Every winter, Amsterdam’s canals become an open-air gallery. From late November through mid-January, the Amsterdam Light Festival transforms the city’s waterways into a winding exhibition of large-scale light installations — sculptures, projections, and kinetic pieces by international artists, all designed to be viewed from the water. The only way to see the full route is by boat, which means for about seven weeks each year, a canal cruise in Amsterdam becomes something entirely different from the usual sightseeing loop.

The installations are not just pretty lights strung across bridges. These are commissioned artworks, often spanning entire canal sections, built by artists and designers from around the world who compete for spots in the festival lineup. Past editions have featured a glowing whale skeleton suspended over the Amstel, a field of LED reeds that sway in the wind, and a tunnel of light arching over the Herengracht that makes your boat feel like it is passing through a portal. The theme changes every year, the artworks rotate, and repeat visitors keep coming back because the route never looks the same twice.



The boats used for Light Festival cruises are different from your typical summer sightseeing vessels. They are enclosed, heated, and fitted with large windows — essential when December temperatures hover around freezing. Most operators include hot chocolate, mulled wine, or other warm drinks as part of the ticket. You settle in, the boat pulls away from the dock, and for the next hour and change you are gliding through the dark, watching enormous light sculptures appear one by one across the water.
In a Hurry?
- Best overall: Light Festival Boat with Unlimited Drinks and Snack — heated boat, 75 minutes, unlimited drinks and a snack included. The most popular option by far.
- Best for commentary: Light Festival Live Commentary and Optional Drinks — a live guide walks you through each installation, explaining the artists and concepts behind the work.
- Best for flexibility: Light Festival Cruise with Optional Hot Drinks — solid mid-range option with the choice to add drinks or keep costs down.
- In a Hurry?
- What the Amsterdam Light Festival Actually Is
- When the Festival Runs and When to Go
- The Three Best Light Festival Cruises to Book
- 1. Light Festival Boat with Unlimited Drinks and Snack
- 2. Light Festival Live Commentary and Optional Drinks
- 3. Light Festival Cruise with Optional Hot Drinks
- What to Expect on the Night
- Practical Details That Matter
- Is the Amsterdam Light Festival Worth It?
What the Amsterdam Light Festival Actually Is
The festival has been running since 2012, and each edition draws well over half a million visitors. The organizers commission around 20 light artworks per year from a pool of international submissions — architects, visual artists, lighting designers — and install them at specific points along a boat route through the historic canal ring and the Amstel river.

The cruise route is roughly 6 kilometers long and takes about 75 minutes to complete. It passes through some of the city’s most scenic canal sections, including parts of the Herengracht, Keizersgracht, and along the Amstel. The installations are placed to create a natural rhythm — something dramatic, then something contemplative, then something playful — so the journey feels curated rather than random.
There is also a walking route through the city center with additional installations, but the boat route is the main event. Several installations are positioned over the water and can only be fully appreciated from below — looking up from the canal as a glowing sculpture stretches overhead is a very different experience from spotting it from a bridge.

When the Festival Runs and When to Go
The Amsterdam Light Festival typically runs from late November through mid-January — roughly seven weeks. The exact dates shift slightly each year, but it always brackets the Christmas and New Year period.

Best time to go: Weeknights in early December or the first week of January. The holiday period between Christmas and New Year is peak — boats fill up, prices rise slightly, and you will want to book at least two weeks ahead. Early December catches the festival at its freshest, and the first week of January benefits from the post-holiday lull when travelers thin out but the installations are still up.
Best time of day: The first cruises depart around 5pm, right after sunset. These early slots tend to be slightly less crowded. The 7-8pm window is the busiest. If you can handle a late night, the final departures around 9-10pm offer the most atmospheric experience — the canals are emptier, the city quieter, and the light installations have less ambient light to compete with.

The Three Best Light Festival Cruises to Book
There are dozens of operators running Light Festival cruises, but the quality varies. I have narrowed it down to three that consistently get strong visitor feedback, each offering something slightly different.
1. Light Festival Boat with Unlimited Drinks and Snack

Duration: 75 minutes | Price: From $31 per person
This is the crowd favorite, and for good reason. The ticket covers a full cruise through the Light Festival route on a heated, enclosed boat with panoramic windows, unlimited beer, wine, soft drinks, and a Dutch snack. Seventy-five minutes gives you enough time to see every installation without rushing, and the unlimited drinks mean you are not watching the clock on your refreshments.
The boats depart from a central location near Amsterdam Centraal, so getting there is straightforward. The onboard atmosphere tends toward relaxed and convivial — couples, small groups, families — and the crew points out highlights as you go, though this is not a full narrated commentary cruise. Think of it as a self-guided gallery visit with drinks in hand.
Thousands of visitors have taken this cruise and the consensus is clear: it delivers exactly what it promises. The heated cabin makes a real difference when it is near freezing outside, and having drinks included removes the nickel-and-diming that can sour a good experience.
Read full review and book this cruise
2. Light Festival Live Commentary and Optional Drinks

