Amsterdam, Netherlands

The Hoxton, Amsterdam

Price per night from$398.79

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (EUR343.92), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Old master, new strokes

Setting

Handsome Herengracht

Spread over five 17th-century houses on a picturesque canal, The Hoxton, Amsterdam mingles Old-Dutch heritage, modernist style and lively, Latin-inspired dining. Period features like historic beams and monumental fireplaces sit alongside Fifties-inspired furnishings and bold contemporary art — a look entirely in keeping with the hotel’s Nine Streets locale, one of Amsterdam’s buzzier enclaves. Neighbourhood restaurant Lotti’s turns up the heat with kaleidoscopic pops of colour, South American flavours and a bar slinging signature cocktails until late.

Smith Extra

Get this when you book through us:

Guaranteed late check-out until 3pm

Facilities

Photos The Hoxton, Amsterdam facilities

Need to know

Rooms

111.

Check–Out

Noon, but you’ll get guaranteed late check-out until 3pm included with your stay. Check-in is at 2pm.

More details

Rates at The Hoxton, Amsterdam are room only, but an à la carte breakfast is available at Lotti’s for €22 each. You’ll also find a breakfast bag in your room, which you can leave outside your door to be filled for €5 each.

Also

All of the public areas are accessible, as is one of the Roomy rooms, adapted for wheelchair access with a modified bathroom and an emergency alarm.

At the hotel

Shared living areas, charged laundry service and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: TV, Roberts radio, air-conditioning, tea- and coffee-making kit, mini fridge, free boxed water and bespoke bath products.

Our favourite rooms

The Hoxton, Amsterdam’s rooms are spread between five 17th-century canal houses, giving them all manner of quirks and historic features. Some are nestled beneath the original beams in the attic, some have canal views, and others have restored decorative ceilings or monumental fireplaces. Cosy rooms make a perfect city crashpad, but you’ll want to go for a Roomy or Biggy if you plan to do more loafing.

Packing tips

You’ll soon notice that Amsterdammers love a bag that can be slung across your back — whether it’s a canvas tote or a prized Celine. It’s all about comfort when you’re on your bike.

Also

If a spin on your Dutch bike isn’t getting your blood flowing, hit The Hoxton’s partner gym, TrainMore. It’s right around the corner and guests get a hefty discount on day passes (€17.50 instead of the usual €30).

Pet‐friendly

Your dog (up to 18 kilogrammes) can stay for free in any room type at The Hoxton, Amsterdam — although for comfort, we’d suggest Roomy or bigger; staff provide local walking routes, treats, bowls, beds and poo bags. See more pet-friendly hotels in Amsterdam.

Children

All ages are welcome; an extra bed for under-12s can be added to some rooms free of charge. Cots are provided for infants and a free Little’uns Breakfast Bag, family-approved neighbourhood map, kid-friendly menus and baby bath essentials are available on

Sustainability efforts

The Hoxton, Amsterdam’s Green Key certification shows it strives for sustainability: single-use plastic is banned, bath products are all refillable, water flow reducers are in place, LED bulbs and sensors lighten energy consumption, and an AI-powered system is used to monitor and minimise food waste. Bird houses have also been installed around the hotel to encourage biodiversity and provide safer habitats for wildlife.

Food and Drink

Photos The Hoxton, Amsterdam food and drink

Top Table

During daylight hours, go for one of the circular tables beneath the skylight. After dark, see if you can snag the corner banquette in front of the open kitchen.

Dress Code

Look to South American designers like Gabriela Hearst, layering vibrant knits, bold patterns and suede for that subtle gaucho nod.

Hotel restaurant

Lotti’s brings lashings of Latin-inspired zing to the Dutch capital. The interiors lead the way with bright bursts of colour: chrome chairs clad in cobalt blue-leather, tables topped with peach marble and banquettes upholstered in an eye-popping orange lifted straight from the Seventies. This riotous scheme is the perfect frame for the chilli-spiced and citrus-swirled dishes that follow, such as Zeeland king fish ceviche, grilled octopus with chimichurri, and catch of the day slathered in chipotle mussel sauce. For dessert, opt for the chocolate tonka mousse or apple pie, delivered fresh from local makers Winkel 43.

Hotel bar

Lotti’s Bar is next to the restaurant, with stools at a marble-topped counter. It gets lively after dark, when the lights are turned down and guest DJs take to the booth. There’s an extensive cocktail menu with signature creations like the North Sea Highball, shaken with Reyka vodka, Pentire, Noilly Prat, sherry vinegar, sea salt and oyster leaves. Wines are curated by sommelier Figo van Onna and expert Nico McGough, who’ve a focus on natural, organic and biodynamic varieties.

