Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Security turning a fatbike rider away from the Vondelpark on the day that the city's fatbike ban in the park takes effect, 11 May 2026
Security turning a fatbike rider away from the Vondelpark on the day that the city's fatbike ban in the park takes effect, 11 May 2026 - Credit: Joris van Gennip / ANP - License: All Rights Reserved
Politics
Amsterdam
Vondelpark
fatbike
fatbike ban
APV
Melanie van der Horst
Monday, 11 May 2026 - 09:06

Share this article:

Amsterdam’s fatbike ban starts today in the Vondelpark

From today, fatbikes are banned in Amsterdam’s Vondelpark. For the next two weeks, the city will just issue warnings. After that, anyone riding an electric bicycle with tires thicker than 7 centimeters will be fined.

If the ban in Vondelpark proves to be a success, the city council may ban fatbikes in other busy locations throughout the city. “It is a last resort,” traffic alderman Melanie van der Horst told AT5. The city has been asking the national government for measures since 2024, but according to Van der Horst, that is taking too long. “The rules from the central government are lacking, so we have to take action ourselves.”

The fatbike ban in the Vondelpark is arranged through an amendment to the General Municipal Ordinance (APV), the same way that beer bikes were banned from the city streets. Van der Horst is not overly concerned about legal objections to the measure. “We have one clear rule: the thickness of the tire,” she told the broadcaster. “And measuring a tire isn’t complicated.”

Whether the ban will reduce nuisance in the Vondelpark remains to be seen. Fatbike suppliers have already launched the skinnybike, basically a fatbike with tires just under 7 centimeters wide, and demand for these electric bicycles is skyrocketing.

Amsterdam’s ban follows Enschede, which banned fatbikes from the main shopping area in the city center during shopping hours, also based on the thickness of the bicycles' tires. Fatbike retailer La Souris has sued the municipality of Enschede, calling the ban “discriminatory,” among other things.

The national government has also decided on a stricter approach to fatbikes. Minister Vincent Karremans of Infrastructure announced last month that the government would give municipalities the option to ban fatbikes in specific areas, make helmets mandatory, and implement an age limit on fatbikes. What the age limit will be and when these measures will take effect remains unclear.

Image
Traffic sign informing people of the fatbike ban in the Vondelpark in Amsterdam
Traffic sign informing people of the fatbike ban in the Vondelpark in Amsterdam - Credit: Gemeente Amsterdam / Gemeente Amsterdam - License: All Rights Reserved

More like this

Image
Aerial view of the Vondelpark in Amsterdam
Amsterdam banning fat bikes in Vondelpark from May 11
Image
Traffic sign informing people of the fatbike ban in the Vondelpark in Amsterdam
Amsterdam fines 39 fatbike ban violators; Police begin campaign in Barendrecht
Image
Police check the maximum speed of a fatbike in 2024
Skinnybikes circumventing the first fatbike bans
Image
A person riding a fatbike in Amsterdam
Amsterdam plans fat-bike ban in busiest areas of the city
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Smog expected to degrade air quality in parts of Netherlands on Wednesday and Thursday
  • Zoetermeer school caretaker faces trial over sex abuse of at least 18 children
  • Man charged with terror-motivated plot to stab asylum seekers in Amsterdam
  • Public transport strike tomorrow may lead to more: No morning trains, trams & buses
  • Leiden steps up summer inspections amid rise in illegal sex work in student housing

Top stories

  • Heineken board taps JDE Peet’s exec. Rafa Oliveira as new CEO
  • More Dutch households can't make ends meet; Over half of young adults struggling
  • Heat: Schools implement special rosters, Amsterdam sets up cool-down spots
  • Heat wave: Code Orange weather alert for 36°C temps takes effect on Wednesday
  • More international students facing housing issues in Netherlands, from bedbugs to fraud

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

Footer menu

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