REVIEW · AMSTERDAM
Anne Frank Walking Tour in Amsterdam
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Amsterdam’s past walks right beside you. This Anne Frank walking tour is interesting because it links daily life under occupation to very specific places in the Jewish Quarter and around the Anne Frank House area. I especially like the strong focus on the wartime story (including resistance and survival themes), and I also like the route that takes in landmarks such as the Portuguese Synagogue and the Jewish Museum. One consideration: the Anne Frank House entrance is not included, so you’ll need a separate ticket.
This is built as a small-group stroll, with a maximum of 45 people, which usually keeps things easier to follow. The tour runs about 2 hours in English, with multiple departure times available so you can fit it into your day. It’s priced at $55.94 and includes a professional guide, but you’ll want to plan for a few extras like tips and the House entry if you want to go inside.
If you’re aiming for value, this tour is a solid way to understand the neighborhood before you add any museum time. The overall rating is 4.9 out of 5, with 93% recommending it, and the feedback highlights guides who are well prepared and willing to connect the story to real human losses and ongoing research. Since it’s popular, pre-booking matters.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- Walking Into Amsterdam’s WWII Story in Just 2 Hours
- Starting Point and Meeting Flow You Can Plan Around
- Stop 1: Amsterdam City Walk Through Occupation-Era Clues
- Jewish neighborhood landmarks: Portuguese Synagogue and the Jewish Museum
- Stop 2: Resistance, Survival, and the Anne Frank House Area
- Hollandsche Schouwburg: from theater to deportation center memorial
- End near the Anne Frank House: what’s included vs what’s extra
- What the Guide Actually Adds (and Why It Matters)
- Price and Value: What You Pay For, and What You Still Need
- Who This Tour Fits Best
- Timing: Getting the Start Time That Works for You
- Respectful Expectations for a Heavy-History Tour
- Should You Book This Anne Frank Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Anne Frank walking tour?
- What is the meeting point?
- Where does the tour end?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- How much does it cost?
- What is included in the price?
- Is the Anne Frank House entrance included?
- Are there any free admissions during the tour?
- How many people are in the group?
- Is it refundable if I cancel?
Key things to know before you go
- WWII story told on foot across key Jewish Quarter and memorial sites in about two hours
- Jewish landmarks included free during the Jewish neighborhood portion (no paid admissions listed there)
- Anne Frank House ticket is separate (starts at €7), so factor that into your schedule
- Small-group format (max 45) keeps the pace readable and the explanations clearer
- English tour with multiple start times so you can match it to your itinerary
- Built for understanding, not just photos with a focus on resistance, survival, and deportation context
Walking Into Amsterdam’s WWII Story in Just 2 Hours

This tour is short by design, which is great if you only have a limited window in Amsterdam. You cover a compact stretch with two main stops that add up to roughly an hour each, then you end back at the meeting point. That format helps you get the big picture quickly, without turning the day into museum marathons.
What makes the timing smart is that you start in the city center area and move into the Jewish neighborhood, so the story feels connected rather than disconnected trivia. You’ll hear about how Amsterdam coped during the occupation, then you’ll transition into the neighborhood that became central to the tragedy of persecution. It’s the kind of tour where the walking path is part of the lesson.
Price-wise, $55.94 is not a bargain, but it’s also not pretending to be one. You’re paying for a professional guide plus a curated route that gives context around the places you see. The main “cost catch” is that the most famous site in the story, the Anne Frank House, is not included—so your total cost depends on whether you choose to visit the house afterward.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Amsterdam.
Starting Point and Meeting Flow You Can Plan Around
The meeting point is Nieuwe Amstelstraat 1, 1011 RH Amsterdam. The tour ends back at the same meeting point, which makes it easier to plan your next stop for lunch, canals, or another museum.
It’s also near public transportation, so you’re not forced into a long trek just to get started. That matters in Amsterdam, where the weather can change fast and walking between transit connections can eat time.
