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Keukenhof and the Bollenstreek (Tulip Fields), Netherlands
Keukenhof and the Bollenstreek (Tulip Fields)

Bollenstreek, South Holland

Keukenhof and the Bollenstreek (Tulip Fields)

The Dutch tulip gardens and bulb fields done properly from the UK: the eight-week season, how to skip the Schiphol bus queue, where the open fields actually are, and why a bike beats the coach.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

In short

Keukenhof and the Bollenstreek (Tulip Fields) at a glance

Keukenhof is a 32-hectare flower garden at Lisse, halfway between Haarlem and Leiden in the strip of reclaimed land called the Bollenstreek (the 'bulb region'), and it opens for only about eight weeks a year — 19 March to 10 May in 2026. Inside the garden seven million bulbs are planted by hand and timed to flower in sequence, so it looks immaculate whenever you come; the open commercial bulb fields that surround it, the ones in every photo, are a separate thing and only colour up for roughly the last three weeks of the season. Most UK visitors reach it as a half-day trip from Amsterdam on the Keukenhof Express bus, but the smart play is to base in Lisse, Haarlem or Leiden, arrive at opening, and hire a bike to ride the fields rather than just queue for the garden gate.

Keukenhof is the most photographed garden in Europe and one of the most misunderstood. It sits at Lisse, on the flat reclaimed strip between Haarlem and Leiden the Dutch call the Bollenstreek, and it opens for barely eight weeks a year — 19 March to 10 May in 2026 — before closing again until the following spring. Inside the gates, seven million bulbs are planted by hand in waves so the beds peak in sequence, which is why the garden looks immaculate whether you come in March or May. The catch is that the wide open fields of red, yellow and pink stripes that pull people here in the first place are not inside the garden at all. They are the commercial bulb farms in the lanes around it, and they only colour up for roughly the last three weeks of the season.

That gap between expectation and reality is where most UK visitors come unstuck. They book the cheapest coach day-trip from Amsterdam in late March, queue at Schiphol for the 852, shuffle round a beautiful but enclosed garden, and leave wondering where the famous fields were — because they hadn’t flowered yet. Do it the other way round. Time the trip for the back end of April, take the first 08:00 entry slot on a weekday before the Amsterdam coaches arrive, spend two hours on the headline beds and the windmill viewpoint, then hire a bike in Lisse and ride the signposted bollenroute north towards Noordwijkerhout, where the real striped fields are. Better still, skip Amsterdam as a base and stay in Haarlem or Leiden — 18km and 12km away, a short train from Schiphol, and a far better evening than Lisse itself can offer.

Towns & places in Keukenhof and the Bollenstreek (Tulip Fields)

The route

Keukenhof itself needs only half a day, but the Bollenstreek around it rewards a full one — and pairing it with a night in Haarlem or Leiden turns a rushed coach run into a proper spring break. These legs are short: Lisse to Leiden is about 12km, Lisse to Haarlem about 18km, and the bulb-field lanes are all within a 10km bike ride of the garden.

  1. Half day

    Keukenhof at opening

    Take the first timed slot (the garden opens at 08:00) and you'll have the headline beds — the Tulipomania display, the Oranje Nassau pavilion and the windmill viewpoint over the fields — before the Amsterdam coaches arrive around 10:30. Two to three hours covers it comfortably; the on-site whisper-boat through a flooded field is worth the extra €9.

  2. Afternoon

    Ride the open bulb fields

    From late April the colour is outside the gates, not in. Hire a bike at Lisse or rent one of the Keukenhof bikes at the entrance and follow the marked bulb-field cycle routes north towards Noordwijkerhout and west towards the dunes — flat, signposted lanes of striped red, yellow and pink fields. The 25km 'bollenroute' is the classic loop; an hour out and back hits the best stretches.

  3. Add a night

    Base in Haarlem or Leiden

    Rather than coach straight back to Amsterdam, stay over in Haarlem (18km, a handsome smaller Amsterdam with the Frans Hals and Teylers museums) or Leiden (12km, Rembrandt's canal-ringed university town). Both are 15–35 minutes by NS train from Schiphol and let you reach Keukenhof at opening the next morning without the early Amsterdam start.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Lisse

££ mid-range

The bulb-region town the garden sits beside, and the only base that's genuinely on the doorstep — a 10-minute bus or 15-minute cycle from the Keukenhof gate, with the Black Tulip museum and bike hire in town. It's a small, ordinary Dutch town rather than a sightseeing destination, but it puts you first through the gate and right among the fields. Beds are limited and book out fast in season.

