REVIEW · AMSTERDAM
STRAAT Museum – Museum for Street Art Amsterdam Admission Ticket
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Street art in Amsterdam can feel like an endless scavenger hunt. STRAAT Museum gives you the same energy in a single, practical stop: a huge warehouse space on the NDSM waterfront, with artworks and artist stories that explain how graffiti hit the mainstream.
I especially like the scale of what you see and the way it’s presented—150 works by 140 artists from 32 nationalities—so you’re not stuck with one local style. Another plus is the building itself: old warehouse bones and machinery make the street-art vibe feel intentional, not shoehorned.
One thing to consider is the timing. Even though you’ll pick a specific day and time when you book, your ticket only works for that slot, so double-check the date and start time before you lock it in.
In This Review
- Key Things You’ll Notice at STRAAT
- Why This Warehouse Museum Works So Well on the Waterfront
- Getting There: Ferry to NDSM Wharf From Amsterdam Central
- The Main Stop: Street Art From 32 Nationalities in One Hall
- Don’t Miss the Outside Area Where Artists Can Work
- The Cafe Stop: Coffee Views and a Different Way to See the Art
- How Long You’ll Really Need: 1 to 2 Hours, Often Faster
- Price and Value: Is $26.01 Worth It?
- Best Fit: Who Will Enjoy STRAAT Most
- A Small Warning From Real-Life Problems: Double-Check Your Time Slot
- Should You Book STRAAT Museum Tickets?
- FAQ
- How long should I plan to spend at STRAAT Museum?
- Where is STRAAT Museum located, and how do I get there?
- What’s included with the ticket?
- Is the ticket available in English?
- Can I use a mobile ticket?
- What’s the price per person?
- Is free cancellation available?
- Are service animals allowed?
Key Things You’ll Notice at STRAAT

- Warehouse-sized street art: big walls, big themes, and plenty of room to look without shoulder-to-shoulder stress
- Global artists in one place: 140 artists from 32 nationalities, so you can compare techniques and influences
- Stories behind the spray: you’re not just looking at images; you’re getting the art-and-artist context
- NDSM Wharf stop included: after the museum, you’ll naturally wander an arts-and-industry waterfront zone
- Free outdoor practice area: there’s a spray-paint zone where artists can work, and the results can change day to day
- English tickets: admission is offered in English, with a mobile ticket for easy entry
Why This Warehouse Museum Works So Well on the Waterfront
STRAAT Museum is street art, but it’s street art with guardrails. Instead of trying to find murals hidden between canals and side streets, you walk into a large industrial hall designed for art that usually lives outdoors. That matters because it lets you study pieces longer, without weather, crowds, or constant distractions.
The setting is half the experience. This is a warehouse museum on the NDSM shipyard side of Amsterdam, and the industrial structure gives the work a natural home. You’re basically watching street art change context—from alley and wall to museum space—and you can feel how the medium adapts.
If you’re the type of traveler who likes “one great stop” over museum hopping, STRAAT fits your day. It’s also a nice counterpoint to classic Amsterdam sights: instead of paintings in quiet rooms, you get color, motion, and technique.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Amsterdam.
Getting There: Ferry to NDSM Wharf From Amsterdam Central

Your trip starts with a short, scenic ferry ride from Amsterdam Central Station to the NDSM shipyard area. That ferry segment isn’t just transportation. It’s part of the vibe: you get a quick water view and you arrive in a different Amsterdam than the canal ring.
The museum is near public transportation, and the NDSM Wharf area around it is very much an “arrive, wander, look again” kind of zone. One practical tip: if you like having a buffer, plan to arrive a bit early so you’re not racing from the ferry landing to your time slot.
Also, if you’re traveling with kids, teens, or anyone who learns best by seeing and doing, the ferry + waterfront approach helps. It breaks the day into something active before you even hit the exhibits.
The Main Stop: Street Art From 32 Nationalities in One Hall

