First time visiting a coffeeshop in Amsterdam?
You've landed in Amsterdam, you've heard about the coffeeshops, and now you're trying to figure out which door to walk through. This is a practical guide — no cliché, no winking. Just what to expect.
What a coffeeshop actually is.
A coffeeshop in the Netherlands is a licensed venue where adults can buy and consume cannabis in a regulated setting. It is not the same as a café — coffeeshops are held to strict rules about age, quantity, advertising and nuisance. It's tolerated, regulated and quiet. Not a bar. No DJ. Nobody is going to pressure you.
Try a shop outside the centre.
Most first-time visitors stick to the coffeeshops in the very centre — the ones near Dam Square or inside the Red Light District. They are easy to find, but they are almost always the busiest, most tourist-heavy spots in the city.
Amsterdam has dozens of licensed coffeeshops in neighbourhoods like Oud-West, Oost, or Noord — places where locals actually live. These shops tend to be quieter, more relaxed, often better value overall, and have a regulars' feel you simply cannot replicate in a centre spot. If you have the time, step a few tram stops out of the centre and see how different the vibe becomes.
You need your ID.
Always. Bring a passport, European ID card, or driving licence. Coffeeshops can and do refuse entry without one — this is Dutch law, not us being difficult. Expect to show it at the door.
How to order.
At Coffeeshop 96, step up to the counter and ask the crew for recommendations. They know what's good today and will help you find something that works for you. The legal maximum purchase is 5 grams per person per day.
"If it's your first time, just say so. Nobody minds — we'd rather help you start gently than have you back ten minutes later."
Start small.
If you are new, begin with a small amount. Effects vary between smoked and edible forms — smoked takes 5–15 minutes to hit, edibles up to two hours. If you feel uncomfortable, sit down, drink water, eat something sweet. It passes.
Tipping.
It's appreciated but not expected. A euro or two at the counter is kind if the service was good.
Being a good guest.
- Keep your voice down — especially outside on the street. Jan Pieter Heijestraat is residential.
- No photos of staff or other guests. The space, the mural, the counter — fine. People, no.
- Follow house rules. They're short. They're on the wall and on this site.
- Respect the space. The shop was recently renovated — premium finishes deserve a bit of care.
Questions?
Our crew speaks English, Dutch and a bit of everything else. Ask. That's what they're there for.