Skip to main content
Amsterdam · Jordaan

Moeders

Restaurant

Moeders, Amsterdam · Jordaan
Category
Restaurant
Duration
1h 30m
Best Time
Evening
Entry
€€
Rating
4.5 (5,648)
The place

About Moeders

Traditional Dutch restaurant where the walls are covered floor to ceiling in framed photographs of people's mothers, and the menu features homemade stamppot, hutspot, and other grandmother-style dishes. Each dish is served in cast iron pots and the recipes rotate with the seasons. It's the place to go if you want to eat what Dutch people actually grew up eating, before Amsterdam became a city of ramen shops and brunch spots.

The concept is simple and sentimental. When Moeders opened in 1990, they asked customers to bring a photo of their mother, and they've been adding them to the wall ever since. There are now thousands. The food matches the mood: boerenkool stamppot (mashed potatoes with kale and smoked sausage), erwtensoep (thick split pea soup with rookworst), and apple pie for dessert. Nothing fancy, everything comforting. Portions are generous.

Moeders sits on Rozengracht in the Jordaan, and it fills up on weekends without a reservation. The prices are fair for what you get (mains around €15-20), and it's one of the few places in tourist-heavy Amsterdam where the food feels genuinely personal rather than calculated. Bring a photo of your mother if you have one. They'll hang it on the wall. It's a tradition, not a gimmick, and after 35 years of photos the collection is genuinely moving.

Book ahead

Book Tickets

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
Rozengracht 251, 1016 SX Amsterdam, Netherlands
Neighborhood
Jordaan
Nearest Metro
Tram 13/17 to Westermarkt15-minute walk from Centraal Station
View on Google Maps →
Good to know

Tips, answered

Reserve for dinner on weekends, it fills up. Bring a printed photo of your mother and they'll add it to the wall collection. Try the stamppot if you've never had Dutch home cooking. The erwtensoep (pea soup) is available October through March and is the most warming thing you'll eat in Amsterdam. Portions are big, so skip starters unless you're very hungry.

Plan for about 1h 30m. Evening visits offer a different atmosphere with softer light.

Moeders is in the Jordaan neighborhood of Amsterdam. The address is Rozengracht 251, 1016 SX Amsterdam, Netherlands. The area is well-served by metro.

Evening visits offer a unique atmosphere. The light is softer, crowds thin out, and the experience feels more intimate.

Around the corner

Nearby in Jordaan

Explore all →
Anne Frank House
Museum

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.

1-1.5 hoursExplore
Those Dam Boat Guys
Tour

Those Dam Boat Guys

Small-group open boat tours run by a crew of locals who actually know the city and its canals. This isn't the big tourist operation with 40 people on a glass-topped barge and a pre-recorded audio guide. These are open boats holding 12-20 people, with a live skipper who grew up here and tells you stories you won't find in any guidebook. The boats are open-topped, so you're sitting in the fresh air with an unobstructed view of the canal houses, bridges, and houseboats. The standard tour covers the main canal ring (Prinsengracht, Keizersgracht, Herengracht) and the harbor, with commentary that mixes history, architecture, and personal anecdotes. They explain why the canal houses are narrow (property tax was based on frontage), why they lean forward (it's deliberate, to help hoist furniture through the upper windows), and where the good stuff is on each canal. You can bring your own drinks and snacks on board, which is both unusual and excellent. Tours run about 75 minutes and depart from near Central Station. Book online in advance, especially in summer. The boats run rain or shine (they have blankets and rain ponchos), and honestly a rainy canal tour has its own charm. Pricing is around €27-32 depending on the tour. If you only do one canal activity in Amsterdam, skip the big boats and book this instead. The difference between a personal tour and an industrial operation is night and day.

1.5 hoursExplore
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