Anne Frank House
The actual house where Anne Frank and her family hid for over two years during the Nazi occupation.
About Anne Frank House
The actual house where Anne Frank and her family hid for over two years during the Nazi occupation. The annex behind the canal house at Prinsengracht 263 is preserved as it was: the bookcase that concealed the entrance, the rooms where eight people lived in silence during working hours, the pencil marks on the wall tracking the children's growth. The diary quotes on the walls hit differently when you're standing where she wrote them. This is not entertainment. It is witness.
Tickets are the hardest reservation in Amsterdam. They release online exactly two months before the visit date at 10 AM CET on Tuesdays, and popular dates sell out within minutes. This is not an exaggeration. Set a phone alarm for 09:58 CET on the Tuesday they release for your dates, have the website loaded, and be ready to click. There is no walk-up entry, no standby line, no way to talk yourself in. If you miss the tickets, you miss the house. It costs €16 for adults, free for under-10s, and every slot is timed to keep the space from becoming overcrowded.
The visit takes about an hour. You move through the front house, through the bookcase entrance, and into the annex rooms in the order the family experienced them. The audio guide is included and worth using. It layers diary entries over the rooms you're standing in. The museum section at the end covers what happened after the arrest and the diary's journey to publication. Most people are quiet throughout. Some are crying. The gift shop at the exit sells the diary in dozens of languages for €12. If you haven't read it, buy it here. It matters more after you've stood in her room.
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