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Spring in Amsterdam: The First Things Expats Should Experience

James Evans • Tue, Mar 10, 2026

Spring in Amsterdam: The First Things Expats Should Experience

You've landed in Amsterdam. Your apartment is sorted, your BSN number is in progress, and you're ready to start your new life in one of Europe's most liveable cities. Now what? If you've arrived in spring — or you're about to — you've timed it perfectly. This is Amsterdam at its absolute best: the canals lined with blossom, terraces heaving, bikes everywhere, and an energy in the city that's been coiled up all winter just waiting to release.

Here's your local guide to making the most of it.

1. Why Spring Is the Best Time to Arrive in Amsterdam

Let's start with the basics. Amsterdam winters are grey, damp, and frankly a bit relentless. Daylight runs out by 4pm, and the canal-side charm that looks so good in photos is somewhat obscured by horizontal rain. Spring changes everything.

Warmer temperatures and longer days

Average temperatures climb from around 9°C in March to 16°C by May, and — crucially — daylight hours stretch dramatically. By April, sunset isn't until around 8pm. By late April, you're looking at nearly 15 hours of daylight per day, which means after-work canal walks, early morning bike rides, and long terrace lunches all become part of the daily rhythm rather than a weekend novelty.

It's actually the driest season

Despite the reputation, spring is statistically the driest season in Amsterdam. April in particular tends to be the driest month of the year — with rainfall often half that of summer. Yes, showers happen; the Dutch say "April doet wat hij wil". But sunny mornings in April are genuinely common.

The city comes alive

Amsterdam's outdoor culture — which is considerable — simply doesn't exist from November to February. Terrace season begins tentatively in March, then explodes in April. Parks fill up. Boats appear on the canals.

People sitting outside a canal-side café in Amsterdam during spring sunshine

A terrace scene captures the feeling of Amsterdam coming back to life in spring.

2. The Classic Spring Experiences (That Are Actually Worth Doing)

Some things are clichés because they genuinely deserve to be. Here's the spring Amsterdam shortlist — no fluff.

Cycling the Canals

You're going to need a bike. Not a rental, a proper bike — the kind of heavy, one-speed machine that every Amsterdammer rides.

Vondelpark

Amsterdam's equivalent of Central Park — but more relaxed and sociable. Grab a picnic, find a patch of grass, and you'll be doing exactly what half of Amsterdam is doing on a sunny Saturday.

King's Day — 27 April

Nothing prepares you for King's Day. Over a million people descend on Amsterdam in orange. The entire city becomes a party.

King's Day celebration in Amsterdam with orange crowds and boats on the canal

King's Day turns Amsterdam into a sea of orange, with crowds, boats, and music across the city.

Tulip Season and Keukenhof

The Tulip Festival runs from mid-March through May. For the full spectacle, Keukenhof Gardens — just 30 minutes from Amsterdam — showcases over seven million blooms.

Colourful tulip fields in bloom in the Netherlands during spring

Tulip season is one of the most iconic spring experiences in and around Amsterdam.

Cherry Blossoms at Bloesempark

Often overlooked in favour of tulips, the cherry blossoms at Bloesempark in the Amsterdamse Bos are spectacular.

Terrace Season Begins

The Dutch take terraces seriously. The moment there's sun, every café puts its chairs out and fills them up.

3. The Best Neighbourhoods to Enjoy Spring

Where you live in Amsterdam shapes your daily experience considerably.

The Jordaan — Canals, Cafés, and Character

The Jordaan is Amsterdam at its most photogenic and liveable.

De Pijp — Terraces, Markets, and Multicultural Energy

De Pijp is where many young internationals and professionals gravitate toward.

Oud-Zuid — Vondelpark, Museums, and a Quieter Pace

Oud-Zuid is Amsterdam's most elegant and family-friendly district.

People relaxing on the grass in Vondelpark during spring with bicycles nearby

Vondelpark in spring captures the relaxed lifestyle that makes these neighbourhoods so appealing.

4. Weekend Trips Expats Love

One of the genuine pleasures of living in the Netherlands is how compact everything is.

Haarlem — 20 Minutes by Train

Haarlem is often described as a more relaxed, compact version of Amsterdam.

Zaanse Schans — 17 Minutes by Train

Zaanse Schans is a heritage village north of Amsterdam with working windmills and traditional houses.

Utrecht — 30 Minutes by Train

Utrecht is arguably the best day trip in the Netherlands.

Spring day at Zaanse Schans with windmills and people enjoying the waterfront

Easy day trips are part of what makes spring in Amsterdam feel bigger than the city itself.

5. Why a Serviced Apartment Makes Spring Arrivals Easier

Arriving in a new city is exciting — but the logistics can absorb an enormous amount of that energy if you let them.

Arrive and actually settle in

City Retreat apartments are fully furnished and ready from day one.

Central locations

Our apartments are located in the Jordaan, De Pijp, and Oud-Zuid.

Flexible contracts

Relocation timelines rarely run to plan, so flexible leases make a difference.

Ready to Make the Most of Your First Spring?

View available apartments at cityretreat.com.

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