REVIEW · AMSTERDAM
Anne Frank Walking Tour in Amsterdam
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One neighborhood, one story, and real places that still matter. This Anne Frank Walking Tour in Amsterdam uses a local guide to connect the streets you walk with what happened during the WWII occupation.
I like how the route is balanced: you get both Amsterdam’s historic Jewish neighborhood and the memorial sites tied to the deportations. You also learn the human side—resistance, survival, and what daily life looked like when the city was under pressure.
One thing to plan for: the walk ends near the Anne Frank House, but admission to the Anne Frank House is not included. You’ll need to buy that ticket separately, and it starts at €7.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Two Hours Through Amsterdam’s WWII Story: What the Walk Actually Feels Like
- Meeting at Nieuwe Amstelstraat: Logistics That Save You Time
- Stop 1: Amsterdam and the Historic Jewish Quarter (No Tickets Needed)
- Stop 2: Resistance, Survival, and Hollandsche Schouwburg
- The Ending Near Anne Frank House: Plan the €7 Ticket
- What You’re Paying For: Value of a $55.94 Group Tour
- How to Get the Most Out of Your Guide (Without Feeling Like Homework)
- Is This the Right Tour for You?
- Who This Tour Helps Most: First-Timers and Repeat Visitors
- Final Decision: Should You Book the Anne Frank Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Anne Frank Walking Tour?
- Is the Anne Frank House ticket included in the price?
- Where does the tour meet?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- What language is the tour offered in, and are there different start times?
- What is the cancellation and change policy?
Key things to know before you go
- Two WWII-focused stops in about 2 hours: one hour in the Jewish neighborhood, one hour centered on Anne Frank-era sites.
- Portuguese Synagogue and Jewish Museum area: you’ll cover the neighborhood’s significance during the war.
- Dutch resistance context you can place on a map: February Strike and Winter of Hunger come up in the story.
- Hollandsche Schouwburg as a memorial: the former theater/deportation center is part of the tour.
- Anne Frank House timing is on you: the tour concludes nearby, but the ticket is separate.
- Small enough to feel personal, big enough to stay affordable: capped at 45 travelers with an English guide.
Two Hours Through Amsterdam’s WWII Story: What the Walk Actually Feels Like

This is a short tour, but it doesn’t feel rushed in the way many “quick walks” do. In roughly 2 hours, you move through Amsterdam’s Jewish Quarter and then shift into the Anne Frank–linked sites, with your guide tying street corners to events from the occupation.
The structure works for first-timers. Stop 1 gives you the neighborhood context—where people lived, worshipped, and built community. Stop 2 then tightens the story toward resistance and the mechanisms of persecution, so the ending near Anne Frank House lands with more meaning.
You’ll be walking in groups, capped at 45, which usually keeps the pace manageable and helps the guide control the flow of questions. And since it’s offered in English with multiple daily timings, it’s easier to slot into a busy Amsterdam day.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Amsterdam
Meeting at Nieuwe Amstelstraat: Logistics That Save You Time
The tour starts at Nieuwe Amstelstraat 1, 1011 RH Amsterdam, and it ends back at the meeting point. That round-trip setup is handy: you don’t need to figure out how to connect to transit after the tour.
Since the tour is near public transportation, you can typically build it into a day plan without overthinking travel between stops. Still, I recommend you arrive a bit early. These tours revolve around walking segments, and the group size can make late arrivals a domino effect.
Also note the practical reality: this tour is often booked about 34 days in advance. If you want a specific time slot, locking it in early is the smartest way to avoid disappointment.
Stop 1: Amsterdam and the Historic Jewish Quarter (No Tickets Needed)
Stop 1 focuses on the Amsterdam Jewish neighborhood and how it connects to the war years. You’ll walk through the heart of Amsterdam and see monuments and buildings that still carry the marks of occupation and conflict, with your guide explaining what those scars meant for everyday life.
This part is about location. Your guide doesn’t just name places—they help you understand why this area mattered. You’ll spend about 1 hour here, and the included admission ticket is free, so you can keep the focus on listening and walking.
Two places that anchor the story are tied to Jewish community life: the area around the Portuguese Synagogue and the Jewish Museum. Even if you don’t go inside the museum during the tour, the guidance helps you frame what you see and why it mattered during the occupation.
The best part of Stop 1 is that it gives you a foundation. WWII stories in Amsterdam can otherwise feel like separate fragments—dates here, names there. This start stitches the pieces together so Stop 2 isn’t just a list of tragedies.
Stop 2: Resistance, Survival, and Hollandsche Schouwburg
Stop 2 shifts into the heart of the Anne Frank-era narrative. Your guide covers Dutch resistance efforts and the broader conditions people faced, including the February Strike and the Winter of Hunger. Hearing those terms in the context of the streets makes them more than facts from a timeline.
You also get the idea of survival hiding in plain sight. The tour explains secret locations where families—including the Franks—hid to escape persecution. This is the part where your mindset matters: the information is heavy, but the goal is understanding how fear and resistance shaped daily choices.
Then you’ll visit Hollandsche Schouwburg. This former theater served as a deportation center for Jews during the occupation, and today it functions as a memorial and museum. Standing near it, you start to grasp how institutions of ordinary city life were repurposed for persecution.
The tour’s narrative arc here is strong. You move from the community level (Stop 1) to the mechanisms of danger and deportation (Stop 2). That makes the closing section near Anne Frank House feel more intentional, not like a sudden shift.