Walk in and you’re hit with scale. STRAAT brings together about 150 artworks by 140 artists, with representation from 32 nationalities. That global mix is one of the biggest reasons this works for different tastes. You can spot recurring themes, but you’ll also notice how style shifts depending on the artist’s background.
The museum experience is built around street art as a medium, not just as decoration. The focus is on the stories of the art and the artists who helped street art reach a wider audience. That means you’re more likely to leave with a clearer sense of where techniques come from and why certain styles resonated beyond the street.
How it feels in practice: the warehouse layout gives you breathing room. The hall is large, bright, and designed for moving between pieces. You can slow down and compare brushwork, lettering, layering, stencils, and character-driven work without getting pulled along too fast.
There’s also a film presentation under the staircase near the shop. It’s the kind of detail that can shift your understanding of what you’re looking at, especially if you’re curious about street art’s evolution.
Don’t Miss the Outside Area Where Artists Can Work
Leaving STRAAT isn’t just a exit. There’s an area where artists can practice or create using spray paint for free (as part of the museum’s on-site setup). The big advantage for you is simple: you might catch a changing scene outside the main hall.
This is where street art’s “alive” quality returns. In a traditional museum, the artwork stays fixed. Here, you get that street-art pulse in real time—watching process, not just finished work.
If you love photos, this outside area also gives you a different angle on the whole concept. You’re still in the same theme, but now the art is happening around you, not only behind ropes.
The Cafe Stop: Coffee Views and a Different Way to See the Art
STRAAT isn’t only about walls. There’s a cafe on-site, including a higher-level spot people call out for its views—often referred to as the high-rise Peti cafe. Even if you only take a short break, it changes the rhythm of your visit.
In my view, a cafe inside a museum is practical, not indulgent. You get a chance to sit, reset, and then come back to the art with fresher eyes. And if you’re the kind of visitor who scans quickly, a break helps you slow down for the final rooms.
People also mention the coffee being excellent compared to other places in Amsterdam. Whether you treat that as a must-try or a bonus, it’s a good reason to plan some extra minutes into your visit so you’re not just grabbing something on the fly outside.
How Long You’ll Really Need: 1 to 2 Hours, Often Faster

The ticket duration window is listed at about 1 to 2 hours. In practice, you’ll likely land somewhere in that range depending on how you look.
If you’re more of a “scan and pick favorites” person, you can get through efficiently—some visitors have managed it in around 45 minutes. If you read artist context and take time comparing styles, it’s easy to stretch closer to the full 2 hours, especially if you linger near the film area, the shop, and the outside practice space.
I like STRAAT because it fits neatly into a half-day plan. You can pair it with a waterfront walk at NDSM Wharf without turning your itinerary into a frantic relay.
Price and Value: Is $26.01 Worth It?

At $26.01 per person, STRAAT sits in a mid-range museum price band for Amsterdam. Is that “cheap”? No. But the value is the combination you’re getting.
You’re paying for:
- a warehouse setting that matches the medium
- a large collection with dozens of artists and international range
- context that explains the art and its push into mainstream visibility
- a location on the NDSM waterfront that gives you more than one experience in the same outing
For many visitors, the key “value driver” is how different STRAAT feels from the usual museum format. Instead of quiet halls and classic galleries, you get bold visual impact and an industrial backdrop that makes the art feel at home.
If you’re deciding between another museum and STRAAT, I’d choose STRAAT when you want something modern and visual that you can enjoy at your own pace. If you only like museum content when it’s very traditional or very academic, you might prefer a different type of stop.
Best Fit: Who Will Enjoy STRAAT Most
STRAAT is a strong match if you like contemporary art, street culture, and the idea of process. It’s also a great choice for creative teens and young adults. If your group has at least one person who loves Instagram-style visuals or graphic design, STRAAT usually lands well because the work is large and readable even at a distance.
I’d also steer you here if you want a “single highlight” that’s easy to plan. You pick the day and time, you show up, and you spend a focused block in one place. That’s a win when Amsterdam days are already packed with canals, neighborhoods, and travel time.
If you’re traveling with mobility needs, the listing says most travelers can participate and it’s near public transportation. Service animals are allowed too, which is a practical plus.
A Small Warning From Real-Life Problems: Double-Check Your Time Slot
One practical lesson matters: make sure your ticket date and start time match your plan. People have reported booking issues when dates didn’t line up with their intended visit, and because entry is tied to your chosen slot, the fix can be limited after the fact.
So do a quick check before you go: day, time, and any time-zone confusion. It takes seconds and can save a lot of stress.
Should You Book STRAAT Museum Tickets?
Book STRAAT if you want one major Amsterdam art stop that feels different from the standard museum run. You’re getting global street art, thoughtful artist context, and a setting in a working-feeling warehouse that matches the medium. Add the ferry ride to NDSM Wharf, and the day becomes more than a ticket.
Don’t book if you’re chasing a classic, painting-only museum mood or if you’re very sensitive to schedule-based entry. Otherwise, STRAAT is a strong value choice for a modern, visual, and surprisingly thoughtful museum break.
FAQ
How long should I plan to spend at STRAAT Museum?
Plan on about 1 to 2 hours. Many people finish faster if they scan, while those who read context and take their time may stay closer to the longer end.
Where is STRAAT Museum located, and how do I get there?
It’s in Amsterdam at the NDSM shipyard area. From Amsterdam Central Station, you’ll take a short ferry ride over to the NDSM waterfront.
What’s included with the ticket?
The admission ticket is included for entry to STRAAT Museum.
Is the ticket available in English?
Yes. The experience is offered in English.
Can I use a mobile ticket?
Yes, the ticket is mobile, which makes entry simpler.
What’s the price per person?
The listed price is $26.01 per person.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes, service animals are allowed.
























