Netherlands

The Netherlands is rightfully known for its tulips, canals, and bikes, but the northern European city is also brimming with classical and cutting-edge architecture, museums, and even beaches. Its capital, Amsterdam, is among Europe’s most visited cities, but the country’s compact size and expansive rail network make it easy to move around by train, bus, or bike. Visit smaller cities and towns, including Utrecht, with its medieval city center; Alkmaar, where hefty wheels of cheese fill the street during the Friday cheese market; and countryside villages like Kinderdijk, with its tulip fields and preserved wooden windmills.

After boarding the Viking Longship, you have the afternoon to get acquainted with Amsterdam before setting out on your Grand European Tour. You might take a leisurely bike ride along picturesque canals lined with gabled mansions; admire the country’s homegrown talent at the Van Gogh Museum and Rijksmuseum; or see what’s in bloom at the Bloemenmarkt.

After boarding the Viking Longship, you have the afternoon to get acquainted with Amsterdam before setting out on your Grand European Tour. You might take a leisurely bike ride along picturesque canals lined with gabled mansions; admire the country’s homegrown talent at the Van Gogh Museum and Rijksmuseum; or see what’s in bloom at the Bloemenmarkt.

Sergey Borisov / Alamy/Alamy

Overview

Planning your trip

Use these articles, resources, and guides to plan and inspire your next trip to The Netherlands.

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Resources to help plan your trip
“Especially nowadays, it’s a once-every-so-many-years experience, so when you get the chance, do it.”
In a country the size of a postage stamp, it’s easy to hop on a train that will take you from the buzzing capital to iconic windmills, dazzling blooms and sandy beaches in less than an hour. To see the real Holland of emerald plains and verdant meadows studded with dykes and dunes, get out to the countryside, where you’ll find kitschy Dutch gardens, plump cows, day-glow tulips and families of swans gliding along carefully constructed polders.
Amsterdam can be an expensive town for dining out. But as in all major cities, there are ways to get around high restaurant prices. Albert Heijn grocery stores throughout the city have many choices in ready-made fare. Fast food options include all the usual chain suspects, plus a slew of shoarma and falafel options, and such uniquely Dutch fast-food options as FEBO and herring stands.
Amsterdam is a shopper’s paradise, with vintage shops, one-of-a-kind boutiques, Dutch design outlets and pop-up boutiques throughout the city. If you’re a serious shopper, you won’t want to miss special shopping streets like Haarlemmerstraat/Haarlemmerdijk, Hazenstraat, Utrechtstraat, Kalverstraat, Leidsestraat and the nine small streets that comprise the Negen Straatjes. All offer great window shopping, as well as retail treasures you may not yet know you can’t live without.
From nature to nibbles, Amsterdam has all the trappings of a perfect weekend getaway. Rich in more than just bike culture, it’s a quintessentially charming city with stellar nightlife, welcoming cafés and a burgeoning food scene. Now is absolutely the time to visit.
Small bites yield big flavors at such fine Amsterdam tapas bars as Envy, Olivar, A la Plancha, and Bar Boca’s. All offer communal, interactive meals featuring small, tapas-style dishes with big international flavors. Throughout Amsterdam, bistros are popping up with small plates menus, perfect for group outings or sharing with friends.
If you only have three days in Amsterdam, a walking tour, boat tour, museum-crawl, and evening concert are just a few of your activity options. Over three days, you can also experience Amsterdam’s infamous Red Light District, get lost in the canal ring, chill out in Vondelpark and take a ferry to Amsterdam-Noord. Plus: get out of town and see picture-postcard Holland a short cycle-ride away, but worlds apart from bustling Amsterdam.
A perfect day in Amsterdam might begin with breakfast at Papeneiland on Prinsengracht and Brouwersgracht, a brown café on Prinsengracht and Brouwersgracht that’s been around since 1642, where former President Bill Clinton famously downed a hunk of apple pie. It might end in infamous De Wallen, the city’s lovely (and safe) Red Light District. In between, consider a walking tour or canal tour, a picnic at Vondelpark, and a visit to some of Amsterdam’s world-class museums.
If staying in a big hotel owned by a multinational hotel chain doesn’t float your boat, choose from numerous smaller boutique hotels in Amsterdam for a more authentic Dutch experience. In these intimate settings, you’re more likely to experience life as a local. On the con side, you may not enjoy 24/7 concierge services and might face lugging your suitcase up stairs that ascend at a nearly 90° angle to upper floors—a hallmark of historic buildings in Holland.
Shimmering canals, world-class museums, a potpourri of cultures, an eclectic shopping scene, and a raging nightlife are just a few of Amsterdam’s must-do experiences. Use your time wisely and you can experience it all. Or just roam freely, letting Amsterdam lead you through its 400-year-old grachtengordel (canal ring), lined with must-do experiences and recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The Netherlands is a cultural hotspot that goes beyond tulips, windmills, and coffee shops. Amsterdam is a popular embarkation and debarkation point for river cruise journeys on the Rhine or Danube. Thanks to an intricate network of canals and waterways flat-bottomed river boats can easily navigate the shallow waters.
From food in Brussels to seeing stars in Cannes, Europe is filled with can’t-miss festivals. It’s hard not to get amped for the traditional festival season, which spans the warmer months and includes favorites like Glastonbury in England and Pride Festival in Amsterdam. Whatever your festival style, Europe offers something for everyone.
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