Netherlands Travel Guide: Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Utrecht in 2026
The Netherlands offers a mix of cutting-edge design and rich heritage. LocalsInsider guide showcases the best of Dutch dining, eco-conscious spots, and boutique stays.
The Netherlands is the country that handles 20 million annual tourists and still manages to feel livable, mostly because Amsterdam has gotten very good at separating the visitor city from the resident city. The famous canals, the Van Gogh and Rijksmuseum, the Anne Frank House — those will still be there. But Amsterdam's real life is in the Jordaan, Oud-West, De Pijp, and the cafés where locals spend afternoons. Beyond Amsterdam: Rotterdam's post-war architecture is now considered some of Europe's most interesting, Utrecht is the smaller version of Amsterdam without the bachelor parties, and the tulip fields in April-May are genuinely worth the day trip.
Our Netherlands coverage focuses on Amsterdam's overlooked neighborhoods and the cities Dutch people actually like best.
The travel personality: The Compact City Traveler
Quick facts
Live right now
Best time to visit
| Season | Why go |
|---|---|
| April–June, September | April is tulip season — book early, prices spike |
| March, October | Shoulder season — fewer tourists, often cheaper, weather still good |
| November–February | Off-season — quiet, best deals, plan around weather |
Top cities to visit
Experiences you'll probably love
- Renting a bike and getting lost in Amsterdam's Jordaan
- The Rijksmuseum and Van Gogh Museum in a single day
- Cheese tasting in Gouda or Edam markets
- Tulip season at Keukenhof gardens (April)
- Beach days at Scheveningen or Zandvoort
Not many tourists know about…
- Haarlem — Amsterdam's quieter, equally pretty cousin
- The Wadden Islands (Texel, Vlieland) for North Sea escape
- De Pijp neighborhood in Amsterdam for food markets and bars
- Kröller-Müller Museum in the middle of a national park
- Giethoorn — village with no roads, only canals
- Maastricht — southern Dutch town with Burgundian feel
If you visit only once, make it this
The world's largest flower garden — 32 hectares with 7 million tulip, daffodil and hyacinth bulbs planted by hand each autumn. Open only 8 weeks a year (mid-March to mid-May). The peak bloom is roughly the last week of April.
30 minutes from Amsterdam by bus 858 from Schiphol. Buy combo tickets online; expect crowds.
Where to walk & breathe
A 5,400-hectare park with free white bicycles to ride between heathland and forest — and the Kröller-Müller Museum inside the park with the world's second-largest Van Gogh collection (90 paintings). One-hour drive from Amsterdam.
Park ticket + museum ticket combo. The bikes are genuinely free; just take one.
Museums worth your time
Vermeer's The Milkmaid, Rembrandt's Night Watch, and most of the Dutch Golden Age. The 2013 renovation by Cruz y Ortiz restored the building to its 1885 glory.
Visit website →The world's largest collection of Van Gogh paintings (200+) — Sunflowers, The Bedroom, Almond Blossom. Timed-entry tickets only; book online days ahead.
Visit website →Amsterdam's modern art museum with the famous 'bathtub' extension by Benthem Crouwel Architects — Mondrian, Malevich, Warhol, plus strong Dutch design collection.
Visit website →The Insider's Edit
A few additions for travelers planning the Netherlands beyond Amsterdam museums:
Piero Lissoni's design inside the 1897 Sweelinck Conservatory — the eight-storey atrium is one of Europe's great hotel spaces.
Jonnie & Thérèse Boer's three-Michelin-starred restaurant and hotel in a converted prison.
Pair the obvious (Van Gogh) with the hidden gem — Voorlinden's contemporary collection in a country setting near The Hague.
Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring in a 17th-century townhouse — the perfect-scale museum.
Where to eat
Three-Michelin-star (since 2004) in a converted 15th-century library in Zwolle — chef Jonnie Boer's tasting menu focused on Dutch ingredients. Worth the train ride from Amsterdam.
Two-Michelin-star restaurant in the Waldorf Astoria — chef Sidney Schutte's contemporary Asian-influenced tasting menus. Most refined Amsterdam dining.
Amsterdam's serious seafood counter near Museumplein — oysters, the giant seafood platter ('plateau de fruits de mer'), fresh North Sea fish. Multiple locations across Amsterdam now.
Dutch grandmother cooking — stamppot (mashed potato with kale), hutspot (mash with carrots), classic Dutch comfort. The walls covered in customers' mothers' photos.
Where to stay
Six restored 17th-18th century canal houses converted into a single luxury hotel on the Herengracht — Guerlain Spa, Spectrum two-Michelin-star restaurant, private gardens.
