REVIEW · MUSEUMS
Amsterdam: Hash, Marihuana, and Hemp Museum Entry Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Cannabis history, told with objects and audio. This entry ticket takes you into the world’s oldest cannabis museum, right in Amsterdam, with a free audio guide. You’ll move through a collection of 9,000+ cannabis artifacts, plus a small garden with live plants.
I like how the museum teaches through real stuff, not just opinions. The highlights include a big indoor collection of cannabis objects and the stories behind the exhibits, so you can understand how attitudes and laws shifted over time. I also appreciate the practical side: the Hemp Gallery focuses on everyday uses of hemp, and the presence of live plants helps the message feel grounded. One thing to consider: this is education, not a place to smoke—there’s no food or drinks included, and smoking indoors isn’t allowed.
In This Review
- Key things to notice before you go
- Entering the Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum in central Amsterdam
- The big draw: 9,000+ cannabis objects and what they mean
- What to look for during your walk
- The cannabis garden with live plants: why it’s more than decoration
- Hemp Gallery and the practical side of the plant
- How the free audio guide changes your experience
- How I’d use the audio to get more out of it
- Practical details that affect your day
- Ticket basics and value
- What’s included
- What’s not included
- What’s not allowed
- Wheelchair accessibility
- Timing and pacing: making a big collection feel manageable
- Who this ticket suits best (and who might not)
- Should you book the Amsterdam Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum ticket?
- FAQ
- Where is the Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum located?
- How much does the Amsterdam Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum entry ticket cost?
- How long is the visit?
- What do I need to do to enter?
- Is an audio guide included?
- What languages are available for the audio guide?
- Is smoking allowed inside the museum?
- Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
Key things to notice before you go

- Over 9,000 cannabis objects: A large collection means you can take your time and choose what interests you.
- A cannabis garden with live plants: You get a real-world connection to what the museum is talking about.
- Hemp Gallery (recently renovated): It shifts the conversation to hemp’s practical uses.
- Audio guide at your pace: Free audio helps you follow the stories without feeling rushed.
- Multiple languages: English, Dutch, German, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, Russian are included.
- Indoor no-smoking rule: Plan to visit as a learning stop, not a lounge.
Entering the Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum in central Amsterdam

The Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum sits in the heart of Amsterdam, so it’s easy to plug into a day of canals, museums, and wandering streets. Your ticket is an entry voucher—show it at the entrance—and you’re in.
What makes this museum worth your time is the range of what it covers. Yes, it deals with cannabis culture and history. But it also pushes outward to the broader plant family story, with hemp’s uses given real space in the museum experience. If you’re the type who likes context—how a plant moves from farming to politics to everyday life—this place does that job.
Also, the one-day duration is the right length for a museum like this. You’re not stuck for hours on a tight schedule. You can read signs, listen to the audio, and slow down where you want.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Amsterdam
The big draw: 9,000+ cannabis objects and what they mean

The heart of your visit is the museum’s collection: over 9,000 cannabis objects. That number matters because it changes how the museum feels. Instead of a few centerpiece displays, you’re walking through a long-form collection where you can bounce between themes—history, culture, and how different versions of the plant show up in artifacts.
You also get the benefit of hearing the stories behind the exhibits. The museum isn’t only showing items; it’s explaining why those items exist and how they connect to the wider cannabis narrative. That helps you avoid the common problem with topic museums: you see things, but you don’t always understand what you’re looking at or why it’s important.
If you’re coming for curiosity, this is a good spot because you can tailor your pace. The museum is designed for self-guided exploration with the free audio guide, so you can spend more time with what grabs you and skip what doesn’t.
What to look for during your walk
Because the collection is large, I’d approach it with a simple plan: pick a few themes and stick with them for the first half, then widen out. For example:
- Start with cannabis history and culture and pay attention to how the exhibits are framed.
- Then shift to how the plant appears in different roles across time.
- Finish by looking specifically for anything connected to hemp and practical uses.
Even without extra guidance from a tour leader, this keeps you from wandering aimlessly in a big space.
The cannabis garden with live plants: why it’s more than decoration

One of the most grounded parts of this museum is the cannabis garden with live plants. Museum exhibits can sometimes feel like they live in glass cases—interesting, but far removed from reality. Seeing live plants changes the tone quickly.
You can look at the garden as a reality check. It reminds you the museum topic isn’t only about products or politics. It’s also about an actual plant with growth, characteristics, and cultivation. That makes it easier to connect what you hear in the audio guide to something visual and living.
If you like to learn with your eyes—photos are nice, but living plants are better—this is a strong reason to choose this ticket.
Hemp Gallery and the practical side of the plant

