
Biking, Getting Around, and OV-chipkaart
Renting a bike ($12โ18/day) is the fastest way to see any Dutch city, but there are real rules: stay in the marked bike lane, stop at red lights, signal turns, and use a bell โ fines for tourists run $50โ170 for common mistakes. For trains and trams, tap in and out with any contactless debit or credit card (via the OVpay system) โ you don't need to buy a separate OV-chipkaart for a short visit.
Two systems make the Netherlands one of the easiest countries in the world to get around without a car: an extraordinary cycling infrastructure, and a genuinely simple tap-to-pay public transit network. Both have a small learning curve for first-timers, and getting either wrong is either mildly humiliating (biking) or briefly confusing (transit) rather than actually dangerous โ here's how to skip both.
Cycling rules that actually matter for tourists
| Rule | Why it matters | Typical fine |
|---|---|---|
| Stay in the marked bike lane (reddish pavement) | It's not sidewalk overflow โ cyclists move fast and won't expect pedestrians there | N/A โ but you will get yelled at |
| Stop at red lights, including small bike-specific signals | Enforced like any traffic light; police do ticket cyclists | $50โ130 (โฌ45โ120) |
| Use hand signals before turning | Other cyclists are moving fast and relying on your signal to react in time | ~$55 (โฌ50) |
| Equip a working bell and lights after dark | Legally required; also how cyclists warn each other before overtaking | $55โ80 (โฌ50โ75) |
| No phone use while riding | Treated like distracted driving | ~$185 (โฌ170) |
The single most common tourist mistake is walking or standing in the bike lane โ usually a slightly reddish strip of pavement between the sidewalk and the road. It is a real traffic lane for fast-moving bikes, not an extension of the sidewalk, and locals will ring their bell hard (or say something) if you're in the way. Look both ways before stepping into any crossing โ bikes, not cars, are the thing most likely to actually hit you.

Renting a bike
Rental shops are everywhere in Amsterdam and most other cities, typically $12โ18 per day for a basic single-speed 'omafiets' (granny bike) โ the standard, upright Dutch city bike. Always take two locks (most rentals include them) โ bike theft is genuinely the most common property crime in Amsterdam, with well over 800,000 bikes in the city as tempting, easy targets.
Trains, trams, and OV-chipkaart / OVpay

Every bus, tram, metro, and train in the country runs on a simple tap-in, tap-out system called OVpay: use any international contactless debit or credit card, or Apple Pay / Google Pay, tap it against the reader when you board and again when you get off, and the fare (a small boarding charge plus a per-kilometer rate) is calculated automatically and charged to your card the next day. There's no need to buy a separate transit card for a short visit โ it genuinely is that simple, and it's cheaper and easier than the older anonymous OV-chipkaart, which is being phased out entirely by 2027.
Always tap out, even if you're rushing to catch a connecting train. Forgetting to check out triggers a maximum-distance fare charge on your card โ usually a few extra euros, sometimes more, and an easy mistake to avoid just by remembering the second tap.
Trains between cities
Dutch intercity trains are frequent (often every 10โ15 minutes on major routes), fast, and connect every city in this guide in under an hour โ Amsterdam to Rotterdam in 40 minutes, Amsterdam to The Hague in 50, Amsterdam to Utrecht in 25. Tickets can be bought at station kiosks or the NS (Dutch Railways) app, though tapping a contactless card directly at the gate works for most journeys without buying anything in advance.












































