If British tourists search online for terms such as “stag party Amsterdam” “cheap hotel Amsterdam” or “pub crawl Amsterdam”, a video advertisement will appear, warning them of the consequences of drinking too much, taking drugs or causing trouble through antisocial behaviour.
One video shows a drunk young man being arrested. The accompanying text says: “Coming to Amsterdam for a messy night + getting trashed = €140 fine + criminal record = fewer prospects.”
“So coming to Amsterdam for a messy night? Stay away.”
Another video shows an unconscious person being rushed to the hospital in an ambulance.
“Coming to Amsterdam to take drugs + lose control = hospital trip + permanent health damage = worried family,” it reads.
“So coming for drugs to Amsterdam? Stay away.”
Deputy mayor Sofyan Mbarki said visitors were still welcome so long as they did not misbehave or cause a nuisance.
“In that case we as a city will say. ‘Rather not, stay away’,” he said, in a media release.
“Amsterdam is already taking lots of measures against excessive tourism and nuisance, and we are taking more measures than other large cities in Europe.
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“But we have to do even more (in) the coming years if we want to give tourism a sustainable place in our city.”
To keep the city liveable they had to choose “restriction instead of irresponsible growth”.
Tourists from EU countries could be next
The “Stay Away” campaign may expand later in the year to include visitors from the Netherlands and other EU countries who have the potential to cause nuisance, according to the local authority.
Amsterdam will also launch a “How to Amsterdam” campaign this month, aimed at visitors already in the city.
Through social media and street signs, tourists will be warned about drunkenness, causing too much noise, buying drugs from street dealers and the ban on urinating in public.
The city council is also in talks with bachelor party providers to work out how they can reduce nuisance tourism in the city centre, and is awaiting research results on the possibility of applying a tourist tax.
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This year, the city is expected to receive more than 18 million overnight visitors — the number at which the city council is “obliged to intervene”, under a 2021 ordinance called “Amsterdam Tourism in Balance