Restaurant in Amsterdam, Netherlands
A street address with limited public data.

Reguliersdwarsstraat 38 sits on one of Amsterdam's busiest central dining streets, steps from Rembrandtplein. Venue-specific details including cuisine, pricing, and hours are not yet confirmed — making it a higher-uncertainty booking than better-documented Amsterdam alternatives. Check Pearl's full Amsterdam restaurants guide before committing.
If you're weighing up where to eat on Reguliersdwarsstraat, the address itself tells part of the story: this is one of Amsterdam's most concentrated stretches for dining and nightlife, sitting between the flower market and Rembrandtplein. Compared to the quieter, more destination-focused rooms like Ciel Bleu or Vinkeles, a venue here trades on accessibility and foot traffic rather than pilgrimage-worthy cooking. Whether number 38 is the right booking depends on what you're after — and right now, the data available on this specific address is limited enough that booking it cold carries more risk than the alternatives below.
Reguliersdwarsstraat runs through the heart of Amsterdam's canal ring, a narrow street that's busy day and night. Venues along this stretch tend to be compact by necessity — canal-city architecture means tight footprints, close tables, and a lively ambient noise level that suits casual meals better than extended conversation. If intimacy and quiet are priorities, the room layout here is unlikely to match what you'd get at Flore or Spectrum, both of which offer more considered dining environments. That said, for solo diners or pairs who want to be in the middle of Amsterdam's energy rather than removed from it, this location has a practical advantage: it's walkable from most central hotels and well-connected by tram.
If you've already eaten at the better-documented options in Amsterdam's central dining corridor , Bistro de la Mer is a reasonable nearby benchmark for classic cuisine at the €€€ tier , and you're exploring what else the street offers, number 38 could be worth a look. For a first visit to Amsterdam's dining scene, start with venues where Pearl has fuller data. See our full Amsterdam restaurants guide for options with verified ratings, menus, and booking details. If you're planning a broader trip, our Amsterdam hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city. For high-end cooking outside Amsterdam, De Librije in Zwolle and Inter Scaldes in Kruiningen are the Netherlands' most compelling destinations at the top tier. De Nieuwe Winkel in Nijmegen is worth the trip if plant-forward cooking is your focus.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reguliersdwarsstraat 38 | Easy | ||
| Ciel Bleu | €€€€ · Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| Bolenius | Modern Dutch, Creative | €€€€ | Unknown |
| De Kas | €€€ · Organic | €€€ | Unknown |
| Wils | €€€ · World Cuisine | €€€ | Unknown |
| BAK | €€€ · Farm to table | €€€ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
The address puts you on one of Amsterdam's most active dining streets in the canal ring district, which means foot traffic is high and the surrounding options are plentiful. Because detailed menu and pricing information for this specific venue isn't publicly documented, it's worth checking in with the street directly or cross-referencing with a nearby benchmark like Bistro de la Mer before committing. Go in with flexible expectations rather than a fixed plan.
Bar seating details for this venue aren't on record. Reguliersdwarsstraat as a street tends to favour smaller, table-focused formats given the narrow building plots typical of Amsterdam's canal ring. If bar dining is a priority, De Kas or BAK offer documented counter or bar options with clearer seating policies.
No booking lead time data is available for this venue. Given its location at a high-footfall address in central Amsterdam, erring on the side of booking a few days ahead is sensible during weekends and summer months. If you're planning around a specific date, securing a reservation early reduces risk regardless of the venue's typical demand.
Solo suitability can change without seating layout or format data on record. Amsterdam's canal ring venues at this address type often run tight covers, which can work in a solo diner's favour for counter or single-seat availability. For a documented solo-friendly experience in Amsterdam, Wils or BAK are known to handle single covers well. Check the venue's official channels for the latest details.
Group capacity details aren't publicly available for this venue. The street's typical building footprint in Amsterdam's canal ring suggests smaller covers rather than large private dining rooms. For groups of six or more, Ciel Bleu or De Kas are better-documented options with confirmed private or large-table arrangements.
No menu or dietary accommodation data is on record for this venue. Without confirmed cuisine type or chef details, it's not possible to assess how well plant-based, allergen, or religious dietary requirements are handled. check the venue's official channels before booking if dietary restrictions are a deciding factor.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.