What people ask before booking the flight.
Do I need a visa for the Netherlands?+
EU/EFTA citizens enter freely. UK, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Mexico and 60+ other nationalities enter visa-free for up to 90 days (Schengen). From 2026, ETIAS is required — online authorization, €7, valid 3 years. Get it before boarding.
Are coffee shops really legal?+
Yes, with nuance. The sale and use of cannabis in licensed coffee shops is tolerated (not technically legal — decriminalized via "gedoogbeleid", the pragmatic tolerance policy). Adults 18+, up to 5g per purchase, consumed inside. Smoking in public is forbidden. Taking product out of the country is illegal and enforced.
When's the best month to see tulips?+
Keukenhof opens late March to mid-May (exact dates vary — check keukenhof.nl). Peak bloom is the 2nd and 3rd week of April. Book 2 months ahead. Go on a weekday if you can. Arrive at 9am and leave by noon.
Is renting a bike safe?+
Yes, it's the natural way to get around. Use two locks (U-lock + chain), never leave overnight without anchoring to a fixed structure, remove the saddle if it's expensive, signal turns by hand. MacBike, Black Bikes, Yellow Bike and A-Bike are the main rentals (€12-18/day). Bike theft is the city's most common crime — not dangerous, just bureaucratic hassle.
Anne Frank House: how to get tickets?+
Booking is online only at annefrank.org, 2 to 4 months ahead. Tickets release in batches; monitor the site and official accounts. No walk-up sales. About 80% of last-minute visitors give up. Visit lasts 1h30; emotionally heavy.
Is Amsterdam good with kids?+
Excellent. Small, safe, flat city where bikes, child seats and strollers coexist. Kid attractions: NEMO Science Museum (interactive), Artis (historic zoo in Plantage), Vondelpark (playgrounds), Madurodam (in The Hague, a full day), summer water parks. Big family rooms: tricky in the Centrum, easier in Pijp or Oud-West.
Can I travel on €100/day?+
Tight but doable. Hostel or shared apart-hotel outside the Centrum (€40-55), bike (€15), meals at Foodhallen + Albert Cuyp + ethnic food (€25-35), one attraction/day (€15-22). Requires discipline, good shoes, May or October outside events. July/August impossible at that budget; January/February fits with room to spare.
Is overtourism really that critical?+
Yes. 22 million tourists/year for 905,000 residents. The city responds with: among Europe's highest tourist taxes, annual overnight caps, ban on new hotels downtown, growing Airbnb restrictions, campaigns aimed at troublesome tourists. Visiting isn't the sin; conscious behavior is the duty: stay outside the Centrum, support local commerce, spread spending, skip massive groups, respect residents.
Is a day trip to Bruges doable?+
Technically yes, but you need to leave very early. Amsterdam-Bruges train is 3h-3h30 with a change in Antwerp or Brussels. Same-day return: out at 7am, in at 10:30, 5-6 hours in Bruges, back at 5pm. Works but it's tiring. Sleep over in Bruges or pair it with Brussels. For a lighter day trip, pick Haarlem, Utrecht or The Hague.
Will vegetarians and vegans do well?+
Great. The Netherlands is now a vegan hub in northern Europe. Quality all-plant restaurants: De Bolhoed (Jordaan), Meatless District (Pijp), Vegan Junk Food Bar (several locations), Mr. Beans Vegan Junk (Pijp), Beter & Leuk (Oost). Markets like Albert Cuyp have great produce. Almost every mainstream restaurant has 2-4 vegetarian options. Indonesian rijsttafel offers vegan menus at some venues.
Pickpockets são tão comuns?+
Em locais previsíveis, sim. Concentrações: Centraal Station (saída e plataformas), bonde 2 e 5 horários de pico, fila de Anne Frank, Damrak, Leidseplein à noite, Vondelpark em festival. Cuidados: bolsa cruzada à frente, celular não no bolso traseiro, mochila aberta nunca atrás. Em bairros residenciais (Jordaan, Pijp, Oud-West) o risco cai drasticamente.
Red Light District: o que esperar?+
Bairro real e antigo, não fenômeno turístico. Vitrines onde trabalhadoras sexuais legalmente registradas oferecem serviço; igrejas (Oude Kerk, mais antiga da cidade), restaurantes, lojas, moradores. Hoje há regulação crescente: prefeitura quer mover parte das atividades para erotic center fora do centro até 2030. Vá com respeito: não fotografe trabalhadoras (proibido por lei), não beba demais, não grite. Visita curta de 30-40 min é suficiente; vá ao anoitecer (mais autêntico, ainda não pesado).
Inglês resolve mesmo?+
Sim, completamente. Holanda lidera índices de proficiência em inglês como segunda língua na Europa não-anglófona. Garçom, motorista, vendedor, médico, atendente de museu — todos falam inglês fluente. Aprenda 5 palavras em holandês por gentileza ("hallo", "dank u wel", "alstublieft", "tot ziens", "lekker") — recebido com sorriso.
Qual o melhor mercado pra visitar?+
Albert Cuyp Markt (Pijp, segunda-sábado, 250 barracas, alma do bairro) é o mais completo. Noordermarkt (Jordaan, sábado de manhã, fazendeiros + antiguidades) é o mais charmoso. Ten Katemarkt (Oud-West, quarta-sábado, multicultural) é o mais autêntico de bairro. Bloemenmarkt (Singel, flores e bulbos) é mais turístico mas vale a passagem rápida. IJ-Hallen (Noord, mensal) é o maior mercado de pulgas da Europa.
Posso atravessar de balsa pro Noord à noite?+
Sim. As balsas Buiksloterweg (a mais usada, atrás do Centraal) e NDSM operam 24h, gratuitas, a cada 7-15 min de noite. Trajeto de 5 min. Bicicleta e pedestre embarcam livremente. Voltar 1h da manhã do EYE Filmmuseum é trivial.