Amsterdam Coffeeshop Tourist Ban: 2026 Live Updates & Status
Will tourists be banned from Amsterdam coffeeshops? Track the 2026 status of the "weed pass" debate, Mayor Halsema's proposals, and current public smoking restrictions.
Dave Mak
Amsterdam Cannabis Explorer

The Amsterdam Tourist Ban: Separating Fact from Fiction
If you are planning an Amsterdam trip in 2026, you have almost certainly seen alarming headlines: "Amsterdam to Ban Tourists from Coffeeshops," "The Weed Pass is Coming," "No More Smoking in the Red Light District."
Because cannabis laws in the Netherlands are a constant topic of political debate, these stories resurface every year. This live tracker cuttingly separates political proposals from actual, in-force laws so you know exactly what rules apply to your visit in 2026.
🚨 Current Status (June 2026)
[!NOTE] Can tourists buy cannabis in Amsterdam coffeeshops today? YES. As of June 2026, tourists are 100% permitted to enter any licensed coffeeshop in Amsterdam and purchase up to 5 grams of cannabis per day. The proposed "weed pass" or residency requirement was officially rejected by the new city council coalition on June 4, 2026, and is NOT in effect in Amsterdam.
🗺️ Public Smoking Ban Map (The Blowverbod)
While you can still buy cannabis easily, where you can smoke has changed significantly. In May 2023, the city of Amsterdam enacted an official blowverbod (public smoking ban) in specific tourist-congested zones:
[Amsterdam Centraal Station]
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[Damrak Avenue] ──► (Smoking Banned on Street - €100 Fine)
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[Dam Square] ──► (Smoking Banned on Street - €100 Fine)
│
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[Red Light District] ──► (Blowverbod Zone - Strictly Enforced)
What this means for you:
- Red Light District (De Wallen): You cannot smoke cannabis on the streets, canals, or public squares in this zone. Police and municipal enforcement officers (BOAs) actively patrol and issue €100 fines to violators.
- Inside Coffeeshops: You are perfectly safe. Smoking remains fully legal inside licensed coffeeshop premises within the ban zone.
- Quiet Canals & Parks: Outside the designated blowverbod zones, discrete smoking away from children, schools, and crowds is generally tolerated. However, respect the locals—discretion is key.
⏳ The Political Timeline: Why the Ban Keeps Resurfacing
To understand why these headlines keep appearing, we have to look at the ongoing battle between local municipal governments and national Dutch law:
1. The 2012 National "Weed Pass" (Wietpas)
In 2012, the Dutch national government introduced a residency criterion (popularly known as the "weed pass") restricting coffeeshop purchases to Dutch residents only.
- The Catch: The national government left enforcement priorities up to local municipalities.
- Amsterdam's Response: The city refused to enforce it, citing that a tourist ban would devastate the tourism economy and drive the trade directly into the hands of illegal street dealers.
2. Mayor Femke Halsema's 2020-2022 Proposal
Amsterdam's Mayor, Femke Halsema, introduced a proposal to enforce the residency criterion specifically in the city center. Supported by local police and prosecutors, she argued it was necessary to reduce public nuisance and curb the power of organized crime supplying the "backdoor."
3. The 2026 Coalition Decision
Following the municipal elections in March 2026, the newly formed city coalition—consisting of the combined GroenLinks-PvdA party (PRO Amsterdam) and D66—reached an agreement that omitted the "resident criterion." On June 4, 2026, the city council officially voted to reject the ban. The progressive coalition concluded that banning tourists would not solve public nuisance issues and would instead severely exacerbate illegal street dealing.
📊 What Would Happen If a Ban Were Enforced?
A comprehensive study commissioned by the Amsterdam City Council analyzed the potential impact of a tourist coffeeshop ban:
- Street Dealing: Approximately 25% of surveyed foreign tourists stated they would turn to illegal street dealers to buy cannabis if banned from coffeeshops, causing a massive surge in street crime.
- Tourism Decline: Around 11% of foreign tourists stated they would stop visiting Amsterdam altogether, impacting hotels, restaurants, and museums.
- Enforcement Burden: Police unions have warned that enforcing a residency rule across 160+ shops would strain already depleted policing resources.
💡 Tips for a Trouble-Free Visit in 2026
- Always Carry ID: Bouncers are incredibly strict. You must show a physical passport, EU ID card, or driver's license showing you are 18+. Phone photos are never accepted.
- Smoke Indoors or on Terraces: Save your smoking for inside the coffeeshop or on designated scenic terraces (like the canal-side benches at Easy Times or Katsu).
- Avoid Street Dealers: If someone approaches you in De Wallen offering "Cali packs" or "exotics" on the street, do not engage. They are either scams (fake packaging) or unsafe. Buy only from licensed coffeeshops.
This tracker is updated regularly to reflect the latest decisions from the Amsterdam City Council.
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