Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Coffeeshop in Amsterdam
Coffeeshop in Amsterdam - Credit: ttatty / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Politics
Amsterdam
coffeeshop
tourism
international tourist
Cannabis
Monday, 16 February 2026 - 10:09

Share this article:

Amsterdam's plan to ban tourists from coffeeshops back on the table

Amsterdam is again considering a ban on international tourists from cannabis-serving coffeeshops, according to Parool. After next month’s municipal elections, there could be majority support for such a ban in the city council.

Amsterdam has been trying to both get rid of the image of Europe’s cannabis capital and reduce the number of international tourists for years. In October last year, the PvdA proposed banning international tourists from buying cannabis at city center coffeeshops, following the example of the southern provinces. They introduced a special cannabis pass for locals, which they must show when they buy cannabis at coffeeshops, in 2012.

The PvdA’s plan did not get majority support, but that could change after the municipal elections on March 18. One of the major opponents was GroenLinks, which will merge with the PvdA after the election and could then follow the PvdA’s line on this point. Mayor Femke Halsema could also implement the measure herself, but has always stated that she’d prefer to do it with city council support.

The measure is not without downsides. Maastricht, where only Dutch citizens can buy weed or hashish, has seen an increase in street dealers, a crime reporter for De Limburger, told Parool. “This measure will lead to a lot of street dealing. These people stand around the corner from the coffeeshop. Enforcement of this was impossible in Limburg, with the current capacity of enforcement officers and the police.”

Dirk Korf, an emeritus professor of criminology who has studied coffeshops, street dealers, and the tourist ban for years, is also not a fan of the measure. He, too, thinks banning tourists from coffeeshops will lead to more drug dealers on the street. “It’s a game of supply and demand. You don’t have to just imagine annoying street dealers; a new parallel market will emerge. We’ve seen that in the south of the country.”

But according to Dingeman Coumou of the residents’ organization d’Oude Stadt, Amsterdam already deals with street dealers, and this measure will address a more pressing problem - overtourism. “Party tourists, in particular, will stay away, and we’d rather be rid of them,” he told Parool. “We hope a majority will emerge now and Halsema will have the courage to implement it."

More like this

Image
The streets of the Red Light District in Amsterdam packed with tourists on a Thursday night in July 2017
Red Light District businesses vexed by Amsterdam plan to ban tourists from coffeeshops
Image
Tourists in Amsterdam laying down on Dam Square while using their smartphones. 9 Sept. 2015
Over 52 million tourists stayed in Dutch hotels, holiday parks & campsites in 2025
Image
Coffeeshop in Amsterdam
Amsterdam PvdA wants to ban international tourists from Red Light District coffeeshops
Image
Crowded Leidsestraat in Amsterdam
Amsterdam to ban hotels from jamming in sleeping pods to reduce city center overtourism
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Woman seriously injured in Rotterdam industrial site stabbing; Suspect arrested
  • Construction permit granted for massive data center in Amsterdam Zuidoost
  • Netherlands recruited 29 top scientist leaving U.S. under Trump
  • Heavily armed police rescue man, 33, from hostage situation in Tiel home; Five arrested
  • Majority of Dutch support hiking tax on big inheritances; 12% want to scrap it

Top stories

  • Netherlands recruited 29 top scientist leaving U.S. under Trump
  • Police shoot armed man on Rotterdam street
  • Rotterdam train traffic back to normal after week-long outage
  • New-build home sales in Netherlands fall 19% as market cools
  • At least 8 illegal designer drug sites back online via a foreign domain

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content