What to wear in Amsterdam in end of June [duplicate]









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  • Is there a website with historical temperatures and weather data?

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I'll be in Amsterdam end of June for 5 days. I'm from tropical weather and heard spring in Amsterdam is bit cold.



  • Do I need wear clothing thats suits to cold weather or normal t-shirt and trouser will be fine?


  • Will it be cold in nights? can I wear casual baggy shorts at night?


This question is about what to dress in End of June in Amsterdam.



PS: End of June 2017 was very cold and had some rain with wind. Even though it says end of spring don't forget to put some dress for cold weather.










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marked as duplicate by motoDrizzt, Honorary World Citizen, Ali Awan, Giorgio, JonathanReez Jun 21 '17 at 0:01


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 2




    FWIW, this week is very hot to the point that there is a warning out.
    – Relaxed
    Jun 20 '17 at 9:44






  • 4




    P.S. I forgot to add: you'll be in Amsterdam during summer, not in spring.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 20 '17 at 11:24







  • 1




    @user2473015: I've been probably the first one to vote to close, so maybe a little explanation needed after your edit. Recently, other questions like yours have been closed as duplicate, and it makes sense when you think that what to dress is all about your personal feeling with weather. For example I'm mostly "weather insensitive", I went through Dubai and Indonesia with a shirt and jeans and no hats, I just ignored the sun. I was in winter in Amsterdam during a storm and I was dressed like mild autumn in Italy and was without an umbrella. Do you really want advices by me on what to wear? :-)
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 7:57










  • Or you could ask what to wear in Indonesia, and get some advices by some Indonesian to cover as much as possible and wear gloves and scarf, and so on, just because many Indonesian of Chinese descent despise to be tanned (at least, that's the explanation I got). You can see German at the beginning of spring in north Italy with shorts, t-shirts and sandals while Italian are still wearing jackets and warming stuff... So, what to wear? Check the weather forecast, check the weather historical data, and dress accordingly: you are the only one who knows how badly rain or cold or hot can affect you.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 8:01















up vote
0
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • Is there a website with historical temperatures and weather data?

    5 answers



I'll be in Amsterdam end of June for 5 days. I'm from tropical weather and heard spring in Amsterdam is bit cold.



  • Do I need wear clothing thats suits to cold weather or normal t-shirt and trouser will be fine?


  • Will it be cold in nights? can I wear casual baggy shorts at night?


This question is about what to dress in End of June in Amsterdam.



PS: End of June 2017 was very cold and had some rain with wind. Even though it says end of spring don't forget to put some dress for cold weather.










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by motoDrizzt, Honorary World Citizen, Ali Awan, Giorgio, JonathanReez Jun 21 '17 at 0:01


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 2




    FWIW, this week is very hot to the point that there is a warning out.
    – Relaxed
    Jun 20 '17 at 9:44






  • 4




    P.S. I forgot to add: you'll be in Amsterdam during summer, not in spring.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 20 '17 at 11:24







  • 1




    @user2473015: I've been probably the first one to vote to close, so maybe a little explanation needed after your edit. Recently, other questions like yours have been closed as duplicate, and it makes sense when you think that what to dress is all about your personal feeling with weather. For example I'm mostly "weather insensitive", I went through Dubai and Indonesia with a shirt and jeans and no hats, I just ignored the sun. I was in winter in Amsterdam during a storm and I was dressed like mild autumn in Italy and was without an umbrella. Do you really want advices by me on what to wear? :-)
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 7:57










  • Or you could ask what to wear in Indonesia, and get some advices by some Indonesian to cover as much as possible and wear gloves and scarf, and so on, just because many Indonesian of Chinese descent despise to be tanned (at least, that's the explanation I got). You can see German at the beginning of spring in north Italy with shorts, t-shirts and sandals while Italian are still wearing jackets and warming stuff... So, what to wear? Check the weather forecast, check the weather historical data, and dress accordingly: you are the only one who knows how badly rain or cold or hot can affect you.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 8:01













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • Is there a website with historical temperatures and weather data?

    5 answers



I'll be in Amsterdam end of June for 5 days. I'm from tropical weather and heard spring in Amsterdam is bit cold.



  • Do I need wear clothing thats suits to cold weather or normal t-shirt and trouser will be fine?


  • Will it be cold in nights? can I wear casual baggy shorts at night?


This question is about what to dress in End of June in Amsterdam.



PS: End of June 2017 was very cold and had some rain with wind. Even though it says end of spring don't forget to put some dress for cold weather.










share|improve this question
















This question already has an answer here:



  • Is there a website with historical temperatures and weather data?

    5 answers



I'll be in Amsterdam end of June for 5 days. I'm from tropical weather and heard spring in Amsterdam is bit cold.



  • Do I need wear clothing thats suits to cold weather or normal t-shirt and trouser will be fine?