The Ending Near Anne Frank House: Plan the €7 Ticket
The tour concludes near the Anne Frank House, where you’ll hear more about her life and legacy. This is a smart build: the walk prepares you to understand what you’ll face at the House, so you’re not arriving with only a few headline facts.
But here’s the key detail for budgeting: Anne Frank House admission is not included. Tickets start at €7, and you purchase them separately from the official Anne Frank House website if you want to enter.
If you’re deciding whether to buy the Anne Frank House ticket, I’d treat it like two-stage learning. The walking tour gives context and placement—why people were where they were, what resistance looked like, and what institutions became during the occupation. The House then provides the specific, personal space of the story.
If your schedule is tight, consider timing your Anne Frank House visit right after this tour if the entry slots match. Even with separate tickets, the “nearby ending” is there to make your next step easier.
What You’re Paying For: Value of a $55.94 Group Tour
The price is $55.94 per person, and it’s a group format with a professional tour guide. That matters for value. Two hours isn’t long, but the guide is doing the heavy lifting: explaining events like the February Strike in a way you can picture, and tying Hollandsche Schouwburg to what it was used for.
The group setup helps keep the cost down while still covering meaningful ground. With a maximum of 45 travelers, it’s not the kind of packed mega-group where you feel invisible to the guide. You still get real-time explanation, not just a headset and a route map.
One more value point: the tour includes free admission where listed during Stop 1. That keeps you from paying extra during the first block of the itinerary, so the main add-on you’re likely to consider is the Anne Frank House entrance.
If you’re comparing this to doing everything on your own, I’d think about time and clarity. The tour’s job is to connect the dots quickly and responsibly. For many visitors, that connection is worth more than squeezing in an extra stop at random.
How to Get the Most Out of Your Guide (Without Feeling Like Homework)
This is the kind of tour where your listening ears are just as important as your walking shoes. You’ll hear about WWII life under occupation and about Dutch resistance efforts, so it helps to pace your day and not stack it with overly loud, high-energy plans right after.
I also like that the tone is informed and serious. One of the standout themes from strong feedback is the sense that the guide is well prepared and that the tour reflects ongoing research into the lives lost and efforts not to forget. That combination matters: you want respectful storytelling, not just dates.
If you want to make it easier on yourself, do two small things:
- Bring comfortable shoes, since you’ll be walking through multiple areas.
- Keep your Anne Frank House plan ready (ticket purchase and timing), so the ending feels like a next step, not a last-minute scramble.
And yes, it’s a walk. Amsterdam is famous for being walkable, but WWII memorial sites also mean you’ll likely slow down and look. Build a little extra time around your schedule so you’re not rushing out of the emotional weight of the stop.
Is This the Right Tour for You?
This tour suits you if you want a guided path through Amsterdam’s Jewish Quarter and the Anne Frank–linked places, without trying to research every connection yourself. It’s also a good match if you like getting the bigger picture first, then stepping into the most personal site at the end.
It may not be ideal if you prefer a lighter, purely sightseeing style. This tour deals directly with persecution, deportation, hunger, and resistance. You don’t have to be a history expert, but you should be ready for a serious subject.
The tour is listed as accessible for most travelers and allows service animals. It also runs in English, so if you’re comfortable with English narration and Q&A (when it comes up), you’ll get more out of it.
Group size is capped at 45, so it tends to feel like a shared experience rather than a one-person private guide setup. If you want maximum personal interaction, you might still find the group format works best if you come with focused questions.
Who This Tour Helps Most: First-Timers and Repeat Visitors
First-timers often struggle with Amsterdam’s layers. This tour gives you a guided thread through one especially important layer of the city’s WWII story.
Repeat visitors sometimes want something beyond the usual postcard route. If you already know the center streets, this walks you into meaning: why these areas were targeted, how resistance formed, and what memorials like Hollandsche Schouwburg are meant to preserve.
It’s also a good choice if you’re mixing learning styles. Some travelers like museum time. Others like street-level interpretation. This tour blends both—neighborhood context plus the memorial site experience.
Final Decision: Should You Book the Anne Frank Walking Tour?
I’d book it if you want a focused, structured introduction to the WWII story in Amsterdam, with enough context to make the Anne Frank House visit feel richer. With a 4.9 rating and strong recommendation stats, it’s clearly landing well for people who care about getting the story right.
Just don’t treat it as a complete Anne Frank plan by itself. You’ll want to budget for the separate Anne Frank House ticket (from €7) and ideally match timing so the ending flows into the House visit.
If you’re choosing between a self-guided walk and a guided one, I’d take the guided tour for this topic. The value is in the connections: resistance events, survival context, and why specific sites became what they were.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Anne Frank Walking Tour?
The tour runs for about 2 hours.
Is the Anne Frank House ticket included in the price?
No. Entrance to the Anne Frank House is not included. Tickets start at €7, and you buy them separately from the official Anne Frank House website.
Where does the tour meet?
The meeting point is Nieuwe Amstelstraat 1, 1011 RH Amsterdam, Netherlands.
What’s included in the tour price?
The tour includes a professional tour guide.
What language is the tour offered in, and are there different start times?
The tour is offered in English, and there are various tour timings throughout the day.
What is the cancellation and change policy?
This experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason. If you cancel or request an amendment, the amount you paid is not refunded.

































