REVIEW · AMSTERDAM
All Inclusive Guided Walking Beer Tours Amsterdam
Book on Viator →Operated by Tap-In Tours · Bookable on Viator
This beer tour keeps things relaxed and local. You get a guided walking route focused on Amsterdam craft beer, with stops that are easy to follow and a small group that makes conversation happen. I especially like the calm pace and the structure around tastings, not random wandering.
I also like that you skip the boring logistical work and get a guide who connects what you’re drinking to how beer is made and styled. One thing to consider: this is not a rowdy pub crawl, so if you’re chasing loud partying, you may prefer a different kind of night out.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- A small-group Amsterdam beer walk with clear tasting goals
- Four craft beers plus bitterballen: what all-inclusive really means
- Albert Cuyp Market pause: snacks and an easy starting rhythm
- How the guide turns beer tasting into a mini lesson
- Where you start and end: Cornelis Troostplein to Van der Helstplein
- Timing and group pace for a 3-hour beer session
- Value check: why $87.30 can work for a short trip
- Who this Amsterdam beer tour suits best
- Practical tips to get the most from the experience
- Should you book the guided walking beer tour in Amsterdam?
- FAQ
- How long is the All Inclusive Guided Walking Beer Tour in Amsterdam?
- Where do I meet and where does the tour end?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Are alcohol-free drinks available?
- What’s not included?
- How big is the group?
- What happens if the weather is bad or I need to cancel?
Key things to know before you go

- Small group (max 12) means you’re more likely to get personal attention during tastings
- Four Amsterdam craft beers included keeps the experience focused and budget-friendly
- Dutch snacks included (bitterballen) give you that classic pub-food pairing
- Guided walking format trades chaos for an easy route through local spots
- English-language tour makes it straightforward to ask questions and follow along
A small-group Amsterdam beer walk with clear tasting goals

This is an Amsterdam guided walking beer tour built for people who want to enjoy beer without turning the evening into a sprint. The group size tops out at 12, so the vibe stays social instead of crowd-control. You’ll spend the tour moving through local watering holes at a pace that feels comfortable for talking, tasting, and keeping your bearings.
What I like about this format is that it takes away the guesswork. You’re not trying to figure out what to order, which bars are legit, or how to time everything between neighborhoods. The guide handles the flow so you can focus on the fun part: comparing styles and learning what makes each pour different.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Amsterdam
Four craft beers plus bitterballen: what all-inclusive really means

The all-inclusive part here is nicely defined: you get four Amsterdam-brewed craft beers and a snack of Dutch bitterballen. That matters because it keeps your expectations clean. You’re not paying up front and then feeling nickeled-and-dimed every time you take a sip.
Beer choices also come with flexibility. The tour includes alcohol options, with alcohol-free beer available (or other drinks depending on what you prefer). If you don’t want full-strength beer, you still get to take part in the tasting rhythm and compare flavor profiles.
Just know the boundary: anything beyond the included four beers and any food beyond the included snacks is not part of the price. So if you love making one stop last two hours, you’ll want to budget extra. On the flip side, if you’re aiming for a smart tasting session, this structure helps you control your spending.
Albert Cuyp Market pause: snacks and an easy starting rhythm
The tour starts with a walk-by moment around Albert Cuyp Market, then you get a short break to stop for snacks. The time is brief (about 10 minutes), and it’s easy to fit into a short, focused 3-hour outing without turning the whole tour into a marketplace detour.
This is a good kind of “starter” stop because it gives you a local-feeling landmark early, before you settle into the beer tastings. And since the tour includes Dutch bitterballen as part of your snack, this market pause is likely where that classic pairing fits in. Either way, you’ll walk away feeling like you experienced more than just bars—you got a taste of Amsterdam’s day-to-day food scene too.
How the guide turns beer tasting into a mini lesson

A standout theme for this experience is the quality of the guide. The best part isn’t just that you’re handed beers—it’s that the guide connects what you taste to how beer is brewed and why that matters for style. That’s exactly what turns a beer outing from drinking-and-shopping into something you can actually talk about afterward.
Expect the guide to cover topics like the brewing process and how it affects different beer styles, plus the history of beer in Amsterdam. You’ll also visit several breweries or pubs as part of the tasting sequence, which helps you see variety instead of repeating the same flavor route.
If you like beer but don’t know the technical language yet, don’t worry. The tour is built for learning at an enjoyable pace. The goal is not to make you a brewer overnight. It’s to help you understand why one beer tastes lighter or hoppier, why another feels darker or more complex, and why Amsterdam’s local scene developed the way it did.
Where you start and end: Cornelis Troostplein to Van der Helstplein

