How Do I Book a Cheap Hostel in Amsterdam?
You want a cheap hostel in Amsterdam, but you don’t want surprises that ruin your trip—just a solid bed, a good location, and a booking that actually sticks. That’s exactly our lane at Hans Brinker: low-budget, central, and proudly honest about what you’re getting into. Lees het overzichtsartikel over Where can I book a cheap hostel in Amsterdam? In this guide, we’ll walk you through what you need to book, how the booking process typically works in Amsterdam, and how to lock in availability fast (especially when the city goes wild).
How do I book a hostel in Amsterdam?
Booking a hostel in Amsterdam is straightforward, but it goes smoother (and cheaper) when you come prepared. In practice, you’ll choose your dates, pick a room type (dorm or private), confirm guest details, and select a rate type (flexible vs non-refundable). Then you’ll receive a confirmation and you’re done—until you arrive and pay what’s due on arrival (like city tax, if it’s not included in your rate).
What information do I need to book a hostel?
Before you hit “book,” have these details ready:
- Dates and length of stay: we have a maximum stay of 5 nights (and yes, that also applies if you try to stack multiple reservations).
- Who is staying: names plus an email address for confirmation. If you’re booking for others, make sure you can share the confirmation and any house rules.
- Age check: you must be 18+ to stay. For shared dorms, we run an 18–40 dorm age restriction. If you’re 40+, book a private room or an entire dorm.
- Check-in/out planning: our standard times are check-in 14:00 and check-out 10:00.
- Budget notes: remember that city tax is not included and is charged at 12.5% of the net overnight rate per night, payable on arrival.
- Special needs: traveling with a pet? Pets aren’t permitted—unless it’s an alpaca (seriously). If you plan to bring one, contact us first.
How does the booking process work for Amsterdam hostels?
Most Amsterdam hostels follow the same flow, and we do too: you select availability, confirm policies, and receive a booking confirmation. The key difference is in the policies that can affect whether your booking is accepted or changed.
At our place, the policies are part of the “know what you’re getting into” deal. For example, we’re strict about age rules and maximum stay, and we can apply fees for no-shows according to the conditions of your rate. If you’re booking as a group, the rules can be even more specific—especially when underage guests are involved (and we have extra approval steps for those cases).
Can I book online, or do I need to call?
In Amsterdam, you can almost always book online—and you should, because rooms disappear fast. For Hans Brinker, online booking is the norm. Calling is mainly useful when you have a situation that doesn’t fit neatly into a standard booking, such as group requests or edge-case questions about policies.
If you want to double-check rules before paying for anything, you can also read our official pages: FAQ and Houserules.
Why book a hostel in Amsterdam now?
Because Amsterdam doesn’t wait. When the city is busy, “I’ll book later” turns into “I guess I’m sleeping somewhere expensive and far away.” If you’re hunting for a cheap bed, timing is part of the price.
Are there seasonal deals you can use right now?
Seasonality in Amsterdam is real: weekends, holidays, and big event periods can spike demand. Even if you don’t see a flashy “sale,” you can still win on price by booking earlier and being flexible with dates. If you can shift your stay by even one night, you often unlock cheaper inventory and avoid peak surcharges that show up when the city fills up.
How do you secure availability in popular hostels?
Availability isn’t just about being first—it’s about being eligible. At our hostel, the most common booking-killers are ignoring the maximum stay (5 nights) or missing the dorm age range (18–40). If you’re traveling with someone outside that range, go straight for a private room or book an entire dorm so you don’t waste time on a reservation we can’t host as booked.
Also: groups should treat availability like a limited resource. If you’re 25+ people (or a student/sports/event group), you’re in group-booking territory with additional terms. Waiting too long can mean splitting up, paying more, or losing the dates entirely.
What’s the urgency—why not book last minute?
Three reasons: (1) price—cheap beds sell out first; (2) location—central spots go before the outskirts; (3) policy fit—if you need flexibility, you want time to choose the right rate. We offer a fully flexible booking option that lets you cancel up to 2 days in advance without charges. That kind of flexibility is your safety net, but it’s only helpful if you secure a bed before the city runs out.
What are the concrete steps to book a hostel?
Here’s a practical, no-drama flow you can follow today—whether you book with us or anywhere else in Amsterdam.
1) Fill in a booking form correctly
- Enter the right dates and keep the 5-night maximum stay in mind.
- Select the correct room type: dorm for the cheapest bed, private room if you want more space or don’t fit dorm rules.
- Check age rules before you confirm (18+; dorms 18–40 at our place).
- Use a reliable email address so your confirmation arrives (and you can retrieve it later).
- Read the rate conditions: flexible vs non-refundable is not a vibe—it’s a financial decision.
2) After you confirm: what to do next
- Save your confirmation (screenshot + email folder). If you’re traveling in a group, forward it to everyone.
- Plan arrival around check-in/out: check-in is 14:00 and check-out is 10:00.
- Budget for taxes and extras: at our hostel, city tax is 12.5% of the net overnight rate per night and is paid on arrival.
- Know the basics you’re getting: free WiFi in all areas, reception, and (if you’re into it) breakfast starts at 7:30. If you’re more of a “breakfast at 3pm” person, our Brinker Bar has you covered too.
3) How to change or cancel if needed
This depends on the rate you choose:
- Flexible booking: you can cancel up to 2 days in advance without charges. If your plans might shift, this is the smartest option.
- Non-refundable booking: canceling means the full stay amount can still be applied. Book this only when you’re sure.
- No-shows: if you don’t show up, cancellation fees apply according to your booking conditions—so don’t ghost your own trip.
If you need to make changes, do it as soon as you know. The earlier you act, the more likely there’s availability to adjust dates or room type—especially in central Amsterdam.
Conclusion
To book a cheap hostel in Amsterdam, you need three things: the right info (dates, ages, stay length), the right rate (flexible vs non-refundable), and the right timing (early beats expensive). At Hans Brinker, we keep it simple: clean bed, decent breakfast, free WiFi, and a central location a short walk from Leidseplein—plus rules that are clear enough to save you trouble later. If you’re ready to lock it in, pick your dates, choose your room, and book online now—then show up at 14:00 and let Amsterdam do the rest.
