  • Will it be cold in nights? can I wear casual baggy shorts at night?


This question is about what to dress in End of June in Amsterdam.



PS: End of June 2017 was very cold and had some rain with wind. Even though it says end of spring don't forget to put some dress for cold weather.





This question already has an answer here:



  • Is there a website with historical temperatures and weather data?

    5 answers







netherlands weather-and-climate amsterdam clothing






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edited Jul 8 '17 at 3:10

























asked Jun 20 '17 at 9:35









user2473015

234216




234216




marked as duplicate by motoDrizzt, Honorary World Citizen, Ali Awan, Giorgio, JonathanReez Jun 21 '17 at 0:01


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by motoDrizzt, Honorary World Citizen, Ali Awan, Giorgio, JonathanReez Jun 21 '17 at 0:01


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 2




    FWIW, this week is very hot to the point that there is a warning out.
    – Relaxed
    Jun 20 '17 at 9:44






  • 4




    P.S. I forgot to add: you'll be in Amsterdam during summer, not in spring.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 20 '17 at 11:24







  • 1




    @user2473015: I've been probably the first one to vote to close, so maybe a little explanation needed after your edit. Recently, other questions like yours have been closed as duplicate, and it makes sense when you think that what to dress is all about your personal feeling with weather. For example I'm mostly "weather insensitive", I went through Dubai and Indonesia with a shirt and jeans and no hats, I just ignored the sun. I was in winter in Amsterdam during a storm and I was dressed like mild autumn in Italy and was without an umbrella. Do you really want advices by me on what to wear? :-)
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 7:57










  • Or you could ask what to wear in Indonesia, and get some advices by some Indonesian to cover as much as possible and wear gloves and scarf, and so on, just because many Indonesian of Chinese descent despise to be tanned (at least, that's the explanation I got). You can see German at the beginning of spring in north Italy with shorts, t-shirts and sandals while Italian are still wearing jackets and warming stuff... So, what to wear? Check the weather forecast, check the weather historical data, and dress accordingly: you are the only one who knows how badly rain or cold or hot can affect you.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 8:01













  • 2




    FWIW, this week is very hot to the point that there is a warning out.
    – Relaxed
    Jun 20 '17 at 9:44






  • 4




    P.S. I forgot to add: you'll be in Amsterdam during summer, not in spring.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 20 '17 at 11:24







  • 1




    @user2473015: I've been probably the first one to vote to close, so maybe a little explanation needed after your edit. Recently, other questions like yours have been closed as duplicate, and it makes sense when you think that what to dress is all about your personal feeling with weather. For example I'm mostly "weather insensitive", I went through Dubai and Indonesia with a shirt and jeans and no hats, I just ignored the sun. I was in winter in Amsterdam during a storm and I was dressed like mild autumn in Italy and was without an umbrella. Do you really want advices by me on what to wear? :-)
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 7:57










  • Or you could ask what to wear in Indonesia, and get some advices by some Indonesian to cover as much as possible and wear gloves and scarf, and so on, just because many Indonesian of Chinese descent despise to be tanned (at least, that's the explanation I got). You can see German at the beginning of spring in north Italy with shorts, t-shirts and sandals while Italian are still wearing jackets and warming stuff... So, what to wear? Check the weather forecast, check the weather historical data, and dress accordingly: you are the only one who knows how badly rain or cold or hot can affect you.
    – motoDrizzt
    Jun 21 '17 at 8:01








2




2




FWIW, this week is very hot to the point that there is a warning out.
– Relaxed
Jun 20 '17 at 9:44




FWIW, this week is very hot to the point that there is a warning out.
– Relaxed
Jun 20 '17 at 9:44




4




4




P.S. I forgot to add: you'll be in Amsterdam during summer, not in spring.
– motoDrizzt
Jun 20 '17 at 11:24





P.S. I forgot to add: you'll be in Amsterdam during summer, not in spring.
– motoDrizzt
Jun 20 '17 at 11:24





1




1




@user2473015: I've been probably the first one to vote to close, so maybe a little explanation needed after your edit. Recently, other questions like yours have been closed as duplicate, and it makes sense when you think that what to dress is all about your personal feeling with weather. For example I'm mostly "weather insensitive", I went through Dubai and Indonesia with a shirt and jeans and no hats, I just ignored the sun. I was in winter in Amsterdam during a storm and I was dressed like mild autumn in Italy and was without an umbrella. Do you really want advices by me on what to wear? :-)
– motoDrizzt
Jun 21 '17 at 7:57




@user2473015: I've been probably the first one to vote to close, so maybe a little explanation needed after your edit. Recently, other questions like yours have been closed as duplicate, and it makes sense when you think that what to dress is all about your personal feeling with weather. For example I'm mostly "weather insensitive", I went through Dubai and Indonesia with a shirt and jeans and no hats, I just ignored the sun. I was in winter in Amsterdam during a storm and I was dressed like mild autumn in Italy and was without an umbrella. Do you really want advices by me on what to wear? :-)
– motoDrizzt
Jun 21 '17 at 7:57












