Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Amsterdam, Netherlands

    The Supper Club

    100Pearl Points

    Dutch Modern dining without the pressure.

    The Supper Club, Restaurant in Amsterdam

    About The Supper Club

    The Supper Club on Amsterdam's Singel canal delivers Dutch Modern dining wrapped in a performance-style format that sets it apart from conventional restaurant evenings. With a 3.9 Google rating across 1,600+ reviews, it's a reliable choice for an atmospheric, experience-led night out rather than precision tasting-menu cooking. Book if the setting matters as much as the plate; look elsewhere if Michelin-level food is the priority.

    Verdict

    The Supper Club is worth booking if you want a Dutch Modern dining experience on the Singel canal that doesn't take itself too seriously. With a Google rating of 3.9 across more than 1,600 reviews, this is a venue that divides opinion — and that's partly the point. It operates in a register where atmosphere and format matter as much as the food on the plate. If you're looking for polished fine dining with a Michelin paper trail, book Ciel Bleu or Vinkeles instead. But if you want something looser, more theatrical, and rooted in a Dutch Modern sensibility, The Supper Club has a clear identity and delivers on it consistently enough to justify the trip.

    About The Supper Club

    The Supper Club sits at Singel 460, one of Amsterdam's central canal addresses, which already does some of the work for the evening before you sit down. The venue has operated for long enough to have accumulated a substantial review base, and the score it holds — solid rather than spectacular , reflects a place that lands reliably in the middle tier of Amsterdam's dining scene rather than at its summit.

    What this venue does well is tone. Dutch Modern cuisine, when it's working, takes seasonal local produce and applies technique without ceremony. The Supper Club has historically leaned into a format that blurs dinner and performance , reclining seating, DJs, a lounge-adjacent energy that makes it feel less like a restaurant and more like an event. That format has evolved over the years, and the current iteration is worth checking directly with the venue before you book, since the programming and food offering can shift with the season and with whoever is running the kitchen at a given time.

    For the explorer-type diner who wants context and depth, the honest read here is this: The Supper Club is interesting because it occupies a space that most Amsterdam restaurants deliberately avoid. It is not trying to be Flore or Spectrum. It's not competing on tasting menu precision. It competes on experience, on the sense that the evening has a shape and a pulse that goes beyond what's on the plate. Whether that trade-off works for you depends entirely on what you're after on a given night in Amsterdam.

    The rating of 3.9 across 1,604 reviews is a useful signal: this is a venue where some guests find exactly what they came for and others feel the food doesn't keep pace with the setting. Go in with calibrated expectations and you're more likely to land in the former camp.

    For broader context on where The Supper Club fits within the city's dining options, see our full Amsterdam restaurants guide. If you're planning a full trip, our Amsterdam hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city.

    Booking

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy. The Supper Club does not have the reservation pressure of Amsterdam's leading Michelin-tier restaurants, so last-minute planning is more feasible here than at venues like Bistro de la Mer on a busy weekend. Check the venue's current booking channel directly, as no online reservation system is confirmed in current data.

    Quick reference: Singel 460, 1017 AW Amsterdam , booking difficulty: Easy.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for how The Supper Club stacks up against Amsterdam peers including Ciel Bleu, Flore, and Spectrum. If you're open to day trips, the Netherlands also has serious fine dining outside Amsterdam: De Librije in Zwolle, Aan de Poel in Amstelveen, and De Bokkedoorns in Overveen are all worth the journey for a different calibre of Dutch cooking.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at The Supper Club?

    Bar seating details are not confirmed in available venue data, so call ahead or check when booking. The Supper Club's easy booking difficulty suggests the room isn't packed tight enough to make bar seating a necessity — you're unlikely to struggle for a table.

    Is The Supper Club good for solo dining?

    Yes, provided you're comfortable with a sit-down Dutch Modern format rather than a counter-and-snack setup. Booking is rated Easy, which means you won't need to plan weeks ahead as a solo diner. If you want a livelier solo-friendly counter experience, De Kas offers a different format worth considering.

    What should I wear to The Supper Club?

    The venue's Dutch Modern cuisine and canal address suggest a presentable but relaxed standard — think neat casual rather than formal. Nothing in the venue data points to a strict dress code, so overdressing is more likely than underdressing being a problem.

    Is The Supper Club good for a special occasion?

    It works well for a low-key celebration where the setting — Singel 460 on one of Amsterdam's central canals — does most of the occasion-making. If you need Michelin-tier gravitas to mark the moment, Ciel Bleu is a stronger fit. The Supper Club is the better call when you want atmosphere without the formality.

    What are alternatives to The Supper Club in Amsterdam?

    Ciel Bleu is the step up if budget allows — two Michelin stars and city views. De Kas suits diners who want garden-sourced, produce-led cooking in a greenhouse setting. Bolenius offers a similar Dutch Modern positioning with more structural tasting menus. BAK brings a stripped-back, ingredient-focused approach with strong local credibility.

    What should a first-timer know about The Supper Club?

    The address at Singel 460 puts you on a central canal, so arrive with time to find the entrance — Amsterdam's canal ring can disorient first-timers. Booking is Easy, meaning same-week reservations are generally feasible. The Dutch Modern format means expect seasonal, locally influenced cooking rather than international or fusion-heavy menus.

    Does The Supper Club handle dietary restrictions?

    Specific dietary accommodation details are not documented in the venue record, so check the venue's official channels before booking. Dutch Modern restaurants at this level typically accommodate common requirements with notice — but confirm rather than assume, especially for allergen-critical needs.

    Location

    Singel 460, 1017 AW Amsterdam, Netherlands

    Compare The Supper Club

    Recognized Venues: The Supper Club and Peers
    VenueAwardsPrice
    The Supper ClubWorld's 50 Best Restaurants #43 (2002)
    Ciel BleuMichelin 2 Star€€€€
    BoleniusMichelin 1 Star€€€€
    De KasMichelin 1 Star€€€
    WilsMichelin 1 Star€€€
    BAK€€€

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    • Ciel Bleu, €€€€ · Creative, €€€€
    • Bolenius, Modern Dutch, Creative, €€€€
    • De Kas, €€€ · Organic, €€€
    • Wils, €€€ · World Cuisine, €€€
    • BAK, €€€ · Farm to table, €€€

    The Supper Club sits at a different point on the Amsterdam dining spectrum from most of its Dutch Modern peers. Ciel Bleu and Bolenius both operate at the €€€€ tier with serious tasting menus and the critical recognition to back them up, if cooking quality is your primary measure, either will outperform The Supper Club on that axis. Ciel Bleu in particular, perched on the 23rd floor of the Okura Hotel, is the choice for a special occasion where the food and the view both need to deliver.

    At the €€€ tier, De Kas, Wils, and BAK all offer stronger value propositions if your priority is produce quality or seasonal cooking. De Kas, with its greenhouse setting and organic sourcing, gives you a more distinctive sensory environment than most Amsterdam restaurants at the same price tier. BAK's farm-to-table approach is arguably more coherent as a food-first offer than The Supper Club's experience-led format.

    The case for booking The Supper Club over these alternatives is a specific one: you want an evening with a theatrical, performance-dining energy that none of the above venues provide. It's the right call for groups who want a night out that feels like an event, not a meal. For pure food value at the mid tier, De Kas is the stronger pick. For the full Dutch fine-dining experience, Bolenius or Ciel Bleu are the benchmarks.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate The Supper Club on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.