Independent and family-owned since 1896. Three Michelin Keys. Restaurant Flore at two Michelin stars. The hotel where Amsterdam's old money has stayed for four generations.
"Independent since 1896, owned by the same Dutch family since 1962, and quietly the most polished hotel in the Netherlands. The Michelin Guide gave it three Keys for a reason."
De L'Europe is the hotel that Amsterdam's old money discreetly favours over the international brands — independent since 1896, owned by the Heineken family since 1962, and operated with the kind of unflashy continuity that a single ownership across three generations produces. The building, on Nieuwe Doelenstraat at the point where the Singel meets the Amstel, faces directly across the river to the Munttoren tower and occupies one of the most photographed addresses in the city. The grand red-brick exterior has not changed substantially in 130 years; everything inside has been refined, room by room, in the way a private estate is improved over time.
The Michelin Guide awarded De L'Europe three Michelin Keys in its inaugural 2024 Dutch ratings — the highest possible accommodation rating, given to fewer than thirty hotels in continental Europe. The recognition reflects the hotel's combination of architecture, service standards, and culinary programme. There are 110 rooms and suites across the historic main building and the more recent Dutch Masters Wing, which opened in 2011 with rooms decorated around themes drawn from the Rijksmuseum's collection. The Vermeer Suite, the Rembrandt Suite, and the Hals Suite have full reproductions of paintings as their visual anchors and remain among the most theatrically decorated suites in any European hotel.
The dining is the property's strongest argument. Restaurant Flore holds two Michelin stars and a Michelin Green Star — chef Bas van Kranen's modern Dutch tasting menu draws on Northern European producers and biodynamic principles, and the room is small enough to feel like a private invitation. Brasserie Marie, the all-day restaurant, is one of the most pleasant hotel breakfast rooms in the city. Trattoria Graziella adds a Tuscan kitchen to the property, run by an Italian family that the Heinekens recruited for the project. Marie sur l'Eau — a floating annex on the Amstel — is the summer-only option for canal-side lunch. Freddy's Bar handles the cocktail programme.
The Spa de L'Europe is a credible facility — pool, sauna, treatment rooms, and a fitness centre that handles the basics. The fleet of private boats includes one of the largest hotel-owned vessels in the city, available for private canal excursions. The location places guests at the symbolic centre of Amsterdam — the Rijksmuseum is a ten-minute walk, the Royal Palace at Dam Square is five minutes, and the Concertgebouw fifteen by tram. For a heritage hotel that has remained genuinely current, this is the credible choice.
For milestone anniversaries, De L'Europe is the most quietly elegant Amsterdam booking. Restaurant Flore for the dinner — the two-star tasting menu is among the most personal restaurant experiences in northern Europe — and one of the Dutch Masters suites for the night. The hotel arranges these stays with the kind of practiced calm that only a privately-owned hotel of this age can produce.
A private boat from the hotel's own dock at sunset, dinner at Restaurant Flore on return, and one of the river-facing suites for the night. The concierge has organised many of these. The view of the Munttoren from the hotel's front terrace at golden hour is one of the canonical Amsterdam images and arguably the most authentic proposal setting the city offers.
For honeymooners drawn to old-school grand hotels with current relevance, De L'Europe outperforms most Amsterdam alternatives. The combination of the heritage building, the contemporary kitchen at Flore, the river-facing suites, and the spa makes a four-night booking that does not feel like a museum visit. Book a Junior Suite with Amstel View as the starting point and let the kitchen and concierge handle the rest.
Nieuwe Doelenstraat 2-14
1012 CP Amsterdam
The Netherlands
On the Amstel, facing the Munttoren tower
110 rooms and suites across two wings
Classic Rooms from €426/night
Junior Suite Amstel View from €910/night
Dutch Masters Suites from €1,800/night
Check-in: 3:00 PM
Check-out: 12:00 PM
Open year-round
Restaurant Flore (2 Michelin stars + Green)
Three Michelin Keys (2024)
Brasserie Marie · Trattoria Graziella
Spa de L'Europe with pool
Private canal boat fleet
Open year-round
Peak: April–September
Best value: November–February (excl. Christmas)
High-speed WiFi throughout
Strong signal in rooms and meeting spaces
Full meeting and event facilities
From €426/night. Restaurant Flore books out four to six weeks in advance — reserve at the same time as the room.
Book This Hotel →Six 17th-century canal houses joined into a single hotel on the Herengracht. Spago for the dinner.
The former Amsterdam city hall and Royal Inn. 177 rooms in the most historically loaded building in the city.
The grand 1867 hotel on the Amstel — the city's first international five-star, recently renovated.
Former Palace of Justice, opened 2025. Asaya spa, 134 rooms, the city's most-discussed opening.