Or you could ask what to wear in Indonesia, and get some advices by some Indonesian to cover as much as possible and wear gloves and scarf, and so on, just because many Indonesian of Chinese descent despise to be tanned (at least, that's the explanation I got). You can see German at the beginning of spring in north Italy with shorts, t-shirts and sandals while Italian are still wearing jackets and warming stuff... So, what to wear? Check the weather forecast, check the weather historical data, and dress accordingly: you are the only one who knows how badly rain or cold or hot can affect you.
– motoDrizzt
Jun 21 '17 at 8:01





Or you could ask what to wear in Indonesia, and get some advices by some Indonesian to cover as much as possible and wear gloves and scarf, and so on, just because many Indonesian of Chinese descent despise to be tanned (at least, that's the explanation I got). You can see German at the beginning of spring in north Italy with shorts, t-shirts and sandals while Italian are still wearing jackets and warming stuff... So, what to wear? Check the weather forecast, check the weather historical data, and dress accordingly: you are the only one who knows how badly rain or cold or hot can affect you.
– motoDrizzt
Jun 21 '17 at 8:01











3 Answers
3






active

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up vote
5
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Spring in Amsterdam is generally cooler than it is in the south of Europe but it does not mean that the weather is really cold. The thing is that you cannot rule out a few weeks of 15ºC weather, wind or rain, especially in April-May, so you might want to pack something like a light jacket to be prepared. But you can expect plenty of warm weather as well.



Case in point: This week is very hot, close to 30ºC and there is a warning out, while the forecast for next week is rainy weather, 20ºC during the day and as little as 15ºC during the night.






share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    it is always a good idea to have a sweater (or a vest...) with you in the evening if you are sensitive to cold.



    Depending on what you intend to do in the evening ( eating out, going to a club or bar) maybe you should change to pants.






    share|improve this answer




















    • Yes I used to temperatures like 27°C to 30°C normally.
      – user2473015
      Jun 20 '17 at 19:08










    • Advice to walk about Amsterdam in your vest and pants may be misconstrued in some parts of the anglosphere. Most Dutch are pretty liberal-minded but you may feel cold.
      – RedGrittyBrick
      Jun 21 '17 at 9:08

















    up vote
    1
    down vote













    You should wear clothes. But, even that is not a definite.



    You should already be able to get an idea of the weather in late June, now, by looking at the forecast.



    That said, Dutch weather is a tad unpredictable. In June, it can be 35 degrees celsius during the day and under 10 degrees at night. Check out the climate chart on the Wikipedia page for the Netherlands.






    share|improve this answer



























      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      5
      down vote













      Spring in Amsterdam is generally cooler than it is in the south of Europe but it does not mean that the weather is really cold. The thing is that you cannot rule out a few weeks of 15ºC weather, wind or rain, especially in April-May, so you might want to pack something like a light jacket to be prepared. But you can expect plenty of warm weather as well.



      Case in point: This week is very hot, close to 30ºC and there is a warning out, while the forecast for next week is rainy weather, 20ºC during the day and as little as 15ºC during the night.






      share|improve this answer


























        up vote
        5
        down vote













        Spring in Amsterdam is generally cooler than it is in the south of Europe but it does not mean that the weather is really cold. The thing is that you cannot rule out a few weeks of 15ºC weather, wind or rain, especially in April-May, so you might want to pack something like a light jacket to be prepared. But you can expect plenty of warm weather as well.



        Case in point: This week is very hot, close to 30ºC and there is a warning out, while the forecast for next week is rainy weather, 20ºC during the day and as little as 15ºC during the night.






        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          5
          down vote










          up vote
          5
          down vote









          Spring in Amsterdam is generally cooler than it is in the south of Europe but it does not mean that the weather is really cold. The thing is that you cannot rule out a few weeks of 15ºC weather, wind or rain, especially in April-May, so you might want to pack something like a light jacket to be prepared. But you can expect plenty of warm weather as well.



          Case in point: This week is very hot, close to 30ºC and there is a warning out, while the forecast for next week is rainy weather, 20ºC during the day and as little as 15ºC during the night.






          share|improve this answer














          Spring in Amsterdam is generally cooler than it is in the south of Europe but it does not mean that the weather is really cold. The thing is that you cannot rule out a few weeks of 15ºC weather, wind or rain, especially in April-May, so you might want to pack something like a light jacket to be prepared. But you can expect plenty of warm weather as well.



