REVIEW · AMSTERDAM
Amsterdam Self-Guided Food Tour in De Pijp Neighbourhood
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De Pijp is a shortcut to Amsterdam’s street-food side. This self-guided walk takes you through De Pijp and Albert Cuyp Market with a step-by-step PDF plan and tasting stops that feel like a mini food tour without the group-pressure pace.
I like that it mixes the neighborhood vibe with real shop-to-shop eating at family-owned places, not just snack hopping. I also like the practical structure: you get a clear route, exclusive discounts, and enough guidance to make each bite feel purposeful.
One possible drawback: this is self-guided, so your experience depends on having the PDF downloaded and timing your route before places close.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Walk
- A Self-Guided Street Food Route Through De Pijp and Albert Cuyp Market
- Price and Value: Why $11.11 Can Still Feel Worth It
- Start at FEBO on Ferdinand Bolstraat: The Route Begins Fast
- De Pijp Stop 1: 6 to 8 Family-Owned Food Stops at Your Speed
- Albert Cuyp Market Stop 2: Sampling Street Foods from Around 5 Locations
- What’s in the Sample Menu—and How to Choose Vegetarian-Friendly Bites
- Using the PDF Guide: How to Time It Like a Food Local
- What This Tour Feels Like in Real Life
- Where You’ll Get the Best Experience (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book This Self-Guided Food Tour in De Pijp?
- FAQ
- How long does the Amsterdam self-guided food tour take?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- Is admission included for the market stops?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Are snacks and drinks included?
- Is there vegetarian food?
- When can I use the PDF guide?
- Is this tour refundable if I cancel?
Key Things to Know Before You Walk
- Self-guided, private format: only your group moves through De Pijp, at your speed
- Start at FEBO on Ferdinand Bolstraat and finish near Albert Cuyp Market area
- 6 to 8 neighborhood stops in De Pijp, with deals and tastings at 7 locations
- Albert Cuyp Market stop includes street foods from about 5 locations
- Vegetarian options show up often (croquette, pom, poffertjes, stroopwafel, takoyaki, war fries)
- PDF timing matters: shops close, and a late start can shrink your tasting lineup
A Self-Guided Street Food Route Through De Pijp and Albert Cuyp Market

If you want an Amsterdam food day that doesn’t require a reservation, long waits, or herding anyone, this format fits. You get an outlined route and a clear plan that’s designed for walking between short distances in De Pijp and then into Albert Cuyp Market.
De Pijp is often described as Amsterdam’s Latin Quarter, and the vibe matches: lots of casual dining, international influences, and a strong market culture. The tour leans into that energy by pairing neighborhood stops with a market section that’s built for sampling small things as you go.
The biggest appeal is simple: you can snack, pause, and decide what you want twice. You’re not locked into one tasting schedule. You’re just following a route and using the PDF to make the most of each stop.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Amsterdam
Price and Value: Why $11.11 Can Still Feel Worth It

At about $11.11 per person, the price looks almost too friendly for a food-focused walking experience. The value comes from how the tour is packaged: you’re not only getting route guidance—you’re getting a PDF step-by-step guide, exclusive deals/discounts, and tastings at multiple locations.
Also, the route isn’t generic. It’s built around local, family-owned street food businesses across De Pijp and the market, which makes the experience feel like eating with intent instead of random wandering. In a city where “cheap snacks” can still add up fast, having discounts and suggested stops helps you control your budget.
Just remember: the tour does not include extra snacks or drinks beyond the tastings/deals. So this works best if you treat the tasting stops as your planned bites and then fill in gaps later on your own.
Start at FEBO on Ferdinand Bolstraat: The Route Begins Fast

You start at FEBO Amsterdam on Ferdinand Bolstraat, address Ferdinand Bolstraat 89B, 1072 LD Amsterdam. That matters because you’re kicking off near the De Pijp action, not at some far-off meeting point designed to waste your time.
FEBO is one of those Amsterdam institutions where the food is quick, consistent, and very “street.” Starting there also sets you up for the overall theme of the tour: practical, hand-to-mouth street food that you can actually enjoy while walking.
From there, the plan is designed so each stop is only a few minutes’ walk from the next. That keeps you moving, but not sprinting. It’s the kind of layout that makes a 1 to 2 hour experience realistic even if you take photos and actually read what you’re eating.
De Pijp Stop 1: 6 to 8 Family-Owned Food Stops at Your Speed

