Buy Tickets to Visit the Anne Frank Huis (House) Museum in Amsterdam

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by Henk Bekker

in Amsterdam, Holland, Netherlands

Buy time-slot reservation tickets online only to visit the Anne Frank Huis (House) — it is one of the most popular sights to see in Amsterdam and no admission tickets are sold directly at the museum itself.

Anne Frank House Museum in Amsterdam
© Anne Frank House / Photographer: Cris Toala Olivares

The Anne Frank story is well-known worldwide making a visit to the house in Amsterdam where she and her family hid from the German occupiers during the Second World War one of the most popular sites to visit in Holland. For many visitors, visiting the Anne Frank Huis is almost a pilgrimage while others are disappointed by the often crowded interior and rather bare displays. Queuing outside the Anne Frank House Museum has disappeared, as no tickets are sold at the museum itself. All tickets for the Anne Frank Museum are only sold online with admission during a specific time slot. Anne Frank tours may provide some context to her life in Amsterdam but no guided tour includes admission to the Anne Frank House.

The Diary of Anne Frank in Amsterdam

Diary room, with Anne Frank’s first, red chequered diary in the Anne Frank House Museum in Amsterdam
© Anne Frank House / Photographer: Cris Toala Olivares

Anne Frank (1929-1945) was a German-born Jewish girl who famously wrote a diary of the months she and her family hid from the German occupiers in a small annex to her father’s business in Amsterdam. Het Achterhuis – literally, the house behind but usually translated as the annex – was behind the factory at Prinsengracht 263 (Prince’s Canal).

The Frank family and a few friends stayed in hiding from July 6, 1942, until their betrayal on August 4, 1944. With the exception of the father Otto Frank, all hiding in the annex died in concentration camps. Anne Frank died in Bergen-Belsen in March 1945.

Miep Gies, one of the Dutch helpers of the Frank family, discovered Anne Frank’s diary and after the war, Otto Frank decided to have it published as Het Achterhuis in 1947. The Diary of Anne Frank has since received worldwide fame making the Anne Frank Huis one of the most popular literary-historic sights to see in Europe. Annually, the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam receives well over a million visitors.

The Anne Frank House in Amsterdam

The Anne Frank Huis (House) is one of the most popular museums or sights to see in Amsterdam. Tickets are only sold online – no tickets are sold directly at the museum itself.

Visitors to the Anne Frank House enter the museum through a modern side building and move mostly in single file through the various rooms. After all, the main attraction of the museum is a house that was small enough to hide behind the main building.

A free audio guide makes it much easier to enjoy the museum without having to try and read small labels with visitors constantly pushing even if unintentionally – the museum does get very full.

Displays, models, photos, and videos inside the former factory and adjacent buildings explain the story of Anne Frank and the circumstances surrounding her life and times. A scale model shows the annex furnished.

Visitors enter the annex itself via the famous movable bookcase and see the rooms of the hiding place. The rooms are unfurnished with a few personal items still on display, e.g. the map on which the family followed the progress of the allied invasion, the growth lines of the children on the wall, photos, and pictures Anne used to decorate her room.

Anne Frank’s original diary, notebooks, and other sheets of paper with her notes are seen on the way out in a modern display room with examples of the diary published in many other languages.

Criticism of the Anne Frank House Museum

Anne Frank House Museum in Amsterdam interior
© Anne Frank House / Photographer: Cris Toala Olivares

The main criticisms of the Anne Frank House were the long queues to get in, the lack of visitors’ facilities, the crowds inside, and the rather bare rooms. All of these criticisms are valid to some extent but the change to an online-tickets-only system alleviates the most serious one. The free audio guide now makes it much easier to enjoy displays without having to push all the way to the front to read the descriptions. The crowds should not be a surprise for a sight so popular and physically small.

The decision to keep the rooms in the annex empty and unfurnished was consciously made by Otto Frank to respect and remind that the others did not return after the war. It would hardly have been possible to move visitors through the annex if the rooms were furnished – it was a hiding place not a palace with service corridors.

It is also worth studying the museum’s website in advance — it has some very interesting and well-presented documentation on Anne Frank and the period. It is also a great way to prepare children for a visit to the house itself. Following the story, events, and videos are much easier on the website rather than inside the crowded museum.

Visiting the Anne Frank House combines well with a to visit the Resistance Museum (Verzetsmuseum) for visitors interested in Dutch history during the Second World War.

Tips on Buying Tickets for the Anne Frank House

Anne Frank Huis Museum in Amsterdam
Prinzengracht 263, Amsterdam

No tickets are sold at the Anne Frank Museum itself — all tickets are available only for purchase online. Currently, tickets are sold a maximum of six weeks in advance with tickets for a new week released each Tuesday at 10:00.

Ticket prices for the Anne Frank Museum are €16 for adults, €7 for children 10 to 17, and €1 for children 0 to 9 years — everyone needs a ticket, including babies. The Museumkaart (Dutch Museums Card) is valid but the I Amsterdam City Card is not. Museumkaart holders and children must also book a time-slot reservation online (€1).

Tickets for the Anne Frank Museum often sell out making it sensible to book as far in advance as possible. It is not possible to go on a waiting list and as tickets are only sold to individuals, ticket cancellations are minimal (but always worth checking again later).

Anne Frank Huis Westerkerk Prinzengracht

Many Anne Frank tours are offered in Amsterdam but these are of the neighborhood she lived in, the musical, etc., and do NOT include admission to the Anne Frank House. The museum sells tickets only to individuals and not to resellers or group tours.

Morning tickets still seem to sell out fastest with late afternoon, and especially evening tickets more commonly available, which on its own should indicate that a visit later in the day will be a more pleasant experience.

The average visit to the Anne Frank Huis Museum in Amsterdam takes around an hour.

Don’t buy tickets from resellers — it is not allowed to sell or buy tickets from third parties and such tickets will not be honored.

Anne Frank House Museum Opening Hours

Exterior view of the Anne Frank Huis Museum in Amsterdam

The Anne Frank Museum is open daily from 9 am to 10 pm. The museum is closed only on Yom Kippur (12 October 2024, 2 October 2025, and 21 September 2026) — opening hours are shorter on some other major vacation days but as time-slot reservations are essential this is easily confirmed when booking tickets.

The Anne Frank House currently has no cloakroom or coin lockers. Very small backpacks (A4 size) may be carried by hand but buggies and any larger bags may not be taken into the museum building. (Leave luggage at the hotel or prebook bag storage online.

Some staircases inside the museum are extremely steep even for visitors who otherwise have little difficulty walking or negotiating regular stairs.

The Anne Frank Huis itself is not accessible to wheelchair users, although the newer sections of the museum are.

Photography is not allowed inside the Anne Frank House or the newer museum sections.

Getting to the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam

The Anne Frank Museum is at Prinzengracht 263-267 – the actual Anne Frank Huis is at 263 — the house with dark doors, which are now permanently closed.

Getting to the Anne Frank Huis Museum is easy as it is located next to the Westerkerk — a large church with an iconic 85-m tall spire. Amsterdam, Westermarkt is the closest tram stop to the Anne Frank House and many sightseeing and canal boat tours stop or depart from the landing directly in front of the museum.

A walking route leads from the Anne Frank House via amongst others the Jewish Cultural Quarter (with Portuguese Synagogue) to the excellent Verzetsmuseum (Resistance Museum). The brochure Persecution and resistance in Amsterdam(with map) is available for a nominal amount at the Anne Frank House or at the Resistance Museum.

The Anne Frank Zentrum in Berlin is an interesting documentation center on the life and later influence of Anne Frank’s diary.

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