Most services that advertise 24 hours mean until the phone stops being answered. We mean the clock face: a staffed roster through the night, the same therapists, the same arrival times, and the same rate at 4am as at 4pm.
Plenty of operators in this city print 24/7 on a website that goes quiet at two in the morning. Ours is a different claim and we make it carefully: the WhatsApp line is answered around the clock by a coordinator who is awake, not on call; the roster of forty-five is scheduled in shifts so that therapists are working — not woken — at every hour; and dispatch at five in the morning follows the same mechanics as dispatch at five in the afternoon. We built the operation this way because Amsterdam's nights are a genuine market, not an afterthought, and an afterthought is exactly what a sleepy service feels like from the client's side.
Three groups, reliably. The jet-lagged: long-haul arrivals whose bodies insist it is mid-afternoon, lying awake in a hotel room with hours to burn — for them a 3am session is not eccentric, it is correctly timed. The night's natural ending: guests back from dinner, bars, the casino or a club, who want the evening to close somewhere better than a minibar. And the city's own nocturnal residents — shift workers, performers, people whose days simply run on a later track. None of them is an edge case to us. Between midnight and six is not our quiet shift; some weeks it is the busy one.
Night dispatch is, if anything, faster than day dispatch. The streets are empty, the trams have stopped competing for the road, and a therapist crossing the city at 4am does it in less time than the same journey at 4pm. The twenty-to-thirty-minute arrival window holds through the night anywhere in central Amsterdam, and confirmation still comes back in about ten minutes because the coordinator answering you is actually awake. The only hour-dependent variable is which therapists are on shift — the roster is deep enough that the choice at night remains a real choice.
Every hotel in Amsterdam runs a night desk, and night desks are the least curious creatures in hospitality: their working life is an unbroken sequence of late arrivals, and a therapist in everyday clothes is simply another one. She moves through a sleeping building quietly — it is her workplace etiquette as much as her discretion — and the session itself is naturally suited to the hour: oil-based work is nearly silent. At apartments and short-stays the night logistics are even simpler: your door, her knock, kept soft. Many clients sleep within minutes of a late session ending; the format is designed to make that seamless, and the therapist's exit is as quiet as her arrival.
The night-rate surcharge is a convention we have simply declined to adopt. €180 for the hour, €360 for two, €540 for three, €1,250 for the overnight — those numbers hold at noon, at midnight, at four in the morning, on weekends and on public holidays. No multipliers, no premiums, no quiet adjustment for the inconvenience of the hour, because the hour is not an inconvenience: it is the shift we staffed for. The rate you see is the rate you pay, whenever you happen to be reading this.
WhatsApp +31 651 696 659 — answered around the clock, confirmed in about ten minutes. Send the area or hotel, the session you want, the duration, and the time, even if the time is now. Especially if the time is now.
| 1 hour | €180 |
| 2 hours | €360 |
| 3 hours | €540 |
| Overnight (8h) | €1250 |
Cash in any major currency at the day's exchange rate · card · cryptocurrency. No travel surcharge inside the ring road.