Living in Amsterdam for Indian Students 2026: Complete Practical Guide

Living in Amsterdam for Indian Students 2026

Your complete practical guide to accommodation, food, transport, Indian community, and lifestyle in Amsterdam, Netherlands

Moving to Amsterdam for your studies? You’re joining a growing community of 320+ Indian students who already call this Netherlands city home. Amsterdam is the Netherlands’ financial and tech capital — Booking.com, Adyen, ING Tech, and Heineken all have global headquarters here. The city offers Indian students English-taught Master’s programs at UvA, VU Amsterdam, and Inholland, plus access to one of Europe’s strongest post-graduation job markets via the Netherlands’ 1-year Orientation Visa. At EUR 1,300-1,500/month it is the most expensive Dutch city, but salaries justify the cost.

This guide from Kadamb Overseas — Saumitra Rajput’s Ahmedabad-based study abroad consultancy that has placed 500+ students across Europe since 2014 — covers everything you actually need to know: where to live, what it costs, how to find Indian groceries, banking setup, public transport, weather realities, and part-time work tips.

Amsterdam Quick Facts for Indian Students

  • Monthly cost: EUR 1,300-1,500
  • Indian community: 320+ students
  • Top universities: UvA, VU Amsterdam, Inholland, Amsterdam UMC
  • Direct flights to India: KLM AMS-BOM, AMS-DEL, AMS-BLR daily
  • Best neighborhoods: De Pijp, Oost, Zuid-Oost, Centrum
  • Climate: 2 deg C winter to 22 deg C summer (oceanic)
  • Part-time work: 16 hrs/week (EUR 13-16/hr)
  • Currency: Euro (EUR)

1. Where to Live in Amsterdam — Best Neighborhoods for Indian Students

Choosing the right neighborhood matters as much as choosing the right university. Here are the five areas Indian students most often pick in Amsterdam, each with its own personality and rent range.

De Pijp — Most International, Near Center

Amsterdam’s most international neighborhood, nicknamed Latin Quarter of Amsterdam. Walking distance to UvA Roeterseiland campus, dozens of international restaurants, and the famous Albert Cuyp street market. Many Indian students live here.

Rent: EUR 700-1,000 (single room shared apt) | Vibe: International, foodie, central

Oost (East Amsterdam) — Multicultural and Affordable

Historically diverse area now popular with international students. Lower rents than Centrum, easy tram access, Frankendael park, and growing Indian/Surinamese-Indian food scene.

Rent: EUR 600-850 | Vibe: Multicultural, residential, calm

Zuid-Oost (Bijlmer) — Cheapest Option

Southeast Amsterdam, predominantly Surinamese-Indian community (Hindustani heritage). Most affordable area, modern high-rise apartments, metro line 50 to UvA in 20 minutes. Some social issues but rapidly improving.

Rent: EUR 450-650 | Vibe: Affordable, Indian-heritage community, suburban-feeling

Centrum (Old Town) — Iconic but Expensive

Canal belt UNESCO heritage zone — most photogenic but most expensive. Walking distance to everything. Mostly studios in canal houses, often noisy from tourists. Suitable if budget allows.

Rent: EUR 900-1,300 (studios) | Vibe: Historic, touristy, premium

Amstelveen / Diemen — Suburb Living

Suburbs just outside Amsterdam ring, much cheaper rents and quieter. Diemen is closer to UvA Science Park. Amstelveen has a large Indian/IT community (Tata Steel, ASML cluster). 25-35 minutes by metro/train to central Amsterdam.

Rent: EUR 550-800 | Vibe: Family-friendly, calm, established Indian community

Pro tip from Kadamb: Apply for student dormitories (Studentenwerk in Germany, CROUS in France, DSU in Italy) the moment you receive your admit letter — they fill up months in advance and cost 30-40% less than private rentals.

2. Cost of Living in Amsterdam — Realistic Monthly Breakdown

Here’s what an average Indian student actually spends per month in Amsterdam, based on real data from our placed students:

ExpenseCost (EUR/month)Cost (INR approx)
Rent (room shared apt)EUR 600-950INR 54,000-85,500
Health insurance (basisverzekering)EUR 130INR 11,700
GroceriesEUR 220-300INR 19,800-27,000
Public transport (OV-chipkaart)EUR 70-100INR 6,300-9,000
Mobile + internetEUR 25-40INR 2,250-3,600
Eating out + leisureEUR 180-250INR 16,200-22,500
Utilities (often included)EUR 60-100INR 5,400-9,000
TOTALEUR 1,300-1,500INR 1.17 – 1.35 lakh
Money-saving tip: Apply for the Dutch zorgtoeslag (healthcare allowance) once you have a BSN number and basisverzekering — pays back EUR 100-130/month of your health insurance, almost making it free. Apply at toeslagen.nl with your DigiD.

3. Indian Community in Amsterdam

Amsterdam hosts approximately 320+ Indian students across UvA (160), VU Amsterdam (90), Amsterdam UMC (50), and Inholland (30). Plus a much larger Surinamese-Indian (Hindustani) heritage community of 70,000+ in greater Amsterdam — one of Europe’s biggest established Indian-origin populations. The UvA Indian Students Association and VU Indian Society organize Diwali, Holi, and Independence Day events. Amstelveen has a strong settled Indian IT/business family community.

Where Indians gather: UvA REC (Roeterseiland) on weekday lunches, Saravana Bhavan Amsterdam in De Pijp on Friday-Sunday evenings, the Sri Lakshmi Narayan Mandir in Bijlmer for festivals, and Albert Cuyp Markt on Saturday mornings (multiple Indian/Surinamese stalls).

Festivals celebrated locally: Diwali, Holi, Ganesh Chaturthi, Navratri, Independence Day (15 August), and Republic Day (26 January) — all organized by Indian student associations and the Indian Embassy/Consulate.

4. Indian Food, Groceries, and Restaurants in Amsterdam

Indian Grocery Stores

Amrit (De Pijp) — go-to Indian grocery, atta + dal + spices + frozen samosas. Indian Spices (Albert Cuyp) — small but well-stocked, fresh paneer. Boon’s Markt (Bijlmer) — Surinamese-Indian (Hindustani) grocery, has unique sub-continent items not elsewhere in Europe. Toko Ramee (Oost) — pan-Asian with Indian section. Albert Heijn and Jumbo mainstream supermarkets stock basmati rice and basic spices in international aisles. Ekoplaza — organic, growing Indian spice range.

Indian Restaurants Worth Visiting

Saravana Bhavan Amsterdam (De Pijp) — Tamil veg chain, dosa EUR 12, thali EUR 16. Tandoor Mahal (Centrum) — North Indian, butter chicken EUR 17. Anara Indian (Oost) — Punjabi specialties, popular weekend dinner spot. Roopram Roti (Bijlmer) — Surinamese-Indian roti, a different but delicious take on Indian food, EUR 8-10. Maharaja (Centrum) — fine dining for special occasions.

Cooking at home tip: Buy basmati rice (5kg bag ~EUR 12), atta (5kg ~EUR 10), dal varieties, and basic spices in bulk from Indian shops — it cuts your monthly food bill by 40-50% versus eating out.

5. Public Transport in Amsterdam

Amsterdam’s GVB transport network combines metro (5 lines), trams (15 lines), buses, and ferries (free). The OV-chipkaart works across all transport in the Netherlands. Most students rely on bikes — Amsterdam is the world’s most bike-friendly city with 500 km of bike lanes, and a used bike costs EUR 100-200. Walking is realistic in central districts. The OV-chipkaart costs around EUR 70-100/month with student discounts.

Student transport hack: Get a Dutch student OV chipkaart with a ‘voordeelurenabonnement’ for 40% off off-peak trains nationwide — makes weekend travel to Rotterdam, The Hague, Utrecht, and Maastricht very affordable (EUR 8-15 round trip).

6. Banking and Mobile Setup as an Indian Student

Best Banks for Indian Students

ING Direct — most popular bank for international students, free student account, English app and support. ABN AMRO — second most popular, similar offering. Bunq — Dutch fintech, fully digital, multi-currency support. Revolut — widely accepted, useful as secondary card. Note: Dutch banks require BSN (citizen service number) before opening account — get this from City Hall (Stadhuis) within 5 days of arrival.

Mobile and Internet Plans

Lebara — most popular among Indians, EUR 15/month for 8GB + cheap India calling (1-2 cents/min). KPN Compleet — Dutch flagship, EUR 25 for 10GB. Vodafone NL — EUR 22 for 10GB. Simyo — KPN’s budget brand, EUR 12 for 5GB. Lyca Mobile — also popular for India calling.

Setup order: 1) City registration (Anmeldung in Germany / similar elsewhere), 2) Open bank account, 3) Get residence permit, 4) Get mobile SIM, 5) Sign up for health insurance. This sequence avoids most bureaucratic delays.

7. Direct Flights from Amsterdam to India

Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS) is one of Europe’s biggest hubs and the best-connected Dutch airport to India. Direct flights: KLM AMS-Mumbai daily (KL875), AMS-Delhi daily (KL871), AMS-Bengaluru 5x weekly (KL877). Air India AMS-Delhi 4x weekly. One-stop: Emirates via Dubai, Qatar via Doha, Lufthansa via Frankfurt, Turkish via Istanbul. Booking tip: KLM directs typically EUR 550-750 round trip. Cheapest one-stop via Turkish Airlines from EUR 400. Book 2-3 months ahead.

8. Weather and Lifestyle in Amsterdam

Amsterdam has an oceanic climate — mild but very wet and windy. Winter (Dec-Feb): 0 to 7 deg C, rainy, occasional snow, daylight 8 hours. Spring (Mar-May): 5 to 16 deg C, tulip season famous worldwide, parks bloom. Summer (Jun-Aug): 14 to 22 deg C, mostly pleasant, occasional 30+ deg C heatwaves. Autumn (Sep-Nov): 7 to 16 deg C, gray and rainy. Critical: Buy a quality rain jacket and waterproof shoes — Amsterdam averages 200+ rainy days per year. Wind is constant — quality jacket essential.

What to pack from India: Heavy winter jacket (or buy locally — better quality), thermal innerwear, masala/spice starter kit, pressure cooker, formal Indian clothes for festivals and embassy events, all academic transcripts (originals + 5 attested copies), and a power adapter (Type C/F for European sockets).

9. Things to Do — Cultural Life and Travel

Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum, Anne Frank House (book months ahead), canal cruises, Vondelpark (huge park in city center), Albert Cuyp street market. Indian-Surinamese cultural events at Bijlmer’s Sri Lakshmi Narayan Mandir. Day trips: Keukenhof (tulip season Mar-May), Zaanse Schans windmills, Volendam fishing village. Free things: ferries across IJ river, walking the canals, Amsterdam Museum on the first Sunday of the month.

Weekend travel from Amsterdam: Netherlands is small — anywhere is reachable within 2 hours. The Hague (50 min), Rotterdam (40 min), Utrecht (30 min), Maastricht (2.5 hours) — all reachable by NS train. International: Brussels (2 hours by Thalys), Paris (3.5 hours), London (4.5 hours via Eurostar from Brussels), Berlin (6 hours by ICE), Cologne (3 hours). Use NS Flex student discount + Dal-Voordeel for cheap travel.

10. Working Part-Time as an Indian Student in Amsterdam

International students from non-EU countries (including India) can work 16 hours per week year-round, OR full-time during summer (June-August) — but require a Dutch employer-arranged work permit (TWV). Common student jobs: hospitality at Centrum/De Pijp restaurants (EUR 13-15/hr + tips), retail at H+M, Bijenkorf (EUR 12-14/hr), tutoring (EUR 20-30/hr), university student assistant (EUR 14-18/hr), Booking.com/Uber/Deliveroo gig work. Dutch companies like ING and Heineken hire student-trainees year-round.

Top Employers Hiring Indian Graduates in Amsterdam

Booking.com (HQ Amsterdam, hires hundreds of international graduates), Adyen (HQ Amsterdam), ING Tech, Heineken (HQ), Philips, TomTom, Tata Consultancy Services Amsterdam, Wipro Amsterdam, Infosys Amsterdam, Uber Amsterdam regional HQ, Optiver, Flow Traders, IMC (HFT), Albert Heijn parent Ahold Delhaize, KPN, NXP Semiconductors Eindhoven (1.5h), ASML Veldhoven (1h). Average graduate starting salary: EUR 38,000-50,000.

Job search reality check: Learning the local language to B1 level (German/French/Italian/Dutch/German) doubles your job offers within 6 months of graduation. English-only roles exist but are concentrated in tech and consulting.

11. Frequently Asked Questions about Living in Amsterdam

How expensive is Amsterdam compared to other Dutch cities?

Amsterdam is the most expensive Dutch city — 25-35% more than Rotterdam, Utrecht, or Eindhoven. Rent for a single room: Amsterdam EUR 700-1,000, Rotterdam EUR 500-700, Utrecht EUR 550-750. However, Amsterdam offers the most jobs, the largest international community, and best post-graduation salaries.

How big is the Indian community in Amsterdam?

Around 320+ Indian students directly, plus a much larger Surinamese-Hindustani heritage population (~70,000) across greater Amsterdam — making this one of the most established Indian-origin communities in Europe. UvA and VU Amsterdam Indian Student Associations are active. Amstelveen has a settled professional Indian community.

Do I need to know Dutch to live in Amsterdam?

Almost everyone in Amsterdam speaks excellent English — 95% of Dutch under 50 are English-fluent. Universities teach in English, restaurants/shops/transport all work in English. Dutch is helpful for some part-time jobs and longer-term integration but not strictly necessary for daily life. Many Indians live in Amsterdam for years without learning Dutch.

How is the post-graduation job market in Amsterdam?

Excellent. Amsterdam has Europe’s strongest English-friendly tech and finance scene — Booking.com, Adyen, ING, Heineken, Optiver, Flow Traders all hire international graduates. The Netherlands’ 1-year Orientation Year visa lets you stay and job-hunt after graduation. Average graduate salary: EUR 38,000-50,000. Companies like Booking.com offer relocation support and Highly Skilled Migrant visa sponsorship.

Is Amsterdam safe for Indian students?

Amsterdam is among Europe’s safest large cities. Bike theft is the #1 crime — never leave your bike unlocked or with a cheap lock. Night transport is safe (trams + Uber). The Red Light District is a tourist area, generally safe but rowdy on weekend nights. Female Indian students report Amsterdam as very safe; women bike home alone at midnight regularly with no issues.

Ready to Move to Amsterdam? Talk to Kadamb Overseas

Saumitra Rajput and the Kadamb team have placed 500+ Indian students across Europe since 2014. Get city-specific accommodation, university selection, and visa guidance for Amsterdam.

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