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The national language in the Netherlands is '''[[Dutch phrasebook|Dutch]]''' (''Nederlands''). It's a charming, lilting language punctuated by phlegm-trembling glottal ''g''s (not in the south) and ''sch''s (also found, for example, in Arabic). Dutch, especially in written form, is partially intelligible to someone who knows other Germanic languages (especially German and Afrikaans), and you might be able to get along at least partially in these languages if spoken slowly.
 
However, the Dutch merchant tradition and international attitude have left this little country with a strong tradition of multilingualism. The majority of the adult population is able to speak '''English''' relatively well, and most younger people speak it fluently, so you should have no trouble getting by. If you attempt to speak Dutch to locals and it does not sound native, do not be surprised if they respond to you in English. Do not take this personally; they are not trying to be rude, but just trying to make communication easier. If you want to practise your Dutch, just tell them and they will usually oblige if they are not in a hurry.

While less widely spoken than English, basic [[German phrasebook|German]] is also spoken by many, especially by seniors and those in the regions near the German border and it is a mandatory subject in high school for two years, though German fluency among younger people is marginal at best. [[French]] and [[Spanish]] are spoken by some as well, but proficiency is rare and usually on a much lower level than English or German. French and especially Spanish are slowly overtaking German in popularity.
 
Besides Dutch, several regional languages and dialects are spoken. In the eastern provinces of Groningen, Overijssel, Drenthe and Gelderland people speak a local variety of Low Saxon (including Grunnegs and Tweants). In the southern province of Limburg the majority speaks Limburgish, a regional language unique in Europe because of its use of pitch and tone length to distinguish words. Frisian is the only official language besides Dutch, but only common in the province of [[Friesland]]. It's the closest living continental language to English.
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[[File:Stena Hollandica at Hoek van Holland Haven aerial photo.jpg|thumb|Ferry in Hook of Holland]]
There are three ferry services from the UK:
* [httphttps://www.stenaline.nlco.uk/ Stena Line] between [[Harwich (England)|Harwich]] and [[Hook of Holland]]. [https://booking.stenaline.co.uk/ferry-to-holland/rail-and-sail Dutchflyer Rail & Sail] is a combination ticket that includes the train ride from anywhere on the [https://www.greateranglia.co.uk/ Greater Anglia] network (including [[London Liverpool Street]], [[Cambridge]], and [[Norwich]]) to [[Harwich (England)|Harwich]], the ferry, and the train ride from Hook of Holland to anywhere on the NS (Dutch railway) networkferry.
* [httphttps://www.dfdsseawaysdfds.co.ukcom/en-gb/passenger-ferries DFDS Seaways] between [[North Shields]] near [[Newcastle upon Tyne]] and [[IJmuiden]] on the outskirts of Amsterdam.
* [httphttps://www.poferries.com/en P&O Ferries] between [[Kingston upon Hull]] and [[Rotterdam]] Europoort.
 
You may find it more convenient to take the ferry from [[Dover (England)|Dover]] to [[Calais]] or [[Dunkirk]], which are only just over 100 km by road from the southwestern province of Zeeland. As the UK is not part of the EU or Schengen zone, full border checks apply.
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===== OVpay =====
The easiest way to travel around is by using your bank card directly on the readers / gates. The working is similar to the older OV-chipkaart system, you check in when you start traveling (single beep), and check out when you stop traveling (double beep). You should use the same card when checking out. When you switch train operators, trams or buses; you also have to check out and check in again. There is no need to check out and back in when transferring from metro to metro or train to train from the same carrier/operator.
 
You can only use OVpay for second class train travel and distance-based fares. DiscountsNot andall subscriptionsoperators aresupport notdiscount supportedsubscriptions throughwith OVpay yet, but support will be added in the near future.
 
'''9292'''
 
In addition to being a journey planner the [https://www.9292.nl/en 9292] smartphone app can be used to buy ticketsfor the whole of the planned journey.
 
=====OV-chipkaart (being phased out)=====
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===== Unlimited Travel Ticket =====
 
* [https://www.nsdiscoverholland.nl/producten/en/onbeperkt-reizen/pcom/holland-travel-ticket Holland Travel Ticket] allows unlimited travel through all off the Netherlands by train, tram, bus and metro for 1 day for €48 (May 2023).
 
* [https://www.eurail.com/en/eurail-passes/one-country-pass/benelux EurorailEurail] (non-european residents) has ticketspasses for unlimetedunlimited train travel throuthroughout the [[benelux]] for 3 to 8 days. With the price for an adult ranging from €35,- to €50,- per day. €30,- to €43,- for the ages 12-27 and 60+. and kids age 0-11 travel for free. The more days you take the cheaper. (June 2024).
* [https://www.interrail.eu/en/interrail-passes/one-country-pass/benelux Interrail] (European residents) also have a Benelux passes.
 