Best for: Earliest entry, the open bulb fields, no commute

Browse hotels ~3km from Keukenhof

Haarlem

££ mid-range

The best all-round base: a compact, good-looking city 18km north with the Frans Hals and Teylers museums, far better food than Lisse and a 15-minute train to Schiphol where the Keukenhof Express picks up. You get a proper evening out and an easy run to the garden in the morning. Cheaper and calmer than central Amsterdam.

Best for: A real city evening plus easy garden access

Browse hotels ~18km from Keukenhof

Leiden

££ mid-range

Rembrandt's canal-laced university town, 12km south of Lisse and the closest mainline station to it — Connexxion bus 854 runs from Leiden Centraal direct to Keukenhof in about 25 minutes. Studenty, lively in the evenings and well placed if you also want to see The Hague or the coast at Katwijk.

Best for: Canals, students and a southern base

Browse hotels ~12km from Keukenhof

Amsterdam

£££ premium

Where most UK visitors stay anyway, and perfectly workable as a day-trip base via the Keukenhof Express bus 858 from RAI (~45 min) or bus 852 from Schiphol. The trade-off is the late-morning crowds and the bus queue; if Amsterdam is your trip and Keukenhof a single day of it, this is the pragmatic choice — just take the earliest bus.

Best for: Pairing the gardens with a city break

Browse hotels ~40km from Keukenhof

Getting around Keukenhof and the Bollenstreek (Tulip Fields)

There is no train to Keukenhof itself; everyone arrives by the dedicated Keukenhof Express coaches or by car. From the UK the route is a flight or Eurostar to Amsterdam, then the bus: line 852 runs from Schiphol airport in about 30 minutes, line 858 from Amsterdam RAI in around 45, and Connexxion bus 854 from Leiden Centraal in about 25 — all running every 10–15 minutes through the season. The big money-saver is a combi-ticket bought online, which bundles timed garden entry with the return bus and skips the on-the-day ticket queue. Once you're there, the garden is walk-only inside; to see the open bulb fields you want a bike, hired in Lisse (~€12 a day) or at the Keukenhof entrance, since the striped fields are spread along flat, signposted cycle lanes towards Noordwijkerhout that no coach goes near. Driving works too — there's a large paid car park at the gate (about €6) — but parking fills by mid-morning at peak and the Amsterdam-side traffic on the A4 is heavy on sunny April weekends.

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Keukenhof and the Bollenstreek (Tulip Fields) FAQs

When is Keukenhof open in 2026, and when do the fields peak?
Keukenhof opens for about eight weeks only — roughly 19 March to 10 May 2026 — and is closed entirely the rest of the year. The garden itself looks good throughout because the bulbs are planted in succession, but the open commercial bulb fields that surround it flower later: tulips usually peak from about 20 April into early May, weather depending. For the garden alone, early to mid-April is reliable; for the striped open fields in the photos, aim for the last two to three weeks of the season.
How do you get to Keukenhof from Amsterdam or the UK?
There's no train to the garden — you take a dedicated Keukenhof Express coach. From the UK, fly or take the Eurostar to Amsterdam, then catch bus 852 from Schiphol (about 30 minutes), bus 858 from Amsterdam RAI (about 45), or Connexxion bus 854 from Leiden Centraal (about 25). Buy a combi-ticket online that bundles garden entry and the return bus — it's cheaper than buying separately and lets you skip the ticket queue. Driving from Amsterdam takes about 40 minutes on the A4 but the car park fills by mid-morning at peak.
How much does Keukenhof cost and do you need to book ahead?
A 2026 adult ticket is about €23 (£20), with children roughly €11 (£9.50) and under-fours free; the gate price is higher and busy days sell out, so book a timed entry slot online before you travel. Add the Keukenhof Express bus and a combi-ticket runs around €33–€35 (£28–£30) all-in from Schiphol. Parking, if you drive, is about €6. Allow two to three hours inside the garden, plus a bike hire (~€12) if you want to ride the open fields afterwards.
Is Keukenhof worth it, or is it a tourist trap?
It's worth it if you come for the right reason and at the right time. The garden is genuinely spectacular and immaculately kept, but it's busy — up to around 15,000 visitors a day at peak — so take the 08:00 opening slot on a weekday and you'll see the best beds before the Amsterdam coaches land. The common disappointment is people arriving in late March expecting the open striped fields, which haven't bloomed yet, or coming purely for the garden when the surrounding Bollenstreek lanes on a bike are the better half of the day.

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