Last orders

At Lotti’s, breakfast is 7am–11am; lunch runs from noon to 4pm; dinner is from 6pm–10pm. Lotti’s Bar serves from 7am–11pm Sunday to Thursday, and 7am–1am on Friday and Saturday. The daily happy hour is from 7pm–9pm.

Room service

A reduced menu from is available around the clock.

Location

Photos The Hoxton, Amsterdam location
Address
The Hoxton, Amsterdam
Herengracht 255
Amsterdam
1016 BJ
Netherlands

The Hoxton, Amsterdam is on the Herengracht, a grand waterway within the city’s Unesco-protected Canal Ring. The surrounding neighbourhood is known as The Nine Streets, a bustling enclave filled with restaurants, galleries and boutiques.

Planes

Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport is a 30-minute drive from the hotel. Cabs are plentiful at the terminal, and hotel staff will be happy to arrange them in advance. Alternatively, hop on a train to Centraal Station (tickets are €5.50), which takes around 20 minutes. From there, it’s a 15-minute walk or 10-minute cab ride to the hotel.

Trains

Centraal Station is a major European rail hub. Eurostar services from London St Pancras take four hours; from Paris Gare du Nord, it’s three hours and twenty minutes. You can also hop on international trains from Brussels, Cologne and Berlin.

Automobiles

Famed for its labyrinthine streets and proud cycling culture, Amsterdam isn’t much fun to drive in. Instead, do as the locals do and rent a bike, which will enable you to flit around the city centre with ease. For longer hops, the tram network and cabs have you covered.

Worth getting out of bed for

The Nine Streets neighbourhood is a walk-in feast, open-air gallery and jewellery box rolled into one — and staying at The Hoxton, Amsterdam lays it all at your feet. The beauty of the Dutch Golden Age buildings is matched by the treasures you’ll find within: patent shoes and sequined gala dresses shimmer in the window of vintage store Laura Dols, gilt-framed mirrors bounce light around antique glazier Anouk Beerents, and pearl earrings gleam like tiny moons from the display of jewellery store Parisienne. You’ll find haunting and ethereal surrealist paintings at gallery Tim Cantor, boundary-pushing contemporary works at The Merchant House, and wallet-friendly prints and sketches at Gallery Varekamp. Maxed out your credit limit? Take a breather amid the leatherbound tomes at the stately Cuypers Library or strike out east to admire the cacti at Hortus Botanicus.

Local restaurants

Mod-European restaurant Sinck is just beyond the southeastern boundary of The Nine Streets, keeping it off the tourist trail. The menu has a Burgundian lean, with dishes like Anjou pigeon, pumpkin gnocchi and red snapper paired to perfection with fine French wines. To the east of the Singel canal is Il Vicolo, a convivial trattoria that offers incredible bang for buck given its central location; the creamy burrata, homemade pasta, veal cutlets and grilled octopus are mainstays. For a blowout last dinner, book way ahead at Beulings, a tiny fine-dining favourite on Beulingstraat. It’s so small you feel like you’re eating in someone’s living room — an illusion soon shattered by the culinary mastery of chef Bas Bont, whose tasting menus would be at home in the dressiest of settings.

Local bars

Bruine kroegen (brown bars) are Amsterdam’s pubby, old-school drinking holes. Wood-panelled Café 't Smalle is a beauty, sitting canalside on the Egelantiersgracht. For wine, take a perch on the terrace at Oocker, where the sommeliers have garnered acclaim for their ability to sniff out extraordinary — and often lesser-known — labels.

Reviews

Photos The Hoxton, Amsterdam reviews

Anonymous review

Every hotel featured is visited personally by members of our team, given the Smith seal of approval, and then anonymously reviewed. As soon as our reviewers have returned from this canalside stay in The Nine Streets and unpacked their 1970s partywear from local vintage store Laura Dols, a full account of their?city break will be with you. In the meantime, to whet your wanderlust,?here's?a quick peek inside?The Hoxton, Amsterdam…

?In the 17th century, Dutch poet Joost van den Vondel claimed ‘the whole world is built around Amsterdam’. Tall talk, you might say, but lay your head at The Hoxton, Amsterdam and you’ll find the world has indeed come to the door.

Its setting along the Canal Ring means you get classically Dutch charm galore here, waking up in a four-century-old gingerbread house with canal boats puttering past the window. But this city is an old dog forever learning new tricks, an art The Hoxton has also mastered. You’ll find Scandinavian modernism lending character to individually designed rooms, a restaurant that brings Latin American heat to the table, and a cocktail bar that channels the anything-goes ambience of a New York speakeasy. Plus, the brand’s signature living areas weave a community-driven ethos into every ensconcing seat.

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Price per night from $361.46