The De Pijp section is where the tour earns its name as a neighborhood street food walk. You spend about 1 hour exploring De Pijp and heading to 6 to 8 family-owned businesses in the area.
The tour also spells out tasting structure: exclusive discounts, deals, and tastings at 7 locations. That means you’re not just collecting history trivia while you pass shop windows. You’re expected to stop, choose, and eat.
This part also gives you stories and context about dishes and the people behind them. That’s useful because De Pijp has plenty of international food options, and it helps you understand what you’re tasting rather than eating on autopilot.
A practical downside to plan for: shops can be closed on some days. The tour’s design can handle that by still giving you enough stops to keep the walk fun, but your personal lineup may be smaller if a specific shop is shut when you pass.
Albert Cuyp Market Stop 2: Sampling Street Foods from Around 5 Locations

After De Pijp, you move into Albert Cuyp Market, with another 1 hour focused on market sampling. The market is known for being Europe’s biggest day market, and the tour aims to translate that size into something you can actually manage on foot.
Instead of making you browse everything, the plan guides you toward street foods from about 5 locations on the market. That’s the right strategy if you’ve never been there. It turns a massive space into an ordered tasting route.
You’ll also notice how the market fits the tour’s theme of cross-cultural street food. The included tastings and choices include both Dutch classics and international influences, which makes the market feel like Amsterdam on fast-forward.
One more timing note: markets have rhythms. Go late and you can lose options. Go at a steady walking pace and you can leave with a real sense of the place without feeling rushed.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Amsterdam
What’s in the Sample Menu—and How to Choose Vegetarian-Friendly Bites

The sample menu gives you a good preview of what tastings can look like. Your exact selection may depend on what’s available at each stop, but the range is clearly designed to cover Dutch staples plus international street snacks.
Here are the big items you might expect:
Dutch starter ideas
- Traditional Dutch Croquette (vegetarian option available)
- Dutch herring and kibbeling (fried cod) (onions and pickles optional; vegetarian option not available)
- Poffertjes (baby pancakes) for dessert (vegetarian)
- Goudse stroopwafels (vegetarian)
Surinamese and Caribbean influence
- Surinamese pom: oven-baked root plant with chicken and citrus, served with rice, long beans, homemade pickles, and piccalilli sauce (optional). Vegetarian option available.
Meat-heavy roll bites
- Smoked beef brisket and chicken rollade mix with Israeli pickle, olives, arugula, and bread with balsamic vinaigrette (vegetarian option not available).
International street snacks
- Takoyaki from Osaka with octopus, chicken, or vegetables (vegetarian option available)
Fries that taste like Amsterdam attitude
- Patatje Oorlog (War Fries), an award-winning, hand-cut fries dish typically served with peanut sauce, mayonnaise, and onions (vegetarian option available).
If you’re vegetarian, this tour is on the easier end for Amsterdam street food. Several of the highlighted items explicitly include vegetarian versions, so you can build a full tasting path without playing guessing games.
If you’re not vegetarian, you’ll probably love the mix of salty, crispy, and saucy bites—croquettes, fried cod (kibbeling), and the meat-and-pickle roll flavors that feel very Amsterdam street style.
Using the PDF Guide: How to Time It Like a Food Local