===== Train ticket deals =====
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Most of the Netherlands is densely populated and urbanised, and train services are frequent to most big cities and larger villages and towns in between. There are two main types of trains: Intercities which only stop at major stations and Sprinters which stop at all stations. All types of train have the same prices. Also, there are high-speed trains called 'Intercity Direct' between Amsterdam and Breda, which only requires a supplement ticket between Schiphol and Rotterdam. Travelling all the way from the north of the country (Groningen) to the south (Maastricht) takes approximately 4 hours.
 
The [https://www.ns.nl/binaries/_ht_1676536351229/content/assets/ns-nl/dienstregeling/nieuwe-dienstregeling/ns-spoorkaart.pdf ''Spoorkaart]'' is a map of the railway system and shows all services. You can obtain the most recent version from [https://www.ns.nl/voorwaarden.html this page] on NS' website (listed under ''Informatie'' towards the bottom). Connections with only one train per hour are shown in thinner lines. A [https://en.treinposities.nl/ live Spoorkaart] shows where trains are at the moment, with updates as they move.
 
Most lines offer one train every 15 minutes (every 10 min during the rush hours), but some rural lines run only every 60 min. Where more lines run together, the frequency is, of course, even higher. In the western Netherlands, the rail network is more like a large urban network, with up to 12 trains per hour on main routes.
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Bike shops are the best place to buy a second-hand bike legally, but prices are high. Some places where you can rent bikes will also sell their written off stock, which is usually well maintained. Most legal (and often cheap) second-hand bike sales now go through online auction sites like [http://Marktplaats.nl marktplaats.nl] - the Dutch subsidiary of [http://Ebay.nl eBay].
 
TheAlmost all Dutch bicycle-sharetrain stations have bikes from the bike rental system "[https://www.ns.nl/en/door-to-door/ov-fiets OV-fiets]". isYou onlyneed accessiblea forpersonal residentsOV-chipkaart ofwith thea Netherlandsfree OV-fiets season ticket or thoseNS whoFlex haveseason aticket. Dutchthese season tickets require a bank account that supports iDeal payments. The fee of €4.55 per day is debited automatically, and a surcharge of €10 for one-way rentals applies. Smaller stations usually only have a few bikes available so sometimes they are all rented out. A limited number of train stations also have e-bikes available for a higher fee. In Gelderland and Friesland some train stations have bikes from [https://www.deelfietsnederland.nl/locaties/ Deelfiets Nederland], for those bikes the fee is €6.00 per day.
 
====Extra legal protection====
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The Netherlands is full of museums: almost every city has at least one museum and there is always a museum nearby. The Netherlands has more museums than many bigger countries like Italy.
 
If you intend to visit multiple museums during your stay, it is well worth it to buy the '''[https://www.museum.nl/en Museumkaart]''', which costs €64.90€75 for adults and €32.45€39 for under-18s. It gives you free (or sometimes discounted) access to more than 500 museums for a year.
 
There are two ways to get a Museumkaart:
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* {{do
| name=Northsea Jazz Festival | alt= | url=httphttps://www.northseajazz.nlcom | email=
| address= | lat= | long= | directions=
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| content=Big summer jazz festival, held in the Ahoy stadion, [[Rotterdam]]. Around 1,800 jazz, blues, funk, soul, hip Hop, Latin and r&b acts play during this 3 day event.
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===Debit cards and credit cards===
 
Often stores will display a sign saying "''Pinnen, ja graag''", loosely meaning "debit cards gladly accepted" (the Dutch word ''pinnen'' means to pay by debit card). Debit cards on the Maestro and V-Pay scheme are accepted everywhere. As one of the last countries in Europe, the Netherlands is moving to debit VISA/Mastercard. As of May 2023, almost all points of sale have been updated to accept VISA and Mastercard debit cards, but not necessarily Mastercard or VISA credit cards as that requires a special agreement with the merchant's bank (some international Mastercard or VISA debit cards may be read as credit cards by dutch point-of-sales so be ready with alternative payment methods in case that happens).
 