This tour runs in English, and the pace is set for a group up to 45 people. If you like to ask questions, it helps to arrive a bit early so you can get settled and oriented before the guide starts. Also, confirmation is sent at booking time, so you won’t be left guessing about the start.
Stop 1: Amsterdam City Walk Through Occupation-Era Clues
Your first hour starts with a historical exploration through the heart of Amsterdam. This is where the guide places the war in the real world you’re standing in: monuments and buildings that still carry marks from that period. Even if you’ve seen photos online, seeing the architecture and street scale in person gives the story weight.
The best part of this first segment is how it connects the city’s ordinary life to what was happening during the occupation. You’ll hear how citizens of Amsterdam coped, which is important because it keeps the narrative from being only tragedy and dates. Instead, it brings in the human, day-to-day side of living under pressure.
Jewish neighborhood landmarks: Portuguese Synagogue and the Jewish Museum
From there, the tour shifts toward the historic Jewish neighborhood. You’ll focus on sites such as the Portuguese Synagogue and the Jewish Museum, and the goal is to understand the role this area played during the war.
One practical detail: the Jewish neighborhood portion lists admission as free for that segment. That’s useful if you’re trying to control total spending on your itinerary, since you may be able to spend your money where it matters most—like the Anne Frank House if you choose to go in.
A small consideration here: this is a walking tour, so comfortable shoes help. The route is short in time but still includes enough streets and turns that you’ll want decent grip if the pavement is wet.
Stop 2: Resistance, Survival, and the Anne Frank House Area
The second hour is the emotional center of the tour. You’ll hear about Dutch resistance efforts, including specific events like the February Strike and the Winter of Hunger. These details help you understand that survival wasn’t just waiting—it was shaped by resistance, scarcity, and the brutal reality of occupation.
You’ll also learn about secret locations where families, including the Franks, hid to avoid persecution. The tour doesn’t treat this as a vague story; it frames hiding as a lived reality tied to timing, resources, and danger. Even if you already know the basic plot, the added context tends to make it feel more grounded and less like a single tragic moment.
Hollandsche Schouwburg: from theater to deportation center memorial
Another key stop is Hollandsche Schouwburg, a former theater turned deportation center for Jews during the occupation. Today, it functions as a memorial and museum, and the tour uses it to show how cultural spaces were repurposed into machinery of persecution.
This is the moment where the tour helps you connect the neighborhood story to the larger systems of deportation. You’re not just learning about one family’s hiding; you’re seeing the infrastructure around the persecution, and that adds depth.
End near the Anne Frank House: what’s included vs what’s extra
The tour concludes near the Anne Frank House, where you’ll learn more about her life and legacy. Here’s the important planning note: Anne Frank House admission is not included in the tour price.
The ticket starts at €7 according to the provided details, and it’s available for separate purchase from the official Anne Frank House website. If you want to go inside, I’d treat this tour like the pre-game, not the full event. Arrive ready to connect what you hear on the walk to what you see inside, because the ticket isn’t automatic.
If you’re debating whether to buy the House ticket, think about your priorities. If you’re seeking context first—names, places, and what the neighborhood meant—this walking tour delivers that. If you want the inside-the-house experience, plan on adding the ticket and timing it carefully after the walk.
What the Guide Actually Adds (and Why It Matters)
A lot of walking tours list the places they’ll cover. This one aims for story quality, and the feedback points to guides who are well prepared and able to explain the material clearly. Since the topic is heavy, this kind of presentation style matters more than usual.
You also get a sense that the tour keeps moving with research and updated understanding. The overall feedback highlights the importance of ongoing research into the lives lost and the attempts not to forget. That’s not just “nice to know.” It helps you leave with respect for the full scope of history, not just the most famous narrative thread.
I also like that the tour ties events and conditions together—resistance, hunger, and deportations—rather than dropping isolated facts. When the guide makes those links, you start to see how different parts of the system affected ordinary people.
