Amsterdam nightclubs launch €24.50 monthly pass to boost falling attendance
Four Amsterdam nightclubs have launched a 24.50-euro monthly subscription that allows unlimited entry, as part of a joint effort to counter rising costs and declining youth attendance in nightlife. The initiative, called the Nachtpas, was introduced by Garage Noord, Nachbar, Skatecafe and Radio Radio, with 150 passes initially selling out immediately and a waiting list now open.
The launch comes amid broader cost-of-living pressures in the Netherlands, with economists warning that households could face sharply higher living expenses if the war in the Middle East escalates. Rabobank scenarios show petrol could rise to about three euros per liter in a severe case, while monthly energy contracts for new customers could exceed 400 euros, depending on disruptions to global energy supplies. Even in more moderate projections, energy costs remain elevated compared with current levels.
The clubs say the Nachtpas is intended as both a practical response to rising prices and a way to make nightlife more accessible as young people cut back on going out. “We see that everything is just getting more expensive, and that is why people are going out less,” said Moktar Nabil, owner of Garage Noord and one of the initiative’s founders, told AT5.
The pass grants unlimited entry to participating venues without individual ticket fees, although access remains subject to capacity and door policy.
In joint statements, the participating venues describe themselves as small independent cultural nightlife venues operating under increasing financial pressure in an increasingly expensive city. They say they have “bundled forces” to create a meaningful night program for Amsterdam’s 750-year celebration.
They also frame the initiative as both celebration and warning, stating it is “a celebration, but at the same time a cry for help toward the established order within art and culture; take us and therefore night culture seriously.”
Nabil also noted the balance between local visitors and tourists, saying: “We are all really willing to compromise and understand that you charge a bit less for ticketing. But those tourists can just pay.”
The initiative aligns with broader concerns about financial pressure on young people in the Netherlands. Separate research based on Statistics Netherlands (CBS) data shows that rising youth debt is increasingly linked to vulnerability, with young people up to age 23 with debts around 13 times more likely to end up in drug-related crime than financially stable peers, according to analysis reported by RTL.