Only 16 suites on Dam Square — Bottega in-suite bars stocked with full bottles, the Bridges Michelin-starred restaurant. Leading Hotels of the World, opened 2018, refreshed 2024.
Amsterdam's 1896 grande dame on the Amstel river — Bord'Eau Michelin-starred restaurant, panoramic terraces over Munttoren tower.
25 connected 17th and 18th century canal houses between Prinsengracht and Keizersgracht, refreshed 2024 — the Pulitzer's Bar, courtyard garden, walking distance to Anne Frank House.
Realistic daily budget
Per person, per day. Excludes flights. Peak season can run 20-40% higher.
Travel safety & inclusivity
Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.
Major festivals
Need a visa for Netherlands?
Many travelers can enter Netherlands visa-free, but it depends on your passport. Check your specific requirements:
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Not sure if Netherlands is right for your next trip? We'll compare 53 destinations against your travel style. Take our country matcher quiz →
Frequently asked questions about Netherlands
When is the best time to see Dutch tulip fields?
Mid-April to early May is the prime window — Keukenhof opens late March through mid-May (2026 dates: roughly March 19 to May 10), but peak bloom is almost always the last two weeks of April. Visit Keukenhof on a weekday at opening (8am) or after 4pm to dodge tour buses. For the actual fields, cycle the Bollenstreek between Lisse, Hillegom, and Noordwijkerhout — pick up an e-bike at Schiphol or Haarlem. Crowd-free alternatives: the Noordoostpolder in Flevoland (its own Tulpenfestival mid-April to early May), or the Kop van Noord-Holland between Schagen and Den Helder — the world's largest contiguous bulb area. Never walk into the fields — they're working farms, not photo sets, and damage them. Stay on the paths.
Is Amsterdam worth visiting, or should I base elsewhere?
Amsterdam is still essential — the museums (Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh, Stedelijk) are world-class, the canal architecture is unique, and the city is best explored in three or four focused days. But it's also the most touristed and expensive part of the Netherlands. If you have a week, pair Amsterdam with Utrecht (30 min by train, similar canals, half the crowds), The Hague (the seat of government and home to the Mauritshuis with Vermeer's Girl with a Pearl Earring), Rotterdam (modern architecture, the harbor, completely different energy), or Delft (postcard-perfect old town, easy day trip). Train travel between cities is fast, frequent, and rarely more than an hour.
Do I really need to rent a bike in the Netherlands?
Yes — at least for a day. The Netherlands has roughly 35,000km of dedicated bike lanes, and cycling is genuinely how the country moves. In Amsterdam, walking covers the center fine, but the surrounding neighborhoods (Noord, Oud-West, De Pijp) open up on a bike. Rent through Donkey Republic, Black Bikes, or your hotel — €10–15 per day. Rules matter: use marked bike lanes (they're separate from cars and pedestrians), signal turns with your hand, lock the bike to a fixed rack with the included chain (bike theft is constant), and stay alert — local cyclists are fast and don't slow for confused tourists. For day rides, the Waterland route north of Amsterdam through Broek in Waterland and Marken is the easiest beautiful loop.
Do I need a visa to visit the Netherlands?
EU, EEA, and Swiss citizens enter freely. Citizens of the US, UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, and around 60 other visa-exempt countries can stay up to 90 days within any 180-day period in the Schengen Area. From late 2026, those travelers will need an ETIAS online authorization (around €7, valid three years) before flying. Russian and Chinese passport holders need a Schengen short-stay visa via VFS Global or the Dutch consulate. Schiphol airport is one of Europe's busiest passport-control points — allow extra time, especially on Sunday evenings and Monday mornings. The Eurostar from London (St Pancras to Amsterdam Centraal) runs direct in about 4 hours and is often a better option than flying short-haul into Europe.
Where do locals eat in Amsterdam?
Skip the canal-side restaurants with photo menus and head into the neighborhoods. De Pijp for Albert Cuyp street food + dinner at Bar Mash or Ron Gastrobar. Jordaan for the classic Dutch bruin café experience (Café Chris is among the oldest, since 1624) and modern bistros like Toscanini for Italian or Worst for wine and small plates. Oud-West for Foodhallen — a covered food market in an old tram depot, perfect for indecisive groups. For the iconic local snack, get bitterballen with mustard and a small beer at any brown café. Indo-Dutch rijsttafel at Tempo Doeloe is the lesser-known Dutch culinary tradition worth seeking out — a 20-dish Indonesian feast.
Locals Insider's Articles About Netherlands
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