Price and Value: What You Pay For, and What You Still Need
At $55.94 per person for about 2 hours, you’re paying for a guided route plus the time and structure of someone guiding you between key sites. Admission to the House is not included, and tips are not included either. That’s normal for walking tours, but it’s the main line-item difference between “book it and forget it” and “book it and plan your add-ons.”
To judge value, compare the included elements:
- A professional guide
- A route that covers Amsterdam’s occupation-era context
- A Jewish neighborhood focus with listed free admissions for that segment
- A memorial-centered second stop tied to deportation history
Then compare what you may add:
- Anne Frank House ticket (starts at €7)
- Tips & gratuities (not included)
- Food and beverages (not included)
If you want the best overall value, I’d pair this tour with a visit to the Anne Frank House afterward, since the walk ends right by it. If you skip the House ticket, you can still come away with a strong understanding of the neighborhood and the wartime context that surrounds it.
Who This Tour Fits Best
This tour is a strong match if you want a structured overview without committing to a full day. The duration is short enough to slot into a busy Amsterdam schedule, and the route is focused on WWII context in the city.
It’s also a good choice if you’re pairing history with a personal-interest stop. Many people plan to see the Anne Frank House, and this walk sets you up to understand what you’re looking at and why the neighborhood matters.
If you’re traveling with limited time, group tours can be easier to manage than self-guided wandering. The maximum of 45 people helps keep the group experience from getting too chaotic.
One more practical note: service animals are allowed, and most people can participate. If you have mobility concerns, the info doesn’t specify accessibility details beyond that, so it’s worth evaluating your comfort with a walking route of about two hours before booking.
Timing: Getting the Start Time That Works for You
You can find various tour timings throughout the day. That flexibility is more useful than it sounds. Amsterdam has a lot going on, and travel days can get messy with transit delays or museum lines.
The tour is also booked in advance on average about 34 days, which is a friendly hint that you shouldn’t wait too long. Pre-booking is a smart move here because this subject draws strong interest, and popular departure slots can fill.
Respectful Expectations for a Heavy-History Tour
This is not a light, joke-and-stroll type of tour. You’re covering resistance, survival, deportation, and memorial spaces like Hollandsche Schouwburg. I’d treat the experience as a learning walk that asks for quiet attention more than casual sightseeing.
The good news is that the tour is designed to make the story understandable in a limited time. If you come in ready to listen and take it one step at a time, you’ll leave with a clearer sense of how Amsterdam’s occupation-era life connected to the persecution of the Jewish community.
Also, because the Anne Frank House ticket isn’t included, you can decide how long you want to spend at the conclusion. Some people prefer to head straight to the House, while others may keep their visit lighter and use the tour as context.
Should You Book This Anne Frank Walking Tour?
I’d book it if you want a fast, guided understanding of Amsterdam’s WWII story with a strong focus on the Jewish Quarter and the places tied to Anne Frank’s legacy. The tour’s short format, professional guidance, and focus on concrete locations make it a good starting point, especially if you plan to add the Anne Frank House ticket after.
I’d think twice if you’re hoping the tour price includes everything at the Anne Frank House. It doesn’t. You’ll need to buy a separate entrance ticket starting at €7, so your total cost depends on what you want to see.
If you can handle a walking tour focused on heavy history—and you want the context before you look at the most famous site—this one is an efficient, meaningful way to spend two hours in Amsterdam.
FAQ
How long is the Anne Frank walking tour?
The tour lasts about 2 hours.
What is the meeting point?
The meeting point is Nieuwe Amstelstraat 1, 1011 RH Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Where does the tour end?
The activity ends back at the meeting point.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, the tour is offered in English.
How much does it cost?
The price is $55.94 per person.
What is included in the price?
The included item listed is a professional tour guide.
Is the Anne Frank House entrance included?
No. Entrance to the Anne Frank House is not included, and it starts at €7.
Are there any free admissions during the tour?
The Jewish neighborhood portion lists admission ticket free for that stop.
How many people are in the group?
The tour has a maximum of 45 travelers.
Is it refundable if I cancel?
No. It is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason.
























