North Holland
Heineken Experience
How to visit Amsterdam's Heineken Experience: which ticket to book, the best time slot to dodge the stag groups, and an honest verdict on whether the brewery tour earns its price.
Where
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Opening hours
Roughly 11:00–19:00 Monday to Thursday and 10:30–21:00 Friday to Sunday, with last entry about two hours before closing; hours stretch in summer and over holidays. Always confirm your date on heineken-experience.com.
Tickets
From about €23 (roughly £20) online for the basic self-guided ticket (two beers plus a soft drink included); roughly €29 (about £25) on the door. Guided and rooftop-bar packages run about €34–€47 (roughly £29–£40). Children's tickets are cheaper and under-18s can't drink.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours, including the two included beers at the Best' Bar and the bottling-line tasting; allow longer at busy weekend slots.
In short
Visiting Heineken Experience
Book a timed Heineken Experience slot online before you go — it's a self-guided tour of the original 1867 brewery on the edge of De Pijp, and walk-up tickets cost more than the online price. The basic ticket includes two beers and a soft drink; an afternoon weekend slot fills with hen and stag parties, so an early weekday slot is calmer. Allow 1.5–2 hours, and skip it entirely if you don't drink — most of the payoff is the two beers at the end.
How to visit without overpaying or queuing
The thing to know first is that this is a self-guided brand tour, not a working brewery — Heineken stopped brewing in the 1867 building on the Stadhouderskade in 1988, and what’s left is a slick walk-through of the old copper kettles, a horse stable and a couple of gimmicky rides on the way to two beers. Book a timed slot online before you go. The basic ticket is about €23 (roughly £20) online versus around €29 (about £25) on the door, it includes two beers and a soft drink, and the popular Friday-to-Sunday afternoon slots sell out a day or two ahead in summer.
Pick the plain self-guided ticket if you just want the route and the two pints; the guided and rooftop-bar packages cost more and aren’t worth it unless you specifically want a bartender pour or the view. The one decision that matters is the time slot, not the tier — an early weekday slot is calm, while a weekend afternoon fills with hen and stag groups and the tasting bars get loud and slow.
Worth it? Depends if you drink
Go on a weekday morning if you can. The building sits on the southern edge of De Pijp, a ten-minute tram from the centre or a walk from the Rijksmuseum, so it slots naturally after the museums on Museumplein rather than competing with them. Allow an hour and a half to two hours, most of which is the self-guided route and the two beers at the end.
This earns its place only if you enjoy a beer and want a light, easy afternoon — the real payoff is the two pints and the handsome old building, not brewing history you’ll learn anything new from. If you don’t drink, spend the money on the Van Gogh Museum or an evening canal cruise instead, and keep this one for a rainy hour when you fancy a pint with a tour wrapped around it.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Amsterdam city guide.
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