language
Cultural tips
Money & payment
Currency
Euro (EUR, €). €1 ≈ $1.07 (April 2026).
Card acceptance
Universal — even small cafés take contactless. Cash for street markets and herring carts.
Tipping
10% restaurants appreciated. Round-up taxis. €1-2/bag hotel porters.
ATM
Dutch banks (ABN AMRO, ING, Rabobank) free for foreign cards. Avoid Euronet (5-12% premium).
Recommended itinerary
Amsterdam 3-day route
Day 1 Canals & Anne Frank
09:00
Anne Frank House
Pre-book 6+ weeks ahead — sells out months in advance
🎫 18% off — Book lowest price11:00
Jordaan walking tour
Photogenic canal-side district with hidden courtyards
13:00
Lunch at Café Restaurant De Reiger (Jordaan)
Local Dutch cuisine in historic setting
15:00
Canal cruise (1 hour)
Best way to see Amsterdam's UNESCO canal system
🎫 17% off — Book lowest price16:30
Dam Square + Royal Palace
Free entry to Dam Square; palace $13 entry
19:00
Dinner at Moeders (Dutch home cooking)
Traditional Dutch comfort food
Day 2 Museums Day
09:00
Rijksmuseum (open 9 AM)
Vermeer, Rembrandt's Night Watch, Dutch Golden Age
🎫 17% off — Book lowest price12:00
Lunch at Museumplein
Cafes around the museum square
13:30
Van Gogh Museum
Largest Van Gogh collection in the world; pre-book mandatory
🎫 20% off — Book lowest price16:00
Vondelpark (Amsterdam's Central Park)
Free outdoor park; bike rentals nearby
18:00
De Pijp dinner + Albert Cuyp market
Multi-cultural food scene
21:00
Brown café tour (traditional Dutch pubs)
Cafe Hoppe, Cafe Chris (since 1624)
Day 3 Day Trip & Heineken
09:00
Day trip to Zaanse Schans (windmills)
30 min from Amsterdam; traditional windmill village
🎫 12% off — Book lowest price13:00
Lunch at Restaurant De Hoop op d'Swarte Walvis
Riverside Dutch cuisine
15:00
Return to Amsterdam — Heineken Experience
Beer brewery tour + tastings
🎫 12% off — Book lowest price18:00
Bike rental + canal-side ride
Rent bike $15/day; bike Amsterdam like a local
20:00
Dinner at Foodhallen (food court)
20+ food stalls in converted tram depot
Where to stay
Click each district to compare hotel deals
Centrum (Old Town)
Dam Square + Royal Palace + Anne Frank House. Most central but also most touristy and pricey.
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Jordaan
Charming canal-side district with cafes, vintage shops, Anne Frank House nearby. Best for couples.
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De Pijp
Hipster southern district with Albert Cuyp market, indie restaurants. Best for foodies.
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Museumkwartier
Around Museumplein — Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum, Concertgebouw. Best for art lovers.
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Oost (East)
Up-and-coming residential area with Oosterpark, multicultural food scene. Cheaper hotels.
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Westerpark
Industrial-turned-creative quarter with Westergasfabriek (former gas factory), parks, indie shops.
See hotels in this area
Amsterdam hotel price comparison
Compare Booking.com, Expedia, Hotels.com prices in one place
* Centered on Centrum (Old Town) — the most hotel-dense area in Amsterdam
Top tours & activities in Amsterdam
Top-rated by travelers
Frequently asked questions
Most common questions from travelers to Amsterdam
Q How much does a day in Amsterdam cost?
Budget travelers spend $110/day with hostel ($35-50) and pub-style meals. Mid-range $280/day with 4-star hotel and table-service meals. Luxury $720+ for canal-house boutique hotels and Michelin dining. Amsterdam is one of Europe's pricier capitals due to land scarcity.
Q How many days do I need in Amsterdam?
4 days for major sights. Day 1: Anne Frank House + Jordaan + canal cruise. Day 2: Rijksmuseum + Van Gogh Museum + Vondelpark. Day 3: Dam Square + Royal Palace + Heineken Experience + De Pijp. Day 4: Day trip to Zaanse Schans (windmills) or Keukenhof (spring) or Den Haag (Vermeer).
Q When is the best time to visit Amsterdam?
April-June and September-October are sweet spots — temperatures 15-22°C / 59-72°F, manageable crowds, all attractions open. Mid-March to mid-May is tulip season (Keukenhof). July-August is hot for Amsterdam (22°C / 72°F) but most crowded. December has Christmas markets but cold, dark (sunset 4:30 PM).
Q Do I need a visa for Amsterdam?
Schengen 90 days visa-free for US, UK, Canada, Australia, NZ, Japan, Korea passports. From 2026, ETIAS pre-authorization ($8 / €7) is required — apply online at least 72 hours before flight.
Q Is Amsterdam safe for tourists?
Generally safe but pickpocketing in Centrum and on trams is real. Front pockets only. Red Light District is well-policed but feels safer in groups. Don't take photos of sex workers (illegal, fine €100+). Late-night walking in central canals is fine.
Q Does English work in Amsterdam?
Yes — Netherlands ranks #1 in the world for English proficiency. Hotel, restaurant, museum staff all fluent. Even older locals typically speak conversational English. Dutch isn't necessary at all for tourist visits.
Q What food is Amsterdam famous for?
Stroopwafels (caramel waffles, $2-3 from street stalls), bitterballen (deep-fried beef croquettes, $5-8 at any pub), herring (haring) with onions ($3-5 from herring carts), Dutch pancakes ($8-15 at Pancakes Amsterdam), Indonesian rijsttafel ($25-40 at Sampurna), Gouda cheese tasting at any cheese shop. Iconic spots: Café Restaurant De Reiger (Dutch traditional), Moeders (Dutch home cooking), Foodhallen (food court).
Q Are coffee shops legal? How do they work?
Yes — coffee shops sell marijuana legally to 18+ adults. About 160 coffee shops in Amsterdam, mostly in Centrum. 5g per person per day maximum. Smoking allowed inside (or in designated outdoor areas). The Bulldog (since 1975) is the original; Boerejongens has highest-rated quality. Tobacco is being phased out due to anti-smoking law — most coffee shops sell pure marijuana now.
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