Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket

Gravity takes a vacation here. The Upside Down Amsterdam ticket throws you into the world’s largest upside down social media experience with 25 playful, interactive rooms and mind-bending optical illusions. I especially love the voice-activated LED-light ball pit with a jacuzzi and the way every stop practically begs for photos. One thing to keep in mind: a few of the most popular spots can get busy, so expect some waiting for your turn at the best angles.

For $24 per person, you’re not just paying for a gimmick. This is a full ticketed experience with lockers, a printed welcome photo, and digital photo downloads, plus access to the Upside Down Café and shop. It’s also sold in small groups (limited to 10), which helps the flow feel more relaxed than you’d expect.

Key highlights you’ll feel fast

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Key highlights you’ll feel fast

  • 25 interactive, upside-down rooms built for photos and playful optical illusions
  • Voice-activated LED ball pit with jacuzzi where your actions trigger the lights
  • A true private jet photo room plus other set-piece scenes like an ice bath and metro moments
  • Silent disco in an upside-down club so the fun stays on your schedule
  • Upside Down Café with colorful food and a famous Freakshake
  • Photo downloads included (you’ll get digital copies after you play)

Tickets, price, and why $24 can feel fair

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Tickets, price, and why $24 can feel fair
Let’s talk value up front. At $24 per person, this isn’t trying to compete with a classic museum day where you can wander for hours. Instead, it’s priced like a concentrated, ticketed entertainment experience in a single location.

What makes the price more reasonable is what you get bundled in:

  • Entry fee to the attraction
  • A printed welcome picture
  • Lockers for small and medium items
  • Digital photo downloads (so you’re not paying extra later for your pictures)
  • Access to the Upside Down Café and shop
  • A parking discount (handy if you’re driving in)
  • Wheelchair access via an elevator

One more practical note: your ticket is valid for 1 day, and you should check availability for starting times. That matters because you’ll have a better experience if you time it when you can move through rooms without feeling rushed.

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Finding The Upside Down Amsterdam and what you’ll do first

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Finding The Upside Down Amsterdam and what you’ll do first
You start at the main entrance of The Upside Down Amsterdam and present your voucher. That first step is simple, and it sets expectations right away: this place is designed for quick, repeatable photo moments.

Before you run into the rooms, you’ll want to make the most of two early conveniences:

  • Use the lockers (provided for small and medium items). This keeps your hands free for posing and filming.
  • Keep your phone ready. The experience is built around visual moments, and the included photo download process means you’ll likely spend time reviewing shots afterward.

The museum is wheelchair accessible thanks to an elevator, so mobility shouldn’t shut down your plans. If you’re traveling as a group, the fact that it’s a small group (limited to 10 participants) can also make the first minutes feel less chaotic than bigger attractions.

The 25 upside-down rooms: how the experience actually plays

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - The 25 upside-down rooms: how the experience actually plays
The core idea is straightforward: you’ll walk through 25 immersive and interactive settings where everything is designed to feel wrong in the best way. Doors, rooms, and props are flipped or arranged for optical illusions, so the fun isn’t only looking. It’s doing.

Here’s how you’ll likely experience the route in real life:

  1. You move room to room, stopping whenever a set piece gives you a fresh “How is this real?” moment.
  2. Each room encourages quick posing. You’ll often get a better shot by doing it twice: once fast, then once after you’ve adjusted your position.
  3. Some areas are more popular, so you may hit short waits for the best spot. This isn’t a deal-breaker, but it’s worth planning for.

Specific set pieces you should look for

You’ll see big signature scenes that people usually talk about after:

  • Dutch Ice Bath: expect a dramatic, chilly-looking photo set. Even if you’re not actually doing cold-water stuff, it’s built for the moment.
  • Metro upside down: another classic illusion environment that helps you create that “impossible angle” effect.
  • Upside-down club with silent disco: you get the club vibe, but the audio setup is tied to your own silent disco rhythm. It’s fun when you want your experience to feel more like play than just posing.
  • True private jet: a full-on photo room that sells the fantasy. You’ll likely spend extra time here because it’s such a clear “content spot.”

Not every room will be your favorite, and you’ll get a better overall day if you treat it like a photo trail with breaks, not a formal “museum” schedule.

The ball pit with jacuzzi and voice-activated LED lights

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - The ball pit with jacuzzi and voice-activated LED lights
If you want one reason to buy the ticket, it’s this. The largest voice-activated LED-light ball pit with a jacuzzi is exactly the kind of interactive moment that makes the whole place feel special.

Why it’s a standout:

  • The lights react to sound, so it becomes playful and interactive without you needing to be an expert at anything.
  • The jacuzzi element adds a relax-and-laugh contrast. Even if you’re mostly there for photos, it’s nice to have a moment that feels like an activity, not just a background.

Practical tip: wear comfortable footwear and keep your plan simple. This room can turn into a full-on play session, so don’t schedule anything immediately afterward that requires you to look pristine and composed.

