LandedCity
GuidesDeals
ContributeSign in
LandedCity

Community-verified guidance for your first weeks in a new city.

Explore

  • All guides
  • Deals
  • Contribute
  • Tax Calculator
  • Legal Assistant
  • Points & Rewards
  • About us
  • Contact

Cities

  • Amsterdam
  • Bangkok
  • Berlin
  • Brussels
  • Dubai
  • and more…

Account

  • Sign in
  • Profile
  • Referrals

Legal

  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Disclosures
Community content is moderated. Always verify legal and financial decisions with official sources.
HomeTopicsDaily Essentials

Amsterdam

Daily Essentials

Affordable essentials, grocery options, and setup tips.

Share your tip

AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that grocery shopping in Amsterdam can be convenient but expensive, especially at Albert Heijn. However, you can save money by doing a big weekly shop at Lidl and topping up with fresh items at Albert Heijn. Most newcomers are surprised by the strong sustainability culture in Amsterdam, where all major supermarkets have a deposit system on plastic bottles. Watch out for Dutch public holidays, such as King's Day on April 27, which can affect shop closures and daily life. To navigate daily essentials, start by registering with a huisarts, or family doctor, which is essential for accessing healthcare in the Netherlands. Today, take a step towards settling in by visiting Albert Cuypmarkt in De Pijp to explore affordable shopping options.

Top verified tips

Ranked by contributor trust level and quality score.

Albert Heijn everywhere but Lidl is much cheaper

Trust L4Updated May 7, 2026

De Pijp · Experience date Feb 7, 2026

Albert Heijn is convenient but expensive. I do a big Lidl shop weekly and top up at AH for fresh stuff. Albert Cuypmarkt in De Pijp for fresh produce at fair prices on weekdays.

Contributor: Omar

Cycling with children in Amsterdam — bakfiets and bike seats

Trust L1Updated Dec 17, 2025

Jordaan · Experience date Dec 1, 2025

Dutch families cycle with children as standard. Options: bakfiets (cargo bike, box at front carrying 1–4 children, €1,500–3,000 new or €600–1,200 used), fietsstoeltje (child seat mounted on front or rear of regular bike, €60–200), and child trailers (Burley, Thule — €200–500). Most Amsterdam families: bakfiets for young children, rear seat for older toddlers. Renting a bakfiets: Babboe and other rental services offer monthly rentals. Electric cargo bikes: becoming standard for hilly or longer routes. Children's helmets: not legally required but increasingly common among expats. Bike infrastructure is designed for this — dedicated wide lanes accommodate cargo bikes.

Contributor: Sophie Martin

Dutch food delivery and dining apps

Trust L1Updated Jan 24, 2026

Centrum · Experience date Apr 30, 2026

Food delivery in Amsterdam: Thuisbezorgd (Just Eat Takeaway) is the dominant Dutch platform — enormous selection of restaurants, delivery in 25–45 minutes. Uber Eats: good coverage in central Amsterdam, slightly fewer restaurants. Deliveroo: smaller but present. Grocery delivery: Picnic (grocery-only, subscription-free, very reliable, 1-hour windows), AH Bezorgservice (Albert Heijn delivery, same-day slots in central Amsterdam). Restaurant booking: OpenTable and local reservations via Google — many Amsterdam restaurants are fully booked on weekends, especially for groups. Tip: Thuisbezorgd has a loyalty program worth activating — regular discounts for frequent users.

Contributor: Yuki Tanaka

Latest from the community

Supermarkets in Amsterdam — overview

May 1, 2026

Noord · Experience date Apr 17, 2026

Main supermarkets: Albert Heijn (dominant, everywhere, good quality, AH Bonus app for discounts), Jumbo (second largest, good value, slightly larger stores), Lidl (cheapest, excellent produce and bakery), Aldi (very budget, limited but good quality basics), Ekoplaza (organic, premium prices), Marqt (sustainable/premium, expensive). Convenience: AH to go (small urban stores, higher prices), Jumbo City. Weekly grocery spend for one person cooking at home: €60–100. Albert Heijn Bonus card (free): essential — large weekly discounts. AH online ordering (bezorging): delivery from €1.99, highly reliable, same-day slots available in central Amsterdam.

Contributor: David Okonkwo

Dutch holidays and shop closures — what affects daily life

Apr 30, 2026

De Pijp · Experience date Dec 23, 2025

Dutch public holidays affecting services: New Year's Day (Jan 1), Good Friday (varies), Easter Monday (varies), King's Day (April 27 — the biggest Dutch national celebration, Amsterdam fills with orange-clad revellers), Liberation Day (May 5, every 5 years schools close), Ascension Day (varies), Whit Monday (varies), Christmas (Dec 25–26). Bank holidays: banks and government offices closed. Supermarkets: usually open on most holidays (limited hours). Shops generally closed on: some municipalities have Sunday shopping restrictions — Amsterdam has deregulated Sunday shopping so most shops open. King's Day (April 27): almost everything closes, massive street market and party across Amsterdam.