This is a walking tour that doesn’t start and end in the same exact spot, which is a small detail but a big help in real life. You meet at Cornelis Troostplein, 1072 Amsterdam, and the tour ends at Van der Helstplein.
Practically, that means you can plan your evening around the finish point rather than backtracking. It also usually keeps the route from being overly repetitive, since you’re moving forward through the city.
You’ll also be in an area that’s convenient for getting there. The tour notes it’s near public transportation, so you should be able to reach the start without turning your day into a logistics project.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Amsterdam
Timing and group pace for a 3-hour beer session

The tour runs for about 3 hours, which is a sweet spot. Long enough for multiple tastings and learning, short enough that you’re not stuck commuting and waiting all evening. On a trip schedule, that matters. It lets you fit this in without sacrificing dinner plans or your next day.
Because it’s a guided walk, your time is likely distributed across walking segments plus stops for tasting and snack moments. The Albert Cuyp Market stop is only about 10 minutes, so most of your experience is spent on the beer portion and the walking between local spots.
And with a maximum group size of 12, the pace tends to stay workable. You’re less likely to feel like you’re being rushed through each place or stuck watching your whole group file in like a train station.
Value check: why $87.30 can work for a short trip

At $87.30 per person, you’re paying for three things at once: a guide, multiple tastings, and snacks. The math looks better when you remember the tour includes four beers plus bitterballen. If you were to do this on your own, you’d likely end up paying bar-by-bar anyway—and you’d still have the trouble of picking places, ordering efficiently, and timing the night.
This price point also makes sense for the experience length. At roughly 3 hours, you’re not buying a full day. You’re buying a focused evening with structure.
Is it the cheapest beer night in Amsterdam? Probably not. But it’s often the smart one if you want to drink local craft beer and learn a bit, while keeping the logistics off your plate. For me, that’s where the value sits: you pay to make the evening simpler and more meaningful.
Who this Amsterdam beer tour suits best

This is a strong match if you’re:
- Traveling solo or as a couple and want an easy way to meet other people
- Interested in Amsterdam beer beyond the basics
- The type of person who enjoys conversations with a guide, not just noise and shots
- Looking for a beer night that doesn’t derail your schedule
It’s not the best match if your ideal evening is a chaotic, high-energy pub crawl. The tour’s whole vibe is calmer. You should expect a more thoughtful pace, with learning and guided tastings as the focus. If you want to stumble from bar to bar, you might find this feels controlled—in a good way, just not what you asked for.
Also, because it requires good weather, plan to dress for the walk and be ready for an alternative plan if conditions are poor. That’s one of those travel realities in Amsterdam where the forecast can change your comfort level fast.
Practical tips to get the most from the experience
Here are a few ways to make this tour feel smooth from start to finish:
- Bring your phone for the mobile ticket. If your battery is weak, charge beforehand.
- Wear walking shoes. It’s a walking tour, and 3 hours adds up fast once you’re on cobblestones.
- Ask questions early. If you’re curious about brewing or styles, the guide is best used when you start thinking like a student.
- Pace your tastes. Four beers can be plenty when you’re also walking and listening.
- Plan for included snacks only. You’ll get bitterballen as part of the tour, but other food isn’t covered.
One extra confidence note: the operator Tap-In Tours communicates in a friendly, attentive way, signed by Gideon in at least one message tied to tour support. That lines up with the overall theme of helpful guidance and personal attention in the experience.
Should you book the guided walking beer tour in Amsterdam?
If you want an Amsterdam beer tour that’s social, structured, and calmer than a typical pub crawl, I’d say yes. The combination of four craft beers, Dutch bitterballen, and a guide who explains how brewing connects to style makes this a solid “one evening, lots of value” choice.
Book it if you like learning while you drink and you want a small group setting. Skip it if you’re chasing rowdy chaos or you want an open-ended, buy-whatever-you-feel-like tasting night. This tour is designed for a defined experience, and that’s exactly why it works.
FAQ
How long is the All Inclusive Guided Walking Beer Tour in Amsterdam?
The tour lasts about 3 hours.
Where do I meet and where does the tour end?
You meet at Cornelis Troostplein, 1072 Amsterdam, Netherlands, and the tour ends at Van der Helstplein, Amsterdam.
What’s included in the tour price?
It includes four Amsterdam-brewed craft beers, Dutch bitterballen, and a guide.
Are alcohol-free drinks available?
Yes. The tour includes alcohol-free beer as an option, and it also notes that other drinks may be available.
What’s not included?
Other beers or drinks after the four included beers and any other food after the snacks are not included.
How big is the group?
The tour has a maximum of 12 travelers.
What happens if the weather is bad or I need to cancel?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. You can cancel for free up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






