Debit cards on the Maestro and V-Pay scheme are accepted everywhere. As one of the last countries in Europe, the Netherlands is moving to debit VISA/Mastercard. As of May 2023, almost all points of sale have been updated to accept VISA and Mastercard debit cards, but not necessarily Mastercard or VISA credit cards as that requires a special agreement with the merchant's bank (some international Mastercard or VISA debit cards, especially those issued outside the EEA, may be read as credit cards and refused by Dutch point-of-sales so be ready with alternative payment methods in case that happens).
Acceptance of VISA and MasterCard credit cards and to a lesser extent American Express has grown, and is now fairly widespread to the point that some establishments no longer accept cash. In tourist destinations, you will generally find credit cards widely accepted.
 
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In tourist destinations, you will generally find credit cards widely accepted. Debit cards and credit cards are also the only way to pay for bus or tram tickets on board (see [[#Get around]]).
Contactless payments are the standard, with 91% of all card payments at the end of 2023 being contactless. As of 1 January 2020, all payment terminals in the Netherlands should offer contactless payments. This also means Apple Pay and Google Pay transactions that are linked to VISA or MasterCard cards should be relatively seamless.
For safety reasons, credit card use in the Netherlands often requires a PIN-code.
 
Contactless payments are the standard, with 9193% of all card payments atin the end ofJune 20232024 being contactless. As of 1 January 2020, all payment terminals in the Netherlands should offer contactless payments. This also means Apple Pay and Google Pay transactions that are linked to VISAa orcard MasterCardscheme cardsthat is accepted by the merchant should be relatively seamless.
 
ATMs are readily available, mostly near shopping and nightlife areas. Even villages usually have one or more ATMs near the local supermarket. [https://www.geldmaat.nl/information-english Geldmaat] manages the ATMs for the largest banks in the Netherlands. See the [https://www.locatiewijzer.geldmaat.nl/ map] for ATM locations. The Geldmaat ATMs offer a bank note selection option; example: you want €50 with the selection option, you get 3 options, which can be 1x€50, 2x€20 + 1x€10 and 1x€20 + 3x€10.
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===Hotels===
Hotels in the Netherlands are abundant, particularly in Holland proper, and can be relatively inexpensive compared to other Western European countries. You may be able to find a decent hotel of international standards for €50€80 or less per night. Due to good public transportation options, even staying outside of the city centre, or even in a different town altogether, may still be a viable option for visiting a particular destination comfortably while remaining within budget limits.
 
[[File:Amstel hotel.jpg|thumb|Amstel hotel, a [[grand old hotel]] in Amsterdam]]
 
While there are independent properties throughout the country, there is a relatively high presence of international and local hotel chains. Some of the more popular are:
* {{sleep
| name=NH HotelesHotels | alt= | url=https://www.nh-hotels.com/ | email=
| address= | lat= | long= | directions=
| phone= | tollfree= | fax=
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| content=The Spanish hotel chain inherited a lot of properties throughout Netherlands by taking over the former Krasnapolsky Hotels in Amsterdam and many of the former Golden Tulips. Thus, most of the properties are older, or even historic ones. NH Hoteles in larger cities are usually what one would expect of the chain in any other country; in smaller towns the properties are usually from the 1980s and only partially refurbished since then. You can always count on a very rich breakfast buffet, which is an NH Hoteles' trademark. NH Hoteles has the largest number of properties of all hotel chains in Amsterdam, which can be either helpful or disappointing in busy periods when hotels are prone to overbooking (you can be easily relocated to another NH Hotel across Amsterdam). Members of Aeromexico, Aerolíneas Argentinas and Iberia frequent flyer schemes can collect award miles/kilometres for stays at NH Hoteles in the Netherlands.
}}
* '''[httphttps://www.goldentulip.com/ENen-us/our-hotels/Netherlandsnetherlands/netherlands-hotel-booking.aspx Golden Tulip]{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot }}''', '''/Tulip Inn]''' (same website as Golden Tulip) and '''[httphttps://www.campanile.com/en-us/our-hotels/netherlands/ Campanile]''' - the remaining properties of the Dutch Tulip hotel chain now belong to the France-based Groupe du Louvre, which also operates Campanile hotels. Golden Tulips are mostly found in city centres and are of higher standards (four stars usually), Campaniles by motorway junctions and are more basic (two stars), Tulip Inns fall somewhere in between. Some properties may be rather aged, but can offer attractive rates if you don't mind them not being exactly up to snuff to their international competition. For those touring the Netherlands by automobile, Campaniles and Tulip Inns can help keep them within tighter budgets. Groupe du Louvre runs severala [httphttps://www.goldentulip.com/ENregister/loyaltyprograms/connections.aspx loyalty programmesprogramme]{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot }} and you can collect air miles with several airlines when staying with them.
* {{sleep
| name=Van der Valk Hotels | alt= | url=httphttps://www.valk.com/en | email=
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}}
* {{sleep
| name=Hampshire Hotels | alt= | url=httphttps://www.hampshire-hotels.com/ | email=
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| content=With over 80 properties, including 3 in Germany and 8 in Belgium, this is one of the largest hotel chains in the Netherlands. The standards of the hotels vary from basic three-star properties to more upscale, and often historic, '''Hampshire Eden''' and '''Hampshire Classic''' hotels. The chain does not operate a loyalty scheme, and members of most frequent flyer programmes will not be able to acquire miles for stays with Hampshire Hotels.
}}
*{{sleep|name=Bastion Hotels|alt=|url=https://www.bastionhotels.com/en-gb|email=|address=|lat=|long=|directions=|phone=|tollfree=|fax=|checkin=|checkout=|price=|lastedit=2019-01-14|content=A chain of highly uniform, limited-service hotels targeting road warriors who tour the Netherlands by car on business. Most of the hotels have been purpose-built in the 1990s or later, and are reminiscent of other hotel chains of similar character that can be found across Europe, like ibis hotels or Premier Inn. Usually to be found around motorways, with sometimes poor access to public transportation. While limited-service, most feature an on-site restaurant open throughout the day.
}}
* {{sleep
| name=Accor | alt= | url=https://all.accor.com/united-kingdoma/index.en.shtmlhtml | email=
| address= | lat= | long= | directions=
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| content=Has a sizeable presence in the Netherlands, in particular with their '''Ibis''', '''Novotel''' and '''Mercure''' brands. As in other countries, Mercures are often formerly independent three- or four-star properties that have joined the chain.
}}
* The '''[httphttps://www.ihgihgplc.com/hotels/us/en/hd/netherlandsour-hotelsbrands Intercontinental Hotels Group]''' has increased its presence by opening all-new '''Holiday Inn Express''' properties in key locations across the country, with competitive rates including breakfast. There are also older '''Holiday Inn''' and '''Crowne Plaza''' properties in major cities.
 
