Amsterdam expat community — how to connect
May 8, 2026Centrum · Experience date Feb 25, 2026
Amsterdam has one of Europe's largest expat communities (over 180,000 registered foreigners). Connect via: Internations Amsterdam (monthly events, some free), Amsterdam Expats Facebook group (100,000+ members), Meetup.com (sports groups, hiking, board games, tech meetups — very active), Nextdoor app (neighbourhood community — join your specific Amsterdam neighbourhood). Expat-friendly areas socially: De Pijp has the highest expat density. Professional networks: LinkedIn Amsterdam groups, Startup Amsterdam network, TechHub Amsterdam events. Language exchanges: Taalcafé events around the city (free Dutch practice). The expat community in Amsterdam is easy to enter — most newcomers build a social network within 2–4 weeks of active participation.
Register at gemeente for BSN within a week of arriving
May 7, 2026Centrum · Experience date Dec 18, 2025
Registered at Gemeente Amsterdam in Stadsdeel Centrum on day 4. Needed: passport, rental contract, proof of address. Got my BSN same day. Without BSN you can't open a bank account or get a contract.
First week priorities in Amsterdam — the essential sequence
Apr 22, 2026De Pijp · Experience date Dec 9, 2025
Priority sequence for your first week: 1) Book gemeente appointment before arriving (weeks-long wait — book at amsterdam.nl immediately). 2) Buy a Dutch SIM (Schiphol on arrival). 3) Move into your temporary accommodation. 4) Attend gemeente appointment → get BSN. 5) Open Dutch bank account (ING or ABN AMRO — requires BSN). 6) Register for healthcare insurance (belastingdienst.nl). 7) Apply for DigiD. 8) Buy a second-hand bike (Waterlooplein market). The BSN is the bottleneck — everything else unlocks from it. Book that gemeente appointment before your flight.
Contributor: Anna Kowalski Amsterdam orientation — understanding the city layout
Apr 18, 2026De Pijp · Experience date Nov 20, 2025
Amsterdam's city centre: a semicircle of concentric canals (grachten) radiating from Centraal Station. The main canals: Singel, Herengracht, Keizersgracht, Prinsengracht (outermost of the main ring). Neighbourhoods within the canal ring: Jordaan (west), De Wallen/Red Light District (east), Spui area (south). Key areas outside the ring: De Pijp (south, via Amstel), Oud-West (west), Oost/Indische Buurt (east), Oud-Zuid (museum quarter, Vondelpark). Noord: across the IJ by ferry. Zuidas: south of the city, the business district. Orientation tip: the canals run east-west at the top and curve south. Leidseplein and Rembrandtplein are the two main nightlife squares — useful landmarks.
Contributor: Nadia Dubois Dutch food and grocery shopping — what to expect
Apr 17, 2026Centrum · Experience date Feb 26, 2026
Dutch food culture: pragmatic and straightforward. Typical Dutch lunch: brood (bread) with cheese, ham, or peanut butter (hagelslag — chocolate sprinkles on bread is very Dutch). Dinner: meat, potatoes, vegetables (stampot in winter). Global cuisine: Amsterdam has excellent Indonesian (Dutch colonial connection), Surinamese (roti, broodje pom), and Turkish/Moroccan food. Must-try Dutch: stroopwafels, bitterballen (deep-fried beef snacks at bars), poffertjes (mini pancakes), haring (raw herring with onion from street stalls — a Dutch institution). Albert Heijn: buy an AH Bonus card immediately — essential for weekly discounts of 20–40% on rotating products.
Setting up Dutch utilities — electricity and gas
Apr 9, 2026Centrum · Experience date Apr 26, 2026
Setting up utilities in your Amsterdam apartment: most Amsterdam landlords include utilities in the rent, or have existing contracts. If you need to arrange utilities yourself: electricity and gas suppliers in Amsterdam — Vattenfall, Eneco, Nuon (now Vattenfall), and various providers at energievergelijken.nl (compare prices). Switch online: takes 2–3 weeks for account transfer. Average monthly utility costs: electricity €70–100, gas €50–120 (depending on apartment insulation and season), water €25–40. New Amsterdam apartments being built without gas connections — heat pumps are standard. For short stays: most furnished apartments have utilities included — confirm before signing.
Contributor: Priya Sharma Public transport for your first days — before you have a bike
Mar 28, 2026Noord · Experience date Apr 16, 2026
Before you have a bike (first 2–3 days): use GVB trams. Buy a 24-hour GVB ticket (€9.50 at Centraal Station or GVB service points) or use your contactless bank card directly on the tram reader. Tram lines 1, 2, 5 from Centraal are useful for reaching the canal ring and Oud-West. Tram 24: Centraal to De Pijp. GVB app: real-time departures. Once you have a bike: you'll rarely use trams for distances under 4 km. NS trains from Centraal: to Schiphol and Dutch cities — buy with your OV-chipkaart or bank card. Avoid taxis from Centraal Station area — very expensive and often unnecessary given the excellent tram network.
Contributor: Anna Kowalski