Amsterdam canal lined with bicycles and boats with the Westerkerk church tower in the background

How to Get Anne Frank House Tickets

The bookcase swings open and there’s a set of stairs behind it. Steep, narrow stairs — the kind where you have to turn sideways. And then it hits you. Eight people hid behind this bookcase for over two years. Every creak on those floorboards could have been the end.

The Anne Frank House isn’t like other museums. There’s no gift shop at the entrance trying to sell you a tote bag. No audio guide telling you where to stand. It’s just the building, the rooms, and the weight of what happened there.

But getting tickets? That’s where most people’s plans fall apart.

Amsterdam canal lined with bicycles and boats with the Westerkerk church tower in the background
The Prinsengracht canal is one of those walks that never gets old. The Anne Frank House sits about halfway down, easy to miss if you are not looking for it.
Amsterdam canal scene with the Westerkerk church tower, canal boats, and historic buildings
You will hear the Westerkerk bells chiming every quarter hour while you wait in line. Anne Frank wrote about those same bells in her diary.
A blue bicycle parked against the railing of a canal bridge in Amsterdam with canal houses in the background
Half the fun of getting to the museum is the walk itself. Take the long way along the canal and you will pass more bridges than you can count.
Short on time? Here are my top picks:

Best walking tour: Anne Frank & Jewish Quarter Walking Tour$39. Two hours through the Jordaan and Jewish Quarter with a seriously knowledgeable guide. The most popular option for a reason.

Best budget option: The Fascinating Story of Anne Frank$27. Covers the key sites with solid storytelling. Great value if you don’t need the extended Jewish Quarter segment.

Most unique: Anne Frank’s Last Walk + VR Experience$43. Includes a virtual reality walkthrough of the Secret Annex with original furnishings reconstructed digitally. Nothing else like it.

How the Official Ticket System Works

Here’s the thing nobody tells you until it’s too late: you cannot buy Anne Frank House tickets at the door. There is no ticket window. No standby line. No “maybe if I show up early enough” option. Every single ticket is sold online, and they sell out fast.

The system works like this. Every Tuesday at 10:00 AM Central European time, the museum releases all available tickets for a date six weeks out. So on a Tuesday in early March, you’d be buying tickets for a mid-April visit. That’s it. One release per week, one shot at the date you want.

Narrow canal houses with distinctive Amsterdam architecture along a quiet canal
The houses on the Prinsengracht were built in the 17th century for wealthy merchants. Number 263 looked just like any other from the outside, which is exactly what kept the Frank family hidden for two years.

You book a specific date and a specific 30-minute entry window. Miss your slot and you’re out of luck — they’re strict about timing. The museum itself takes about an hour to walk through, sometimes longer depending on how crowded it is.

Prices as of 2026:

  • Adults: EUR 16.50 (includes EUR 1 booking fee)
  • Ages 10-17: EUR 7
  • Under 10: EUR 1 (booking fee only)
  • Museumkaart holders: EUR 1

There’s also an option for a 30-minute introductory program in English before your visit, which adds context to what you’re about to see. Worth considering if this is your first time learning about Anne Frank’s story in depth. Student cards and I amsterdam City Cards don’t get you a discount here, so don’t count on those.

Row of colorful Amsterdam canal houses with reflections in the water under blue sky
These canal houses are hundreds of years old and they lean at different angles on purpose. The narrow staircases inside the Anne Frank House are original, and they are steep.

What If Official Tickets Are Sold Out

They will be. For most dates, every ticket is gone within minutes of the Tuesday release. If you missed the window, you have two realistic options.

Option 1: Try again next Tuesday. Set an alarm for 9:55 AM CET. Have the ticket page loaded and ready. Don’t wait to pick the “perfect” time slot — grab whatever shows as available first. You can always adjust your day around it. The morning and late afternoon slots go fastest, so if you’re flexible on timing, the midday slots sometimes linger a few minutes longer.

Option 2: Book a guided walking tour. This is what most people end up doing, and honestly it’s often the better experience anyway. The tours don’t go inside the Anne Frank House itself (no tour operator has indoor access), but they take you through the neighborhood, past the building, through the Jewish Quarter, and fill in the historical context that makes the whole story land harder.

The walking tours are also available last-minute, which is a big deal if you’re the kind of traveler who doesn’t plan six weeks ahead. And several of them are genuinely excellent — led by guides who specialize in WWII Amsterdam history and know details that no audio guide covers.

People walking through Dam Square in Amsterdam with the Royal Palace and historic buildings
Dam Square is about a 10-minute walk to the museum. Most of the walking tours start here and wind through the Jordaan on the way to the Prinsengracht.

The Best Anne Frank Walking Tours

I’ve gone through every Anne Frank tour available in Amsterdam and narrowed it down to four that are worth your time. Each one takes a different angle, so the right pick depends on what you’re after.

1. Anne Frank & Jewish Quarter Walking Tour — $39

Anne Frank guided walking tour through Amsterdam Jewish Quarter
This tour covers the Jordaan and the Jewish Cultural Quarter in one loop. Two hours of walking, but it never feels rushed.

This is the one I’d pick if you’re only doing one Anne Frank activity in Amsterdam. Two hours, small group, and covers both the Anne Frank story and the broader Jewish history of the city. You’ll walk past the Anne Frank House, through the Jordaan where the resistance operated, and into the old Jewish Quarter on the other side of town.

The guides on this tour tend to be exceptionally well-versed in the material. At $39 per person for a two-hour tour with a specialist guide, the price is fair. It’s the most booked Anne Frank tour in Amsterdam by a wide margin, and the consistent feedback says it lives up to that reputation.

Read our full review | Book this tour

2. The Fascinating Story of Anne Frank — $27

Amsterdam walking tour the fascinating story of Anne Frank
A solid budget-friendly option that focuses on the Anne Frank story without trying to cram in every corner of Amsterdam.

If you want the core Anne Frank experience without the extended Jewish Quarter portion, this is the one. It focuses tightly on Anne’s story — the hiding place, the betrayal, the diary — and takes you through the streets where it all happened. Less walking than the first option, which is a plus if you’ve already been on your feet all day.

At $27 per person, it’s the most affordable guided option and still covers all the essential ground. The guides are engaging storytellers, and you’ll come away with a much deeper understanding of what daily life looked like in occupied Amsterdam. Good pick if you’re traveling on a budget or have limited time.

Read our full review | Book this tour

3. Anne Frank’s Last Walk + Virtual Reality — $43

Anne Frank last walk and visit the Anne Frank House in virtual reality
The VR portion recreates the Secret Annex with all the original furniture in place. It is the closest you will get to seeing what those rooms actually looked like.

This is the unusual one, and it’s brilliant. The tour follows the walking route of Anne’s last journey through Amsterdam, combined with a virtual reality experience that recreates the Secret Annex as it looked when the Frank family lived there. The VR headset lets you “walk through” the rooms with the original furniture, the blackout curtains, the marks on the wall where Otto Frank tracked the children’s heights.

At $43 per person for 2.5 hours, it’s the priciest of the group tours but the VR element genuinely adds something no other tour offers. If you couldn’t get tickets to the actual museum, this is the next best thing for seeing what the hiding place looked like. The walking portion itself is solid too — well-paced and emotionally honest.

Read our full review | Book this tour

4. Private Anne Frank & Jewish Quarter Tour — $157

Anne Frank and Jewish Quarter Amsterdam private walking tour
Private tours mean you set the pace. If you want to linger at the Stolpersteine or spend extra time at the Hollandsche Schouwburg, nobody is rushing you.

For families or small groups who want the guide entirely to themselves, this is the premium option. Two hours, just your group, and the guide adjusts the route and depth based on what interests you most. Some people want more about the resistance movement, others want to focus on the Jewish Quarter’s pre-war culture. Private means you get to choose.

