Skip to main content
Amsterdam · Canal Ring

Amsterdam Museum

Chronicles Amsterdam's transformation from medieval fishing village to modern metropolis through interactive exhibits and paintings.

Amsterdam Museum, Amsterdam · Canal Ring
Category
Museum
Duration
2 hours
Best Time
Any time
Entry
EUR 17.5
Rating
4.3 (6,613)
The place

About Amsterdam Museum

Chronicles Amsterdam's transformation from medieval fishing village to modern metropolis through interactive exhibits and paintings. Housed in a former orphanage, the museum features the free civic guard gallery displaying massive 17th-century group portraits. The Amsterdam DNA exhibition offers a fast-paced 80-minute journey through the city's history.

Get Ticketsvia GetYourGuide · prices may vary
Book ahead

Skip the Queue

Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.

Search on Viator →Search on GetYourGuide →

Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.

The place

Getting there

Address
Kalverstraat 92, 1012 PH Amsterdam, Netherlands
Neighborhood
Canal Ring
Nearest Metro
Tram 13/17 to WestermarktTram 1/2/5 to Spui10-minute walk from Centraal
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

The Schuttersgalerij (civic guard gallery) connecting Kalverstraat and Sint Luciënsteeg is free to enter and less crowded than the main museum.

Plan for about 2 hours.

Amsterdam Museum is in the Canal Ring neighborhood of Amsterdam. The address is Kalverstraat 92, 1012 PH Amsterdam, Netherlands. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Around the corner

Nearby in Canal Ring

Explore all →
De Negen Straatjes
Shopping

De Negen Straatjes

Nine picturesque streets connecting the three major canals (Prinsengracht, Keizersgracht, Herengracht) in the city center, packed with independent boutiques, vintage shops, specialty stores, and cafes. Each street has its own character: Reestraat for fashion, Huidenstraat for homeware and design, Gasthuismolensteeg for vintage. The canal crossings between streets give you postcard views in every direction. These nine streets occupy some of the most expensive real estate in Amsterdam, but somehow most of the shops remain independent rather than chain. You'll find a perfumer who's been blending custom scents for 30 years next to a cheese shop that's been in the same family for generations. The vintage clothing stores are genuinely good, not the picked-over tourist-bait you find elsewhere. Laura Dols on Wolvenstraat specializes in vintage evening wear and is worth a visit even if you're not buying. The Nine Streets are also a strong lunch and coffee stop. Screaming Beans on Hartenstraat does excellent specialty coffee. The Pancake Bakery on Prinsengracht (technically one block north) serves the Dutch pancakes you're supposed to try at some point. Plan to spend a couple of hours wandering. The streets are short, so you can cover all nine at a comfortable pace. Most shops close on Mondays, and Sundays are quieter than Saturday. Visit Tuesday through Saturday for full access to everything.

2-3 hoursExplore
Bloemenmarkt
Market

Bloemenmarkt

The world's only floating flower market, running along the Singel canal since 1862. The stalls sit on houseboats moored to the canal bank, though the floating part is more technical than dramatic. You won't feel the water moving. What you will find is rows of stalls selling tulip bulbs, potted orchids, seeds, wooden tulips, clogs, and every possible flower-related souvenir aimed at tourists. Here is the honest truth: the Bloemenmarkt is more souvenir market than flower market at this point. Most stalls sell packaged bulbs and tourist kitsch rather than the cut flowers that made it famous. If you want to see how the Dutch actually buy flowers, go to a regular florist or a supermarket. But the Bloemenmarkt is still worth a walk-through, especially in spring when the displays brighten up and the bulb stalls bring out their best stock. The canal setting is genuinely pretty. The market runs from Koningsplein to Muntplein along the Singel, about 200 meters. Walk through, admire the displays, pick up some packaged bulbs if you want to try growing tulips at home (most ship internationally and clear customs fine), and then keep walking. Don't buy the plastic clogs. Budget about 20 minutes unless you're a serious gardener, in which case the seed selection is surprisingly deep and the prices are reasonable.

30 min-1 hourExplore
More on Amsterdam

From the blog

View all →
Ready for Amsterdam?

Let DAIZ plan your Amsterdam days

Tell us how long you've got and what you're into. We'll build a day-by-day plan, with the bookable bits ready to lock in.

Plan my Amsterdam tripFree · no signup to start
Plan your Amsterdam trip