Even on a tight schedule, Anne Frank House earns the hours.
Allow 1–1.5 hours.
Quietly devastating — standing in the actual annexe behind the bookcase, on the worn original stairs, reframes the diary entirely, and most visitors leave in silence. Brace for it: this is not a sights-checklist stop but an emotional one, and the evening slots, with thinner crowds and lower light, let the weight of the empty rooms settle in a way the bright midday shuffle never does. What stays with people afterward is rarely an object — it's the smallness of the space they survived in. The catch: tickets release six weeks ahead and vanish in minutes.
Adult ticket €16.50, ages 10–17 €7, under-10 €1 (incl. €1 booking fee). Tickets are online-only via the official site, released every Tuesday 10:00 CET for a visit six weeks later. · annefrank.org
A separate ticket with a 30-minute introductory programme is €23.50 for adults. · annefrank.org