At $157 per person, it’s not cheap. But split between four or five people in a family, it becomes more reasonable. The guides who run the private tours are typically the most experienced on the roster, and the feedback consistently highlights how personal and tailored the experience feels compared to the group options.

Read our full review | Book this tour

Amsterdam canal with historic buildings and a stone bridge in autumn
Give yourself at least an hour inside the museum itself. Most people end up staying longer than they planned.

When to Visit

The Anne Frank House is open daily, though hours shift by season. Generally 9:00 AM to 10:00 PM, with extended hours in summer and shorter windows in winter. The last entry is usually 30 minutes before closing.

For the quietest experience, aim for a weekday evening slot. The last time slots of the day — around 7:00 or 8:00 PM — tend to be the least crowded. You’ll have more room to read the displays, fewer people on the steep stairs, and a more reflective atmosphere overall. Saturday mornings are the worst. Avoid those if you can.

Row of Amsterdam canal houses lit up at night with reflections in the water
The evening time slots tend to be the calmest. Fewer crowds, softer light, and the canal outside looks like this when you step back out.

Season-wise, late autumn and winter see the shortest queues. March through September is peak tourist season in Amsterdam, and the Anne Frank House is one of the city’s most visited sites. But since everything is timed entry, “crowded” at the museum really just means a denser flow through the rooms — you’ll still get through.

Amsterdam canal with houseboats and bridges under autumn trees
Autumn is quietly the best time to visit. The crowds thin out, the trees along the canals turn gold, and you can actually enjoy the neighborhood without fighting for space.

How to Get There

The museum entrance is at Westermarkt 20 — not on the Prinsengracht canal side where the building is most recognizable, but around the corner by the Westerkerk church. It’s a detail that trips up a surprising number of first-time visitors.

From Amsterdam Centraal Station, it’s about a 20-minute walk heading southwest through the Jordaan. The walk itself is pleasant — canals, bridges, narrow streets lined with cafes. If walking isn’t your thing, trams 13, 17, and 19 stop at Westermarkt, which is literally right outside the entrance.

Row of bicycles lined up on an Amsterdam bridge with classic canal houses behind them
The museum is a 20-minute walk from Centraal Station or a 10-minute walk from Dam Square. Tram lines 13, 17, and 19 stop at Westermarkt, right outside.

From Dam Square, it’s a 10-minute walk west. Just head down Raadhuisstraat toward the Westerkerk tower — you can see it from the square. Note that tram service runs to Dam Square from various points in the city, but due to construction work running through 2028, some routes may be diverted. Check the GVB app for real-time updates on your visit day.

There’s no dedicated parking near the museum. If you’re driving, the nearest garages are Parking Centrum Westerdok (10-minute walk) and P+R locations at the city edges. Honestly, don’t drive into central Amsterdam unless you have to. The public transport is excellent and the one-way streets will make you question every life choice.

Tips That Will Save You Time

Set a Tuesday alarm. Tickets go on sale at 10:00 AM CET every Tuesday for visits six weeks out. Be on the site at 9:55. Have your payment method ready. Don’t browse time slots — grab the first one that appears and adjust your day plan around it.

Bag policy is strict. Only bags smaller than A4 paper size are allowed inside. Leave your daypack at the hotel or use the cloakroom for coats. Trying to get through with a backpack will mean a trip to the cloakroom and wasted minutes of your time slot.

Quiet morning view of an Amsterdam canal with houseboats and historic buildings
Early morning along the canals before the city wakes up. The Jordaan neighborhood around the museum has some of the best cafes in Amsterdam for a pre-visit coffee.

No photos inside. Photography and filming are not permitted anywhere in the museum. And yes, that includes smart glasses. Just be present for this one.

Minimum age is 10. Kids under 10 are not admitted. The museum’s position is that the content is too intense for younger children, and honestly they’re right. If you’re traveling with small children, have a plan for childcare during the visit.