Contributor: James Wilson

Dutch directness — cultural adjustment for expats

Apr 20, 2026

Centrum · Experience date Apr 12, 2026

Dutch directness (known as 'Dutch bluntness') is a cultural trait that surprises many expats. Dutch people say exactly what they mean — criticism, opinions, and feedback are delivered without diplomatic hedging. In the workplace: your Dutch colleague will tell you directly if they disagree with your idea. In personal life: a Dutch friend will tell you honestly if your new haircut doesn't suit you. This is not rudeness — it is the opposite of passive-aggression. Adjustment tip: interpret directness as respect (they value honesty over comfort). Reciprocate: Dutch people appreciate when expats are equally direct rather than diplomatically evasive. The directness extends to pricing, contracts, and negotiations — expect clarity.

Contributor: Emma Larsson

Waste sorting in Amsterdam — rules and collection

Apr 18, 2026

Noord · Experience date Feb 13, 2026

Amsterdam waste sorting: glass (groen glas for green/brown, wit glas for clear — separate containers near street, not collected at home), paper/cardboard (papier — blue bags or containers), plastic + metal + drinks cartons (PMD — yellow bags, collected at home in most neighbourhoods), organic waste (GFT — green container), general waste (restafval — grey container or underground chutes in central Amsterdam). Underground waste containers: central Amsterdam uses large underground containers accessible via pass or coin. Bins on street: for litter only, not household waste. App: AfvalWijzer shows your collection schedule. Incorrect waste disposal: fines up to €140.

Contributor: Kenji Nakamura

Sinterklaas and Kerst (Christmas) — Dutch winter traditions

Apr 15, 2026

Oost · Experience date Apr 21, 2026

Two important Dutch winter celebrations: Sinterklaas (December 5 — the Dutch gift-giving tradition, more important than Christmas for families with children) and Kerst (Christmas, December 25–26). Sinterklaas involves: Sinterklaas arriving by steamboat from Spain in mid-November (televised nationally), 'sinterklaasavond' on December 5 when gifts and poems are exchanged. Dutch children: very excited about Sinterklaas. Pakjesavond (gift evening): December 5. Expat adjustment: if you have Dutch colleagues with young children, Sinterklaas is more significant than Christmas. Kerst: quieter family celebration — many Amsterdam restaurants closed December 25. Office Christmas parties: typically held in mid-December.

Contributor: Amira Hassan

Vondelpark — Amsterdam's central park for expat life

Apr 8, 2026

Oost · Experience date Feb 5, 2026

Vondelpark is Amsterdam's main public park — 47 hectares, central location (5 minutes from Leidseplein). Used daily by expats for: running (3.5km outer loop is the standard running circuit), cycling, picnics, open-air theatre (June–August, free), dog walking, inline skating (Friday night skate from Vondelpark is legendary — thousands of skaters every Friday). The park is essentially the living room of the De Pijp and Oud-West expat communities. In summer: the grass fills with picnics from afternoon. Bring your own food and drinks from the AH nearby — café prices in the park are inflated. Vondelpark is central to Amsterdam expat social life in good weather.

Contributor: Kenji Nakamura

Amsterdam coffeeshops — what expats should know

Mar 29, 2026

Oud-West · Experience date Dec 26, 2025

Cannabis is technically illegal in the Netherlands but tolerated (gedoogbeleid) in licensed coffeeshops. Rules: purchase up to 5 grams/visit, consume only inside or off-premises (not on the street), no alcohol sold in coffeeshops, minimum age 18 (ID required), no hard drugs. Non-resident access: since 2024 Amsterdam has implemented stricter access policies — in practice enforcement varies. Coffeeshop culture: relaxed, no pressure to purchase. Wietpas (cannabis pass) for residents: some municipalities have implemented resident-only policies. For expats: coffeeshops are legal, socially accepted, and part of Amsterdam culture. Bringing cannabis across international borders: illegal regardless of Dutch legality — severe consequences.

Contributor: James Wilson
123

Safety note

Community tips are moderated, but always verify legal and financial decisions with official sources before acting.

Contribute to this topic

Earn points and build your trust level by sharing what worked for you.

Start contributing

Related topics

  • First 7 Days Checklist
  • SIM and Mobile Data
  • Housing and Rent
  • Transport and Mobility
  • Money and Payments
  • Work and Legal Basics

Share this topic

Share: