Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Waiter setting a table
Waiter setting a table - Credit: AllaSerebrina / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Health
Business
Coronavirus
lockdown
lockdown exit strategy
hospitality sector
arts and culture sector
Rijksmuseum
coronavirus measures
Saturday, 5 June 2021 - 07:45

Share this article:

With today’s lockdown easing, the Netherlands moves one step closer to fully reopening

The third step of the government’s six-step plan to end the coronavirus lockdown came into effect with dozens of changes on June 5, a few days earlier than planned. Starting on Saturday, the majority of indoor locations in the Netherlands will be able to welcome customers and visitors again, like bars, restaurants and museums.

Thanks to sinking coronavirus infection rates, a declining number of Covid-19 hospital admissions and rising vaccination figures, the Netherlands was able to move ahead with its plan.

Catering establishments are especially enthusiastic about welcoming guests, after many months of financial, personal, and professional difficulties.

"It is very relieving of course. They were horrible times. We were not able to do our job like we used to. We were used to always being busy”, Job from the Koffieschenkerij, a café in the heart of Amsterdam said to the NL Times.

The new allowance of 50 people per indoor space is a breath of fresh air to the culture and the hospitality sector. The businesses are allowed to extend their opening times to between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. Fixed seating does remain mandatory, yet as long as a 1.5-meter distance can be guaranteed, gastro businesses can welcome up to 50 guests inside or on a terrace. Alcoholic beverages can also flow again until 10 p.m.

Entertainment, such as large T.V. screens will continue to be prohibited out of concern it could attract large crowds.

In the culture sector, it is permitted again for people of all ages to work together in arts and culture, including at studios and rehearsal halls. The limit of 50 visitors per room or hall remains, with the exception that large venues with over a thousand fixed seats can grant entrance to up to 250 visitors.

More has also become possible in sports. Friendly matches amongst players of the same club are allowed again, although players still have to wait for official matches. Gyms and sports clubs can also reopen their changing rooms, showers and saunas.

Last but not least, residents can welcome up to four visitors above the age of 12 per day again. Children under 12 do not count towards the total amount.

Face masks remain obligatory in indoor public places. Other basic rules, such as regular hand washing and Covid-19 testing in case of symptoms continue to apply. The government also reiterates their advice to work from home whenever possible.

More like this

Image
King Willem-Alexander and Queen Maxima during their summer photo shoot in the gardens of Huis ten Bosch palace, 30 June 2025
Dutch King again defends holiday trip to Greece days into Netherlands Covid lockdown
Image
Beschuit met muisjes, a traditional Dutch snack to celebrate the birth of a child
Slightly fewer children were born in the Netherlands last year than the year before
Image
Police clear the streets intersecting Van Baerlestraat, south of Museumplein in Amsterdam
136,000 euros in damages for curfew riots during lockdown has not yet been collected
Image
Billboards calling for an end to the proposed 2G coronavirus access pass system go up in Amsterdam. 31 Jan. 2022
Pandemic sparked conflicts among 1 in 4 Dutch people, study reveals
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Three residents checked for smoke inhalation after fire in Delft apartment complex
  • Parents can be prosecuted for keeping homeschooling kids over religious convictions
  • Cuts to long-term care budgets postponed to after 2027
  • Nearly 100 exotic animals found in contaminated, overheated enclosures; Man arrested
  • Fries Museum delays major silver exhibition over security concerns

Top stories

  • Lightning storms ignite multiple house fires, paralyze rail travel across Netherlands
  • New Amsterdam-Paris train from €19 will stop in Haarlem, The Hague, Roosendaal & Gent
  • Police arrest 35-year-old man after youth soccer leader found dead in Herpen ditch
  • Urgent Code Orange warning issued as heavy storms hit eastern Netherlands
  • Prosecutors target alleged drug profits of former Oranje international Quincy Promes

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

Footer menu

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