Budget more time than you think. The museum says visits average about an hour. I’d plan for 90 minutes to be safe. The rooms are small and you’ll want to read the displays, not rush past them. The annexed rooms at the top are particularly powerful, and you won’t want to be watching the clock.

The stairs are no joke. The building has many flights of steep, narrow stairs — including the famous ones behind the bookcase. If you have mobility issues, this is worth knowing in advance. The museum has some accessibility provisions, but the historical building itself is inherently difficult to navigate.

Amsterdam canal at golden hour with a tour boat and historic buildings
Canal cruises leave from piers all along the Prinsengracht. Combine your museum visit with an evening on the water and you have got yourself a full day.

The audio tour is included. Available in nine languages, it adds a personal layer to the visit. There’s a separate version designed for younger visitors called “Anne’s Story.” Both are worth using.

The cafe and shop are inside. You can only access the museum cafe and bookshop by going through the museum — there’s no separate entrance. Both are card payment only. The bookshop has a solid selection of Anne Frank’s diary in various editions if you want to pick one up on the way out.

Scenic Amsterdam canal bridge with autumn foliage and historic buildings
The Jordaan is one of those neighborhoods where you can spend a whole afternoon just walking around. Bookshops, independent galleries, brown cafes with menus in Dutch only.

What You’ll Actually See Inside

The museum takes you through the building at Prinsengracht 263 where Anne Frank and seven others hid from July 1942 until their arrest in August 1944. Otto Frank’s business — Opekta, a company that sold pectin for making jam — occupied the front of the building. Behind it, concealed by a bookcase built into the wall, was the Secret Annex.

You’ll walk through the offices first, where the employees who helped hide the families worked. Then through the bookcase entrance and up into the annex itself. The rooms are empty now — Otto Frank requested the furnishings not be replaced when the museum opened in 1960 — but the walls still have the original decorations. Magazine cutouts Anne pasted up are still there. So are the height marks on the wall where Otto tracked the children growing.

Colorful tulip bouquets on display at an Amsterdam flower market stall
The Bloemenmarkt floating flower market is a 15-minute walk from the museum. Pick up tulip bulbs on the way back. Just make sure they come with a plant passport if you are flying home.

The final rooms display pages from Anne’s diary — the actual diary, not reproductions — along with documents about the arrest, the deportation to Westerbork and then to Bergen-Belsen, and what happened to each of the eight people who hid in the annex. Only Otto survived.

It ends with a space for reflection. No dramatic music, no guided conclusion. Just a quiet room where you can sit and think about what you just walked through.

Beautiful nighttime view of Amsterdam canals with illuminated buildings reflecting in the water
Amsterdam after dark is a completely different city. If you score an evening time slot at the museum, budget time for a walk along the canals afterward.

More Amsterdam Guides

If you’re spending a few days in Amsterdam, a canal cruise is one of those things that sounds touristy but is actually worth every minute — especially in the evening when the bridge lights come on. The Van Gogh Museum is about a 25-minute walk south from the Anne Frank House and has its own ticket headaches, so plan that one early too. And if you want something completely different after a heavy day, the Heineken Experience is loud, silly, and fun in exactly the way you need after an emotionally intense museum visit. The Rijksmuseum and Vondelpark are both in the same southern cluster if you want to make a full day of it.

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The Anne Frank House sits on the Prinsengracht, one of the main canals threading through the Jordaan neighborhood. A canal cruise after your visit puts you right on the same waterway, and the shift from the cramped annex to open sky is something most visitors appreciate. The walking tours that cover the Jordaan usually include the Anne Frank House as a stop, and the guides add context about wartime Amsterdam that the museum itself only touches on.

For a very different side of the city, the Moco Museum on Museumplein has Banksy pieces that deal with war and power in ways that echo what you just experienced. The Rijksmuseum and Van Gogh Museum are both a twenty-minute walk south through the canal ring, and filling your afternoon with art after a morning at the Anne Frank House is one of the better rhythms for a day in Amsterdam.