The museum’s Hemp Gallery is where the visit stops being only about cannabis culture and becomes more useful in an everyday way. The Hemp Gallery focuses on the wider uses of the hemp plant, and it’s described as recently renovated, which usually means improved presentation and clearer exhibit design.
Why this matters: a lot of people only know cannabis through one lane—recreational use. Hemp is different. It’s associated with practical applications, and the museum gives that angle space to breathe.
When you spend time here, the lesson you’re really learning is that the same plant can be discussed in very different ways depending on use. The museum’s structure helps you understand that shift without turning it into a lecture.
If you’re curious about science, materials, or how plants show up in everyday life, this gallery is likely the part you’ll remember after you leave.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Amsterdam
How the free audio guide changes your experience
The audio guide is included, and it’s available in many languages: English, Dutch, German, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, Russian.
This matters more than people think. In Amsterdam, you’ll often find museums where your only option is reading wall text. Here, audio lets you listen while you walk, which is a big advantage if you prefer learning by ear or you want to keep moving.
It’s also helpful because museums like this cover sensitive and controversial territory. Audio helps you follow the museum’s framing of the exhibits so the visit stays coherent.
How I’d use the audio to get more out of it
- Don’t start the audio on every object. Use it to build context, then let your eyes do the rest.
- If one exhibit grabs you, pause and listen fully before moving on.
- If you’re short on time, focus audio on the exhibits that connect cannabis history to hemp uses.
This keeps the visit from turning into a race, which is easy to do in a large collection.
Practical details that affect your day

Here’s the practical stuff that can shape how smooth your visit feels.
Ticket basics and value
The price is listed at about $11 per person for a 1-day entry ticket. For central Amsterdam, and for a museum that includes a free audio guide plus access to a major collection and a cannabis garden, this is strong value. You’re not paying extra for a guided format, and you’re not limited to one narrow theme—there’s cannabis history and also hemp’s practical uses.
What’s included
You get:
- An audio guide in multiple languages, including English and Dutch (plus several others)
- Access to the museum spaces and exhibits, including the cannabis garden and Hemp Gallery
What’s not included
The ticket doesn’t include:
- Food and drinks
- Smokes
So plan your hunger and thirst outside the museum. And come with the right mindset: this is a learning stop.
What’s not allowed
Smoking indoors isn’t allowed. That’s worth taking seriously. If you’re visiting with friends who assume you can treat it like a smoking-friendly attraction, set expectations early.
Wheelchair accessibility
The museum is wheelchair accessible, which makes it a better option if you need a more predictable visitor setup. The visit is also self-paced, which can help you manage breaks.
Timing and pacing: making a big collection feel manageable

The museum is designed for self-guided movement with audio, which is perfect if you want control. The main challenge with a collection of thousands of objects is mental load: your brain can get tired if you treat every display like it’s equally important.
I’d pace it in chunks:
- First chunk: get the overall story of cannabis history and culture.
- Second chunk: focus on the collection highlights and any exhibits that connect to how attitudes changed.
- Third chunk: spend time in the Hemp Gallery and look for practical uses.
Then you’ll leave with a clear takeaway instead of a blur of labels.
Also, because the museum is in the center of Amsterdam, you can usually pair it with nearby stops. If you want a balanced day, combine it with something calmer right after, so your brain can process what you just learned.
Who this ticket suits best (and who might not)

This is a great fit if you:
- Want a structured way to learn cannabis history and culture without needing a group tour
- Like self-paced museum visits with narration
- Are curious about hemp beyond the usual stereotypes
- Prefer learning with audio in your chosen language
It may not be ideal if you:
- Want a food-and-drink attraction built around cannabis use
- Expect to smoke as part of the visit (smoking indoors is not allowed)
- Only want a quick photo stop without reading or listening
Think of this ticket as a museum experience first, with culture and plants as the focus—not as an evening entertainment plan.
Should you book the Amsterdam Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum ticket?

Book it if you want a practical, self-guided lesson in how cannabis and hemp show up in history, culture, and everyday life. The best reasons are the included audio guide, the scale of the 9,000+ object collection, and the live-plant connection plus the Hemp Gallery’s focus on real uses of hemp.
Skip it if you’re mainly looking for a party vibe or a place to smoke. Also skip it if audio guides and museum wandering sound like too much effort for your style.
If you like to understand what you’re seeing—especially in a city where people have strong opinions—this museum is an efficient way to learn at your own pace.
FAQ
Where is the Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum located?
It’s in the heart of Amsterdam, Netherlands (North Holland).
How much does the Amsterdam Hash Marihuana & Hemp Museum entry ticket cost?
The price is listed as $11 per person.
How long is the visit?
The ticket is valid for 1 day.
What do I need to do to enter?
Show your voucher at the entrance to the Hash, Marihuana & Hemp Museum.
Is an audio guide included?
Yes. The audio guide is included, with languages available including English and Dutch, plus others.
What languages are available for the audio guide?
The audio guide is included in English, Dutch, German, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, and Russian.
Is smoking allowed inside the museum?
No. Smoking indoors is not allowed.
Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the museum is wheelchair accessible.






























