A bar made of ice, right in town. At the Amsterdam Icebar, you’ll drink from ice glasses while the room holds at -10°C, with thick winter wear and a full-on themed atmosphere that feels very Amsterdam—odd, fun, and totally different from the usual canal-side beer stop.
What I really like is the welcome lounge portion first, where you can ease in with a cocktail and party music before you head into the cold. If you’re lucky, the staff energy can feel like a mini show; I noticed people mention banter from Wouter and Erion. One practical drawback: it’s run on a strict time slot, and the ice room is small, so busy sessions can feel a bit tight and rushed.
In This Review
- Key things that make the Amsterdam Icebar ticket worth your time
- Amsterdam Icebar: Why this -10°C bar feels so different
- The 45-minute time slot: How to avoid feeling rushed
- What’s included (and how that turns $26 into real value)
- The warm-up lounge near Rembrandtplein: calm before the cold
- Inside the Icebar: 35 tons of ice, ice sculptures, and ice-cold glasses
- Your two free drinks: What to pick when everything’s ice-cold
- Cold-weather comfort: jackets, gloves, and how to not suffer
- Crowds, pacing, and the staff vibe that makes it fun
- After the ice room: warming up and extending your night
- Who should book this Amsterdam Icebar ticket?
- Should you book the Amsterdam Icebar entry ticket?
- FAQ
- Where is the Amsterdam Icebar located?
- How cold is the Icebar?
- How long do I spend in the ice room?
- What drinks are included with the ticket?
- What winter wear is provided?
- Is the visit time-slot based?
- What are the age requirements?
- Is smoking allowed?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
Key things that make the Amsterdam Icebar ticket worth your time

- -10°C ice room with natural ice walls, furniture, and even the glassware
- 35 tons of ice built into the bar design, so it’s more than a gimmick photo spot
- A warm lounge start with a welcome cocktail (so you’re not thrown straight into the cold)
- Jacket and gloves included, plus a controlled stay inside the ice bar (up to 20 minutes)
- Two free drinks included, with choices ranging from vodka options to beer and orange juice
Amsterdam Icebar: Why this -10°C bar feels so different

Amsterdam has a lot of “themed” spots. This one is different because the theme is also the temperature. The Amsterdam Icebar is kept at -10°C, and once you’re inside, you’re surrounded by natural ice—walls, furniture, and the glass you drink from.
That ice-glass detail matters more than you’d think. At normal bars, you’re holding glass without thinking. Here, you’re holding something that’s literally cold enough to change how everything feels in your hands and your mouth. It turns an average drink into an event. And because the place is built to be a short experience, it stays playful instead of turning into a long, uncomfortable slog.
The other big win is the structure: there’s a lounge first (warm), then the ice room (cold), then you can warm back up in the bar area. That flow is smart. You get the shock of cold without losing your evening to it.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Amsterdam
The 45-minute time slot: How to avoid feeling rushed

Your ticket is 45 minutes total, and the visit is scheduled for a specific time. That’s a key detail because the ice bar portion is time-managed. You’ll exchange your voucher for your designated time slot, then you’ll move through the lounge and ice room in that window.
Inside the ice bar, you can stay up to 20 minutes. Some people end up feeling like they want more time, especially if the room is busy or if you’re busy taking photos. The good news: the lounge can be a buffer. You can usually hang out in the lounge as you wait for your ice room segment, and that warm breathing room helps.
My practical advice: arrive a few minutes early and keep your jacket and gloves setup simple. When you’re on a timed schedule in a cold venue, there’s less room for “oops, where’s the entrance” moments. Get your bearings fast near Rembrandtplein, then let the experience do the rest.
What’s included (and how that turns $26 into real value)

At around $26 per person, you’re paying for three things: entry, drinks, and the winter kit.
Included in your ticket:
- A welcome cocktail in the lounge
- 2 free drinks during your visit (you choose from vodka options, sambuca, rum, Heineken beer, or orange juice)
- Jacket and gloves to keep you warm
That drink package is the part that makes the price make sense. If you were to do this without the included drinks, you’d likely spend more just to “justify” the cold. Here, you’re buying the atmosphere plus drinks, and the math feels better than a typical bar entry.
One thing to set expectations: the included drinks are part of a structured menu. You may not get a full bar cocktail experience inside the ice room in the way you’d expect from a regular cocktail bar. People tend to enjoy the vodka flavor shots and the beer options, and that’s what the venue is built for.
The warm-up lounge near Rembrandtplein: calm before the cold

You’ll start in the lounge area, which is the warm part of the experience. This is where you can settle in before the temperature drops hard. You can have your welcome cocktail here, and there’s also a beer option mentioned as part of the lounge experience.
The lounge is also where the vibe lands: mood lighting and party music show up, and it turns into a social stop. It’s not just waiting around. It feels like the pre-show.
This warm start is also practical. If you’re walking in from Amsterdam winter air, you’ll want a buffer. Many visitors also enjoy doing the welcome drink first rather than rushing it after the ice room, because there’s often an urge to move fast once the session starts. If you like to take your time, plan to sip and settle before the cold segment.
Inside the Icebar: 35 tons of ice, ice sculptures, and ice-cold glasses

