Delft
City Guide

Delft

Niederlande · Best time to visit: Apr-Sep.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €75.00/day
Best season Apr-Sep
Language Dutch
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Amsterdam
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Vermeer's Light and a Blue-and-White Heartbeat — One Perfect Day in Delft

09:00

Oostpoort (Eastern Gate)

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From Delft Station, walk 15 minutes east along the Oude Delft canal toward the city's quiet edge — the cobbled lanes are still half-asleep at this hour. Oostpoort is the last medieval city gate standing in Delft, its twin brick turrets and drawbridge mirrored in the glass-still canal; at 9am the water is unbroken and you'll have the view entirely to yourself. By 11 the tour buses park on the bridge and the reflection is gone.

Tip: Shoot from the small wooden bridge on the west bank — the gate, water, and drawbridge line up into one symmetrical composition. The angle from the opposite side looks flat and cuts off the second turret.

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10:30

Royal Delft (De Koninklijke Porceleyne Fles)

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

From Oostpoort walk 20 minutes south along Oosteinde and Rotterdamseweg, passing houseboats and the old Schie harbor that once shipped Vermeer-era trade goods. Royal Delft has been hand-painting blue pottery on this site since 1653 — even without the paid factory tour, the free courtyard, showroom, and the live painting demonstration behind the entrance counter tell the whole 370-year story. The 10:30 window is yours; the coach tours arrive at 11:15 sharp.

Tip: Skip the €16 museum ticket — the free shop has the same master-painter demonstration. Ask for the 'seconds' shelf in the back corner: slightly imperfect hand-painted pieces at 40% off, same factory mark.

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12:30

Stads-Koffyhuis

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €14

Walk 15 minutes north along Oude Delft, the oldest canal in the city, lined with leaning 16th-century merchant houses and arched stone bridges. Stads-Koffyhuis occupies a canal-side 17th-century building and has been voted best broodje in the Netherlands more than once — order the broodje gezond (€8.50) or the broodje met gehaktbal (warm meatball with mustard, €9.50). The canal-side terrace has only eight tables.

Tip: Arrive at 12:30 exactly, before the Delft office lunch rush at 12:45. Order the homemade appeltaart met slagroom (€5) — it arrives warm and is twice the size you expect. Ignore the pancake menu; it's the tourist version.

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14:00

Oude Kerk (Old Church) & Leaning Tower

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Step out of the café and walk 3 minutes north — you'll see the tower before the church, tilting nearly two meters off vertical, a centuries-old subsidence the Dutch simply refused to fix. Vermeer is buried inside, but the story here is the tilt itself: afternoon sun at 14:00 hits the brick from the southwest and throws a long shadow that exaggerates the lean. Stand on Heilige Geestkerkhof for the classic frame with the canal bridge in the foreground.

Tip: The single best angle is from Peperstraat looking back across the Oude Delft canal — you get the lean, the bridge, and the full facade in one shot. The standard front-on photo hides just how dramatically it tilts.

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15:30

Markt & Nieuwe Kerk

Landmark
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €0

Walk 2 minutes east across the short stone bridge and the Markt opens up — one of the most photographed squares in Holland, bookended by the Renaissance Stadhuis on one end and the soaring 109m Nieuwe Kerk tower on the other. At 15:30 the afternoon sun lands directly on the church's sandstone facade and the café terraces fill with locals ordering their first bitterballen of the evening. Every Dutch monarch since William of Orange is buried beneath your feet — this is where modern Holland was born.

Tip: For the one-shot postcard composition, stand at the southwest corner near Stadhuisplein — you get the Stadhuis step-gables and the Nieuwe Kerk tower together with a canal reflection. The middle of the square is too close to fit the tower top in frame.

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19:00

Spijshuis de Dis

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €38

Walk 3 minutes west from the Markt to Beestenmarkt, Delft's quieter locals' square under plane trees. Spijshuis de Dis is where Delft families book birthdays — deeply classic Dutch: stamppot boerenkool met rookworst (€21), mosterd soep van Doesburgse mosterd (€8.50), and the stoofpotje van rundvlees (slow-braised Dutch beef stew, €24.50). Wood beams, candlelight, and the owner still greets every table.

Tip: Reserve at least 24 hours ahead — only 40 seats and the locals know. Avoid the 'tourist menu' restaurants ringing the Markt: they charge €18 for frozen factory bitterballen and skip the Dutch classics entirely. Also watch for silent student cyclists on Beestenmarkt after 22:00 — it's their shortcut home and they don't use bells.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Delft?

Most travelers enjoy Delft in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Delft?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Delft?

A practical starting point is about €75 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Delft?

A good first shortlist for Delft includes Oostpoort (Eastern Gate), Royal Delft (De Koninklijke Porceleyne Fles), Oude Kerk (Old Church) & Leaning Tower.