Duration: 75 minutes | Price: From $31 per person
If you are the sort of person who reads the placard at a museum before looking at the painting, this is your cruise. A live guide narrates the entire route, explaining each installation — the artist’s background, the concept, the technical challenges of building a light sculpture over water, and how the piece connects to that year’s festival theme.
The commentary transforms the experience from visual spectacle into something you can think about afterward. You will learn that the glowing orbs suspended between two canal houses represent something about human connection, or that the flickering light tunnel was built by a collective from Seoul and took eleven months to design. It adds depth.
Drinks are optional — you can upgrade to include them or keep the base ticket leaner. The boats are enclosed and heated. This cruise tends to attract a slightly older crowd and couples on date nights, but it works for anyone who wants substance alongside the spectacle.
Read full review and book this cruise

3. Light Festival Cruise with Optional Hot Drinks

Duration: 75 minutes | Price: Check current availability
This is the flexible middle ground. The base ticket gets you onto a heated, enclosed boat for the full Light Festival route. Hot drinks — mulled wine, hot chocolate, coffee — are available as an add-on. It is a clean, no-frills option that keeps the focus squarely on the installations themselves.
The boats are well-maintained and the windows are large enough that you are not craning your neck to see the artworks. Visitors consistently mention the smooth organization — boarding is efficient, the route timing works well, and the staff is attentive without being overbearing.
This is a strong pick for groups with mixed preferences. If half your party wants mulled wine and the other half just wants to watch the lights, everyone gets what they want without paying for what they do not.
Read full review and book this cruise

What to Expect on the Night

Arrive at the departure point about 15 minutes before your scheduled time. Most Light Festival cruises leave from docks near Amsterdam Centraal station, which is well-connected by tram, metro, and on foot from most central hotels. Boarding is organized — you will be directed to your boat and assigned a general seating area.
Once on board, grab a window seat if you can. The side you sit on matters less than you might think, because the installations are positioned on both sides throughout the route and the boat turns frequently. But being near a window versus in the center aisle makes a meaningful difference for photography and general enjoyment.
Photography tips: Phone cameras struggle in low light and through glass. If you are serious about photos, press your phone flat against the window to eliminate reflections, and use night mode. The best shots usually come when the boat has paused near an installation — the motion blur from a moving boat in darkness is unforgiving. That said, some of the most memorable moments are the ones you just watch instead of trying to capture.

Practical Details That Matter
Tickets sell out. This is not a soft warning — popular dates (weekends in December, anything near Christmas) genuinely sell out weeks in advance. If you know your travel dates, book as early as you can. Most operators offer free cancellation up to 24 hours before, so there is no penalty for planning ahead.
The boats are heated, but you will still be walking to and from the dock in winter weather. Dress in layers. A warm coat, scarf, and gloves are non-negotiable for the walk, even if you peel them off once you are on board.
Duration is about 75 minutes for most cruises. That is enough to see all the installations without the experience dragging. Bring a charged phone — not just for photos, but because 75 minutes of dark canal viewing in a warm boat after a day of walking can make you drowsy, and having something to reference (like the festival app, which maps the installations) adds to the experience.

Combining with other activities: The Light Festival cruises depart in the evening, which leaves your daytime wide open. A good Amsterdam winter day might look like: morning at the Rijksmuseum, lunch in the Jordaan, afternoon at the Van Gogh Museum, then a Light Festival cruise after dark. Or if you have already done the museums, spend the afternoon at a brown cafe nursing a jenever before heading to the dock. And if you have not done a daytime canal cruise yet, that pairs well — the same city looks completely different in daylight versus under the festival lights.


Is the Amsterdam Light Festival Worth It?

Winter Amsterdam divides people. The weather is cold, the days are short, and without the summer buzz the city can feel subdued. The Light Festival exists partly to answer that — to give people a reason to visit between November and January that has nothing to do with museums or brown cafes.
And it works. The installations are genuinely impressive, the boat ride through the dark canals creates a kind of intimacy you do not get from other Amsterdam experiences, and the whole thing feels like discovering a side of the city that most travelers never see. There is something about floating through the dark, watching enormous light sculptures materialize out of the fog and mist, that stays with you longer than you would expect from what is, at its core, a 75-minute boat ride.
If you are already visiting Amsterdam in winter, the Light Festival should be on your list. If you are looking for a reason to visit Amsterdam in winter, this might be it.
The Amsterdam Light Festival runs from late November through mid-January, which means you are visiting Amsterdam in its moodiest, most atmospheric season. Daytime during a winter trip belongs to the museums — the Van Gogh Museum and Rijksmuseum are both indoors, warm, and spectacular. The Fabrique des Lumieres is another strong winter choice, since the immersive light projections share the same luminous spirit as the festival installations.
For warmth between attractions, the Heineken Experience offers a couple of hours inside a historic brewery, and the XtraCold Icebar leans into the cold on purpose — three drinks in a room frozen to minus ten degrees, which after a December canal cruise feels oddly comfortable.