This experience is built around the step-by-step PDF guide you receive. There’s no in-person guide, so your success comes from reading the route before you start and keeping it handy while you walk.
The good news: the tour is set up so it’s easy to follow. The route is designed as a sequence of short walks, and the stops are close enough that you’re not constantly searching.
The main risk is download trouble. If your PDF doesn’t show up right away, don’t panic and try to solve it while hungry. The provider response shared in a past experience indicates instructions and a download link are sent ahead of time, and you should have a phone number included for help if you’re stuck.
Also, the PDF guide can be used repeatedly within specific hours: Monday to Saturday between 11:15 am and 3:00 pm (except holidays). The point: plan to use the PDF during those times so it stays aligned with what the tour expects.
If you’re visiting during a busy season, I’d treat this as a morning-to-midday plan. You’ll still get fun tastings and fewer closed-door surprises.
What This Tour Feels Like in Real Life

This is the kind of self-guided tour that works best when you actually enjoy street food culture. You’re walking, stopping, sampling, and making quick choices. It’s not a sit-down meal experience.
It also feels interactive even without a guide in person. The tastings and included deals push you to try specific items, and the dish explanations help you understand why each food is a big deal locally.
One detail I really appreciate: the route includes a free 3-day Amsterdam itinerary. That’s handy if you’re building your days and want ideas that connect to where you’re already spending time.
And there’s a real neighborhood feel here. De Pijp isn’t just a backdrop. It’s the point of the tour, and the finish near Albert Cuypstraat keeps you close to more exploring after your last bite.
Where You’ll Get the Best Experience (and Who Should Skip It)
This tour is a strong fit if you:
- Want a flexible food walk you can start on your own timing
- Like markets and street snacks more than formal dining
- Enjoy sampling a mix of Dutch classics and international bites
- Prefer moving at your pace over group schedules
You might rethink it if you:
- Hate self-guided plans or don’t want to manage a PDF on your phone
- Need an in-person guide to answer questions in the moment
- Are arriving right when shops start closing, since timing affects how many tastings you complete
Good news for lots of visitors: it’s in English, most travelers can participate, it’s near public transportation, and service animals are allowed. It’s also a private tour/activity, so it’s just your group.
Should You Book This Self-Guided Food Tour in De Pijp?
Book it if you want a low-cost way to understand De Pijp and Albert Cuyp Market through food you can actually eat and compare. The mix of family-owned stops, short walks, and discount-driven tastings makes the price feel reasonable—and the included dish lineup gives you a clear target.
Skip or choose a different option if you need step-by-step help in person. Since there’s no in-person guide, you’ll rely on the PDF and your timing. If you do book it, download the guide early, plan to start with enough daylight before closures, and treat the route like a snack quest rather than a strict schedule.
If that sounds like your kind of Amsterdam day, this is a practical way to leave De Pijp with full pockets, not just photos.
FAQ
How long does the Amsterdam self-guided food tour take?
It’s listed as about 1 to 2 hours, with roughly 1 hour for De Pijp and 1 hour for Albert Cuyp Market.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts at FEBO Amsterdam on Ferdinand Bolstraat (Ferdinand Bolstraat 89B, 1072 LD Amsterdam). It ends near Pietersma Snacks on Albert Cuypstraat (Albert Cuypstraat 271, 1073 BH Amsterdam), about a 10-minute walk from the start area.
Is admission included for the market stops?
Yes. Both the De Pijp section and the Albert Cuyp Market section are listed as Admission Ticket Free.
What’s included in the tour price?
You get a step-by-step PDF guide, exclusive deals/discounts and tastings at locations, stories about local food heroes, foodie tidbits about iconic dishes, restaurant recommendations for the rest of your stay, and a free 3-day Amsterdam itinerary.
Are snacks and drinks included?
No. Snacks and drinks are not included.
Is there vegetarian food?
Many items have vegetarian options in the sample menu, including Traditional Dutch Croquette, Surinamese pom (vegetarian option), Poffertjes, Goudse stroopwafels, Takoyaki (vegetarian option), and Patatje Oorlog/War Fries (vegetarian option). Some items listed do not have vegetarian options, like smoked beef brisket and chicken rollade mix, and Dutch herring and kibbeling.
When can I use the PDF guide?
The provider guidance shared states the PDF can be used Monday to Saturday between 11:15 am and 3:00 pm, except for holidays.
Is this tour refundable if I cancel?
No. It’s non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason, and the amount paid will not be refunded.







































