Living in Koningin Wilhelminaplein
Koningin Wilhelminaplein is densely built and genuinely urban, and this is apartment territory: only about 1 in 100 homes is a house.
With 12,109 residents per km², you will know your streets are alive — and so will your ears; visit on a Friday evening before you commit.
Amsterdam is the tightest housing market in the Netherlands: international workers, students and families chase the same limited stock, overbidding is routine in popular price bands, and a large social-housing sector keeps much of the city permanently off the open market. Where a buurt sits relative to the ring road (A10) and a metro or tram line explains a surprising share of its price.
The housing market in Koningin Wilhelminaplein
At €468,000 average WOZ value, Koningin Wilhelminaplein ranks 268 out of 424 Amsterdam neighborhoods on price — 8% below the city median, leaving room in the budget that pricier neighborhoods would swallow. For scale: Amsterdam's cheapest buurt averages €58,000 and its most expensive €2,250,000, so Koningin Wilhelminaplein sits in the middle band of the city.
Average WOZ value per year (CBS). The reference date lags the current market by ±1 year.
The direction of the market: between 2023 and 2025 the average WOZ value here rose from €468,000 to €486,000, up 4% — roughly in step with the rest of the city. WOZ values lag the market by about a year, but the trend itself is reliable.
Only about 1 in 5 homes here is owner-occupied (2% is social housing) — supply on Funda is structurally thin, which concentrates bidding on the few listings that appear. If you find a home here you like, being prepared (financing check done, valuation lined up) is worth more than in neighborhoods where something new lists every week.
Who lives here
Demographically, Koningin Wilhelminaplein is a young-adult neighborhood — the 25-to-45 group outnumbers everyone else (65% of its 2,975 residents), followed by 45-to-65 year olds at 12%. Households split into 53% singles and 13% families with children — a real mix rather than one lifestyle. The average household counts 1.6 people.
As for who your neighbors would be: this is a neighborhood of contrasts — 30% of households sit in the lower national income bracket, yet the average income per resident is €52,000 a year. Social housing and expensive owner-occupied homes stand side by side here, which is common in Dutch inner cities.
Daily errands, coffee and dinner
Day to day: the nearest large supermarket is about 10 minutes' walk; there are about 16 cafés and restaurants within walking distance — enough choice without the crowds.
The practical checklist most buyers forget to make: pharmacy 10 min walk · GP 11 min · hospital 2.2 km · library 1.9 km · 5 cinemas within 5 km. None of these will decide a purchase on their own, but a GP taking new patients nearby is the kind of thing you only miss after moving.
Families and schools
For families: the nearest primary school is 11 minutes on foot; daycare is well covered (7 locations nearby) — though Dutch waiting lists mean you register the week you know you're expecting, not the week you need it; secondary school is a 3-minute bike ride, which Dutch teenagers do in all weather.
Getting around
Getting around: the station is a 5-minute cycle, standard Dutch commuting range; a highway on-ramp 1.1 km away makes car trips easy — check whether through-traffic noise reaches the street you're considering; and at 0.3 cars per household, most residents simply don't own one — if you do, factor in permit costs and waiting lists before you buy.
Energy and running costs
60% of homes were built before 2000. Two identical-looking houses on the same street can differ by hundreds of euros a month once heating is counted — the energy label tells you which one you're looking at, and lenders increasingly price it into your mortgage too.
Before you bid in Koningin Wilhelminaplein
Before you bid in Koningin Wilhelminaplein: listings are scarce here, which pushes bidding above asking more often — decide your maximum before the viewing, not during it.
None of these averages can tell you whether the specific house you found is fairly priced — that depends on its size, energy label, state of maintenance and the recent sales around it. That is exactly what a free HomeReview report checks, in about 10 seconds, for any Dutch address.
Frequently asked questions
Is Koningin Wilhelminaplein a good neighborhood to live in?
That depends on what you're looking for. Koningin Wilhelminaplein has no single strong profile — it scores mid-range for most buyer types. The average home value is €468,000 (8% below the Amsterdam median) and the neighborhood has 2,975 residents. Ultimately the specific street and home matter more than the neighborhood average.
What is the average home value in Koningin Wilhelminaplein?
The average home value (WOZ waarde) in Koningin Wilhelminaplein, Amsterdam is €468,000, based on the official CBS neighborhood statistics.
Is Koningin Wilhelminaplein mostly owner-occupied or rental?
22% of homes in Koningin Wilhelminaplein are owner-occupied and 78% are rentals, of which 2% of all homes are social housing (woningcorporatie).
Are house prices in Koningin Wilhelminaplein rising?
Between 2023 and 2025 the average WOZ value in Koningin Wilhelminaplein rose from €468,000 to €486,000 (+4%); Amsterdam as a whole moved up 0% over the same period. WOZ values lag the current market by about a year.
How old are the homes in Koningin Wilhelminaplein?
60% of homes in Koningin Wilhelminaplein were built before 2000 and 40% after. Older buildings can mean higher maintenance and energy costs — check the energy label before bidding.
How far is the nearest train station from Koningin Wilhelminaplein?
The average distance to a train station from Koningin Wilhelminaplein is 1.3 km; a large supermarket is 0.8 km away on average.
Is Koningin Wilhelminaplein an expensive part of Amsterdam?
It sits close to the Amsterdam median: neither a premium neighborhood nor a bargain area.
Is Koningin Wilhelminaplein good for families with children?
The nearest primary school is 0.9 km away and there are 7 daycare locations within a kilometer. 13% of households here have children at home.
Similar neighborhoods in Amsterdam
Closest in price — worth a look if Koningin Wilhelminaplein is out of reach or you want alternatives.
Source: CBS Kerncijfers wijken en buurten (buurt BU0363FP02) · Data updated 2026-07-11. WOZ values are neighborhood averages; individual homes vary.