Now comes the main event: the ice bar itself. The venue is built from natural ice, and the design includes ice sculptures and ice-built furniture. Even your glass is made of ice, so you’re not just looking at the theme—you’re using it.
The temperature is held around -10°C, so the first minute can feel startling even if you’re dressed for winter. The jackets and gloves help, but your hands will still notice the cold more than the rest of you, because you’re actively holding an ice glass.
This is the part that’s easiest to enjoy when you go in with the right mindset: think of it as a short, cool (literally) experience, not a long sit-down meal. You’re there to see the ice walls, take a few photos, and sip. The controlled time inside keeps it manageable.
Also, the room can feel tight when it gets busy. Some people mention overcrowding in the ice room. If you’re sensitive to cramped spaces, choose a less peak time slot when possible. You don’t need to be a party person to enjoy it, but you do need to be okay with a social, guided kind of pacing.
Your two free drinks: What to pick when everything’s ice-cold

Your ticket includes 2 drinks you choose from: vodka (regular and flavored options), sambuca, rum, Heineken beer, or orange juice. That selection gives you a lot of flexibility, especially if your group has mixed tastes.
In the cold, drinks behave differently. Sweet drinks can feel more intense, and some visitors report that certain included cocktails can be very sweet, while others prefer the vodka or beer options. If you want something that feels more “standard” in the cold, vodka shots and beer are usually the easiest bets.
If you’re with mixed drinkers, orange juice can be a friendly non-alcohol option, but alcohol choices are built into the experience too. The key is to choose based on how you handle strong flavors when you’re freezing. Don’t force yourself into a drink you’d never order on a warm day.
Cold-weather comfort: jackets, gloves, and how to not suffer
The venue provides a jacket and gloves, and that’s a huge help. Still, you should expect it to be colder than you assume, because your body isn’t just reacting to temperature; it’s reacting to contact with ice and the short bursts of time you spend holding frozen glass.
A couple practical notes from real-world experience:
- The gloves can be hit or miss in effectiveness. Some people find them not great when the cold bites.
- If your hands get uncomfortable fast, you’ll feel it more than other parts of the body.
Your best strategy: layer smart under the jacket. Warm base layer, thicker socks, and closed shoes. Then treat the ice room like a sprint, not a marathon. Get the photos, take the sips, and you’ll enjoy it more.
One more comfort tip: keep your posture relaxed. When you’re tense, the cold feels worse. People who go in calm tend to come out laughing instead of grimacing.
Crowds, pacing, and the staff vibe that makes it fun
This place runs on scheduled sessions, and when it’s full, you’ll feel it. Some visitors mention the ice room being crowded, and others mention feeling rushed to finish the ice portion and move on.
That’s not a bad sign, just how controlled this experience is. The ice bar is cold, and you can’t let people linger indefinitely. The staff are there to keep the flow smooth and the room running safely.
If you want the experience to feel more like a party than a line, lean into the staff energy. People mention banter and fun moments with staff members like Wouter and Erion. When the team is in a playful mood, the whole visit feels lighter—even in the cold.
After the ice room: warming up and extending your night

You’re not forced to leave the venue right after the ice room. There’s a bar area where you can keep going and warm up again, and it’s set up for easier drinking than the ice room itself.
That matters for two reasons:
- You can come out, breathe, and regroup.
- If your group wants to keep the night going, you don’t have to immediately find another place on the street.
Also, the venue is set up for photos. People mention a professional photographer taking pictures, and souvenir shopping like fridge magnets and key rings is part of the fun for many visitors. If you like getting something small to remember the oddball experience, you’ll likely appreciate that side of the venue.
Who should book this Amsterdam Icebar ticket?
Book it if you want:
- A short, quirky activity that’s easy to fit into an Amsterdam day
- A photo-worthy, sensory experience with real ice everywhere
- A set-price entry with drinks included, so you’re not guessing the final bill
Skip it or reconsider if:
- You hate tight spaces or get uncomfortable when places feel crowded
- You want long sit-down time in the ice room (the stay is capped)
- You’re very sensitive to cold hands, even with provided gloves
This is also a great choice for groups. It works whether your group is more “party” or more “let’s try something weird.” The venue handles the pacing, so you can focus on the fun parts.
Should you book the Amsterdam Icebar entry ticket?
If you’re debating between yet another bar crawl stop and something that feels genuinely different, I’d lean Icebar. The price lines up with the included welcome cocktail plus two free drinks, and the ice-glass setup turns those drinks into the point of the night.
Also, the warm lounge start makes it easier than you might expect. You’re not just paying to suffer in cold air; you’re doing a timed experience designed around comfort and fun, with a real theme you can’t fake elsewhere.
If you’re going, pick a time slot that feels less peak, dress in warm layers, and plan to treat the ice room as a quick, memorable moment. You’ll get the best of it without the stress.
FAQ
Where is the Amsterdam Icebar located?
The Amsterdam Icebar is around the corner from Rembrandtplein. You can reach it by tram numbers 4 and 14, and the nearest tram station is Rembrandtplein.
How cold is the Icebar?
The bar is kept at about -10 degrees Celsius.
How long do I spend in the ice room?
You can stay inside the Icebar for up to 20 minutes. The total experience is scheduled for 45 minutes.
What drinks are included with the ticket?
Your ticket includes a welcome cocktail in the lounge plus 2 free drinks during the visit. The choices include vodka (including two different flavors), sambuca, rum, Heineken beer, or orange juice.
What winter wear is provided?
The ticket includes a jacket and gloves to keep you warm.
Is the visit time-slot based?
Yes. You can only visit the Icebar at your chosen time slot, and once you exchange your voucher, you’ll be assigned that designated time.
What are the age requirements?
The experience is only available for guests aged 18+.
Is smoking allowed?
Smoking is not allowed.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.



























