This 7 Day Netherlands Itinerary route is built for spring travelers who want tulip fields, Dutch cities, cheese markets, canal towns, bike routes, and Amsterdam.
Spring is one of the best times to visit the Netherlands, but planning a tulip trip can feel surprisingly complicated once you start looking at maps. Tulip fields are spread across different regions, bloom timing changes every year, and it can be difficult to figure out how Amsterdam, Keukenhof, Gouda, Delft, and the smaller tulip towns all fit together.
After spending a week exploring the Netherlands during tulip season, this ended up being the route that balanced famous sights with quieter areas that felt less crowded. It combines tulip fields, Dutch cities, cheese farms, canals, biking routes, and far more cheese than any reasonable person probably needs in seven days.
This itinerary works especially well if you want to experience tulip season beyond just Keukenhof while still seeing some of the country’s most popular destinations.

I think Gouda is a great place to begin a Netherlands tulip trip.
Most visitors immediately head to Amsterdam, but after a long flight, Gouda felt much calmer. The city is compact, walkable, and filled with canals, historic buildings, bicycles, and brick streets. It was an easy introduction to the Netherlands without immediately jumping into Amsterdam crowds.

For dinner, head to Kaasbar Gouda.
As you might expect from the name, cheese is taken very seriously here.
The menu focuses heavily on Dutch cheeses with options ranging from cheese boards and fondue to burgers, croquettes, sandwiches, and snacks featuring local cheese. It felt very much like, “we are in Gouda now.”
One of the biggest draws is the variety of cheeses available. We saw everything from young Gouda and aged farmer’s cheese to truffle cheese, smoked goat cheese, cumin cheese, paprika-garlic cheese, and pesto cheese.

We ordered a cheese board and the Gouda cheese fondue, which felt like the correct decision considering cheese was in both the city name and the restaurant concept. The cheese board was a great introduction to local Dutch cheeses, while the fondue was rich, warm, and exactly what I wanted after a travel day.
After dinner, spend some time walking around the canals before heading back to your hotel. Gouda gets noticeably quieter in the evening and the city feels completely different once the daytime crowds leave.
If you want more details before planning this stop, my Best Things to Do in Gouda Netherlands guide goes deeper into what to see, where to walk, and how Gouda fits into a spring Netherlands itinerary.
Stay overnight in Gouda.

Start the morning at Cafe Coco for coffee and breakfast before heading toward the city center.
If you’re visiting during market season, the Gouda Cheese Market is the main event of the day.
Compared to some of the larger cheese markets in the Netherlands, Gouda felt more relaxed and local. You’ll see traditional clothing, cheese trading demonstrations, and rows of cheese wheels stacked across the square.
Even if you’re not particularly interested in cheese markets, it’s a fun way to experience a Dutch tradition that has been part of the city for centuries.

The rest of the day can stay flexible.
Spend time:
Gouda is compact enough that you don’t need a detailed sightseeing plan.
At the end of the day, you have two options.
You can stay another night in Gouda if you want a slower pace, or move closer to Lisse for an easier start the next morning.
If tulip fields are your main priority, changing hotels this evening makes Day 3 much smoother. For apartment-style stays, I’d also compare options on Booking.com or Hotels.com, especially during tulip season when spring availability can get annoying fast.

This is the major tulip day.
Start at Tulip Barn as early as possible.
The difference between opening time and late morning can be significant. Early arrival means fewer people in photos, easier parking, and less waiting around popular photo areas.
If sunset photography is more important to you, you can reverse the day and visit Tulip Barn later instead. Just expect larger crowds.
After Tulip Barn, rent bikes and ride part of the Keukenhof tulip route.
This was one of my favorite experiences from the entire trip because you’re not standing in a single tulip field taking photos. You’re actually moving through the countryside surrounded by flowers.
The route passes commercial flower fields, small canals, greenhouses, farm stands, tiny country roads, and small villages, giving you a chance to see much more of the Dutch countryside than you would from a single tulip field stop.
One thing to remember is that the exact fields change every year. Farmers rotate crops, so the landscape won’t look identical from season to season.

While biking, you’re constantly passing rows of tulips, hyacinths, daffodils, and flowering farmland stretching into the distance.
For biking through tulip fields, I’d bring a small day bag, water, and a phone setup that makes it easy to stop for photos constantly. I used my Backpack, and I’d also bring a Brita Water Bottle and iPhone Tripod if tulip photos are part of the plan.
If you want a more detailed breakdown of this route, read my Best Tulip Fields Bike Route from Keukenhof post before you go.
For dinner, head to Funky Moose in Lisse before continuing north.
Stay overnight in Heemskerk.