          Case in point: This week is very hot, close to 30ºC and there is a warning out, while the forecast for next week is rainy weather, 20ºC during the day and as little as 15ºC during the night.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jun 20 '17 at 10:57

























          answered Jun 20 '17 at 9:48









          Relaxed

          75.9k10148282




          75.9k10148282






















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              it is always a good idea to have a sweater (or a vest...) with you in the evening if you are sensitive to cold.



              Depending on what you intend to do in the evening ( eating out, going to a club or bar) maybe you should change to pants.






              share|improve this answer




















              • Yes I used to temperatures like 27°C to 30°C normally.
                – user2473015
                Jun 20 '17 at 19:08










              • Advice to walk about Amsterdam in your vest and pants may be misconstrued in some parts of the anglosphere. Most Dutch are pretty liberal-minded but you may feel cold.
                – RedGrittyBrick
                Jun 21 '17 at 9:08














              up vote
              1
              down vote













              it is always a good idea to have a sweater (or a vest...) with you in the evening if you are sensitive to cold.



              Depending on what you intend to do in the evening ( eating out, going to a club or bar) maybe you should change to pants.






              share|improve this answer




















              • Yes I used to temperatures like 27°C to 30°C normally.
                – user2473015
                Jun 20 '17 at 19:08










              • Advice to walk about Amsterdam in your vest and pants may be misconstrued in some parts of the anglosphere. Most Dutch are pretty liberal-minded but you may feel cold.
                – RedGrittyBrick
                Jun 21 '17 at 9:08












              up vote
              1
              down vote










              up vote
              1
              down vote









              it is always a good idea to have a sweater (or a vest...) with you in the evening if you are sensitive to cold.



              Depending on what you intend to do in the evening ( eating out, going to a club or bar) maybe you should change to pants.






              share|improve this answer












              it is always a good idea to have a sweater (or a vest...) with you in the evening if you are sensitive to cold.



              Depending on what you intend to do in the evening ( eating out, going to a club or bar) maybe you should change to pants.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Jun 20 '17 at 13:13









              Max

              9,25511831




              9,25511831











              • Yes I used to temperatures like 27°C to 30°C normally.
                – user2473015
                Jun 20 '17 at 19:08










              • Advice to walk about Amsterdam in your vest and pants may be misconstrued in some parts of the anglosphere. Most Dutch are pretty liberal-minded but you may feel cold.
                – RedGrittyBrick
                Jun 21 '17 at 9:08
















              • Yes I used to temperatures like 27°C to 30°C normally.
                – user2473015
                Jun 20 '17 at 19:08










              • Advice to walk about Amsterdam in your vest and pants may be misconstrued in some parts of the anglosphere. Most Dutch are pretty liberal-minded but you may feel cold.
                – RedGrittyBrick
                Jun 21 '17 at 9:08















              Yes I used to temperatures like 27°C to 30°C normally.
              – user2473015
              Jun 20 '17 at 19:08




              Yes I used to temperatures like 27°C to 30°C normally.
              – user2473015
              Jun 20 '17 at 19:08












              Advice to walk about Amsterdam in your vest and pants may be misconstrued in some parts of the anglosphere. Most Dutch are pretty liberal-minded but you may feel cold.
              – RedGrittyBrick
              Jun 21 '17 at 9:08




              Advice to walk about Amsterdam in your vest and pants may be misconstrued in some parts of the anglosphere. Most Dutch are pretty liberal-minded but you may feel cold.
              – RedGrittyBrick
              Jun 21 '17 at 9:08










              up vote
              1
              down vote













              You should wear clothes. But, even that is not a definite.



              You should already be able to get an idea of the weather in late June, now, by looking at the forecast.



              That said, Dutch weather is a tad unpredictable. In June, it can be 35 degrees celsius during the day and under 10 degrees at night. Check out the climate chart on the Wikipedia page for the Netherlands.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                You should wear clothes. But, even that is not a definite.



                You should already be able to get an idea of the weather in late June, now, by looking at the forecast.



                That said, Dutch weather is a tad unpredictable. In June, it can be 35 degrees celsius during the day and under 10 degrees at night. Check out the climate chart on the Wikipedia page for the Netherlands.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  You should wear clothes. But, even that is not a definite.



                  You should already be able to get an idea of the weather in late June, now, by looking at the forecast.



                  That said, Dutch weather is a tad unpredictable. In June, it can be 35 degrees celsius during the day and under 10 degrees at night. Check out the climate chart on the Wikipedia page for the Netherlands.






                  share|improve this answer












                  You should wear clothes. But, even that is not a definite.



                  You should already be able to get an idea of the weather in late June, now, by looking at the forecast.



                  That said, Dutch weather is a tad unpredictable. In June, it can be 35 degrees celsius during the day and under 10 degrees at night. Check out the climate chart on the Wikipedia page for the Netherlands.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jun 20 '17 at 15:00









                  MastaBaba

                  19k4877




                  19k4877













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