You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Amsterdam

Photo strategy: QR downloads, posing tips, and avoiding photo traffic jams

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Photo strategy: QR downloads, posing tips, and avoiding photo traffic jams
This is an attraction built for pictures, and it also includes the parts that usually annoy people at other photo spots.

What you’ll get for photos

  • You receive a printed welcome picture.
  • You also get digital photo downloads.

Some visitors specifically mention using a QR code to download photos. Either way, the big win is that your ticket covers your photos, which is rare for content-heavy attractions.

How to pose without feeling stuck

A lot of people enjoy the rooms most when they stop overthinking it. But there’s one real consideration: some rooms can leave you unsure how to stand or position your body for the illusion.

What works best:

  • Start with simple poses, then adjust your hands and head angle.
  • Watch what the room’s design is trying to trick you about—then match your posture to that illusion.
  • If a room has multiple people waiting, don’t linger blocking the path. Take two quick shots, then step aside and let the next person shoot.

The honest downside: crowding at prime angles

Even with a small-group setup, popular photo rooms can create short lines. You’ll waste less time if you keep moving. If you notice a crowd forming, don’t panic—just hop to the next room and come back later.

Upside Down Café and the Freakshake break you’ll actually want

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Upside Down Café and the Freakshake break you’ll actually want
After you’ve gone through the upside-down chaos, you’ll have a built-in decompression zone: the Upside Down Café. It’s included with your ticket, so you can treat it like part of the experience rather than an optional add-on.

What to expect:

  • Access to the Upside Down Café and shop
  • Food like colorful sandwiches and sweets
  • A chance to sip the famous Freakshake

Why this matters for the whole day: it gives you a natural reset between photo-heavy rooms. It’s also a nice way to review your shots while you’re still in the headspace of the museum, instead of ending your day immediately after the last illusion.

Special evenings on Fridays and Saturdays

On Fridays and Saturdays after 5 PM, you can enjoy a cocktail combo ticket with live DJs. If you’re the type who likes your fun to shift from photo mode to party mode, that timing makes a difference.

Who should buy this ticket (and who might not love it)

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Who should buy this ticket (and who might not love it)
This ticket is a great fit if you want:

  • Playful, interactive, photo-first fun
  • A break from “sit and read” sightseeing
  • A family-friendly or group-friendly activity where laughter happens naturally

It’s also ideal for couples and friend groups who want a shared activity that produces memories quickly. Reviews point to strong appeal for kids too—especially ages where they enjoy silliness and being “allowed” to play for a while.

If you’re the kind of traveler who prefers quiet, slow museum wandering and deep interpretive context, you might find this short or a bit too staged. This is more of a themed entertainment day than a traditional museum visit.

Timing tips: when to go so the rooms feel fun, not rushed

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Timing tips: when to go so the rooms feel fun, not rushed
Because the ticket is valid for 1 day and you’ll have starting times, plan around your energy level and what kind of day you want.

A smart approach:

  • If you want fewer slowdowns in the most popular photo spots, pick an earlier start time.
  • If you’re going to enjoy the Friday/Saturday DJs after 5 PM, plan to linger longer in the café and photo rooms so you’re not rushing to “make the party.”

Also, many people treat this like a couple of hours outing. One or two rooms (especially the ball pit area) can take longer than you think, so give yourself breathing room rather than squeezing it between tight train connections.

Accessibility, comfort, and small practical gotchas

Amsterdam: The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket - Accessibility, comfort, and small practical gotchas
You’re getting wheelchair access via elevator, which is crucial for a building with multiple set-piece rooms. Since elevators are mentioned, you can feel better planning around mobility.

Other comfort points:

  • The lockers are for small and medium items, so bring what you need and consider leaving bulky bags elsewhere if possible.
  • Expect areas to involve sound and interaction in certain rooms (like the ball pit). Keep your plan relaxed.
  • If you’re sensitive to crowds, go in with a “move on quickly” mindset. The experience keeps you busy, so you rarely need to stay stuck in one bottleneck.

Finally, bring a fully charged phone. Even with downloads included, you’ll want enough battery to capture your best angles while you’re there.

Should you book The Upside Down Museum Entrance Ticket?

Book it if you want a high-fun, photo-focused Amsterdam activity with included digital photos, a memorable ball pit moment, and a café stop with the Freakshake.

Skip it or choose a different activity if you hate staged photo environments, get stressed by short lines, or you want a long, quiet cultural museum experience.

If your ideal day includes silliness, bright set pieces, and content you actually enjoy reviewing later, this is an easy yes.

FAQ

How much is the Amsterdam Upside Down Museum ticket?

The ticket price is $24 per person.

How long is the ticket valid?

The ticket is valid for 1 day. You’ll need to check availability for the starting times.

What’s included with the entrance ticket?

Your ticket includes the entry fee, a printed welcome picture, lockers for small and medium items, digital photo downloads, access to the Upside Down Café and shop, and a discount on parking.

Are lockers provided?

Yes. The experience provides lockers for small and medium items.

Is the museum wheelchair accessible?

Yes. It is wheelchair accessible by elevator.

Is cancellation available?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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