Other international hotel chains do maintain some presence in the Netherlands, though this is mostly limited to Amsterdam and Schiphol airport. There are also quite a few Best Western-affiliated properties throughout the Netherlands, but as in every country, they vary greatly in character, size, pricing and comfort.
 
Showers are slightly different from the American style. Bar soap is not very popular; most of what is provided in hotels and mainstream stores is liquid body soap. Washcloths are also generally not available, but washing mitts are available in stores. European-style bathrooms often have no edge on the shower floor, allowing water to get on the floor in the other parts of the bathroom. (Bebe prepared to mop up with a floor towel if someone needs the toilet right after someone showers.). Shower heads are generally hand-held on flexible hoses, and there are separate controls for water temperature vs. volume (instead of hot and cold knobs or a single temperature lever typically seen in the U.S.).
 
===Bed and breakfast===
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If you're bringing your own (GSM) cell phone to call (or receive calls) whilst in the Netherlands, make sure to check the relevant "roaming" charges for your provider, as they vary substantially. Receiving phone calls on a cell phone using a Dutch SIM card is free in most cases; charges may apply if you're using a foreign SIM card, as the call is theoretically routed through your country of origin. It may be cheaper to buy a pay-as-you-go SIM card to insert into your GSM phone, or even to buy a very cheap pay-as-you-go card+phone bundle. Providers that specialise in discount rates to foreign countries include [http://www.lycamobile.nl/en/ Lyca], [http://www.lebara.nl/ Lebara], [http://www.ortelmobiel.nl/ Ortel]{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot }} and [http://www.vectonemobile.nl/ Vectone]{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot }}.
 
To enjoy '''cheap international calls''' from the Netherlands you can use low-cost dial-around services such as [http://www.qazza.nl Qazza], [http://www.belbazaar.nl/ BelBazaar]{{Dead link|date=January 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot }}, [http://www.pennyphone.nl/ pennyphone] {{dead link|August 2020|December 2020}}, [http://www.slimcall.nl/ SlimCall], [http://www.telegoedkoop.nl/ telegoedkoop], [http://www.beldewereld.nl/ beldewereld]{{Dead link|date=July 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot }}, [http://www.teleknaller.nl teleknaller] {{dead link|August 2020|December 2020}}. Dial-around services are directly available from any landline in the Netherlands. No contract, no registration is required. Most dial-around services offer USA, Canada, Western Europe and many other countries at the price of a local call so you can save on your phone expenses easily. They also work from public payphones.
 
As of January 2023, there are no public phone booths left in the Netherlands.