After spending time around Keukenhof and Lisse, this day feels noticeably quieter.
The northern tulip regions around Alkmaar, Anna Paulowna, and Julianadorp felt much less touristy and much more spread out.
Driving works particularly well in this area because the fields aren’t clustered together the way they are around Keukenhof. If you’re renting a car for this trip, I’d book early through Discover Cars for the best rates.
Alkmaar itself is worth spending a few hours exploring, with its historic canals, traditional architecture, walkable city center, shopping streets, and long connection to the Dutch cheese trade.
Save this for later on Pinterest so you don’t forget it.

Even when the cheese market isn’t operating, Alkmaar is easy to enjoy without a long sightseeing checklist.
This was also one of the more relaxing days of the trip because there wasn’t any pressure to rush between attractions. We spent a lot of time simply driving around North Holland looking for colorful fields and smaller towns.
If you want to focus more on this part of the trip, my Best Tulip Field Driving Route in the Netherlands guide is the better place to plan the northern tulip area in more detail.
Stay overnight in Heemskerk.

Start the morning at Clara Maria Cheese Farm and Clog Factory.
Yes, it’s touristy.
It’s also genuinely fun if you’ve never watched cheese-making demonstrations or seen how traditional Dutch wooden clogs are made. The experience combines cheese tasting, farm animals, demonstrations, and a look at traditional Dutch farming culture all in one stop.
Afterward, head to Boerderij Meerzicht inside Amsterdamse Bos. This was one of my favorite breakfast and lunch stops from the trip. Dutch pancakes are very different from American pancakes. They’re thinner, much larger, and can be ordered with either sweet or savory toppings.
The menu includes combinations topped with cheese, bacon, vegetables, fruit, meats, and traditional Dutch ingredients, giving you both sweet and savory options to choose from.
After lunch, continue to either Delft or Haarlem.

Delft felt smaller, quieter, and more traditionally Dutch.
The canals, historic buildings, and blue-and-white pottery shops make it easy to spend an afternoon simply wandering around town.
Haarlem feels a little livelier.
There are more restaurants, cafés, shopping streets, and activity throughout the city center while still feeling far less overwhelming than Amsterdam.
Both cities work well. The choice mostly comes down to whether you want a quieter afternoon or a slightly busier one.
Stay overnight in Delft or Haarlem depending on what you choose.

Amsterdam deserves a full day.
Between the museums, neighborhoods, canals, food stops, markets, and historic attractions, it’s easy to fill several days here.
If you’re driving, this is also the day when Amsterdam Park and Ride becomes extremely useful.
Driving inside Amsterdam gets stressful quickly, while Park and Ride makes it much easier to leave your car outside the city and use public transportation. My How to Use Amsterdam Park and Ride guide breaks down the parking rules, public transport part, and what you need to know before trying it.

Some of my favorite parts of Amsterdam honestly weren’t major attractions at all.
They were things like:
Looking back, the best parts of Amsterdam weren’t necessarily the big attractions—they were the smaller moments between them.
Stay overnight in Amsterdam.

Use your final day to fill in anything you missed.
Depending on your interests, this could include:
I actually think building flexibility into the end of the trip makes Amsterdam much more enjoyable.
Trying to see every major attraction in one visit can make the city feel overwhelming. Leaving room for a slower final day made the entire itinerary feel less rushed.
If your flight leaves later in the day, this is also a good opportunity for one last bakery stop before heading to the airport.

If you’re looking for a Netherlands itinerary focused on tulip season, I think this route strikes a good balance between famous sights and quieter experiences.
You still get Keukenhof, Amsterdam, and the major tulip regions, but you also have time for smaller cities, local food, cheese farms, bike rides through flower fields, and the parts of the Netherlands that many visitors drive right past.
If I were planning the trip again, I would absolutely keep the Keukenhof bike route, Gouda, the northern tulip region around Alkmaar, and plenty of time for wandering Amsterdam between bakery stops.
If you end up booking anything for your trip, using my affiliate links helps support my blog at no extra cost to you. I spend a lot of time researching and writing these guides, so I really appreciate the support.
For flights into the Netherlands or nearby European airports, compare prices on Skyscanner.
If you plan to drive between Gouda, Lisse, Heemskerk, Alkmaar, Delft, Haarlem, and Amsterdam, compare rental cars through Discover Cars.
For hotels and apartment stays, compare options on Booking.com and Hotels.com.
Related hotel guides:
For Amsterdam tours, canal cruises, museum tickets, and day trips, check Get Your Guide or Viator.
For a food-focused Amsterdam day, Secret Food Tours is another helpful option.
For this Netherlands spring itinerary, I’d prioritize layers, comfortable walking shoes, a small day bag, a compact umbrella, a water bottle, and a reliable phone battery setup.
Helpful packing items:


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