Three ways to pay, one moment to pay them, and a pricing structure with no asterisks. The full money picture, so the booking chat never has to discuss it.
Money is the least interesting part of a massage and we have structured it accordingly: fixed prices published in advance, payment in one moment at the start, three methods, and nothing — no deposit, no booking fee, no travel charge inside the ring, no night surcharge — added anywhere along the way. This guide exists so that every payment question a hotel guest might form at 23:00 is answered before the WhatsApp message is sent, because the booking conversation has better things to do than arithmetic.
The entire price list: €180 for one hour, €360 for two hours, €540 for three hours, €1,250 for an overnight of eight hours. Sessions with two therapists — four-hand work on one person, or a couples booking side by side — are €360 per hour. For the rare and splendid larger arrangements, a weekend block starts from €2,500 and a travel companion from €3,000 per day, both arranged individually in the thread. Those numbers are the same at 04:00 as at 16:00, the same on King's Day as on a wet Tuesday, and the same in every hotel and apartment inside the Amsterdam ring. Schiphol and destinations outside the ring are served by arrangement, with travel agreed in the chat before anyone moves — so in every case, the figure you confirm on WhatsApp is the figure at the door.
On arrival, at the start. Your therapist will settle payment in the first minutes, before the session begins — a deliberate and universal practice with a simple logic: once the money is done, it is gone from the room, and the hour that follows contains no commerce, no mental meter running, and no end-of-evening transaction to puncture the calm. There are no deposits or prepayments for standard bookings; you pay nothing until a therapist is standing in your room. This also means cancelling or moving a booking costs nothing — we ask only the courtesy of a timely message.
Cash remains the most chosen method, and the policy is broader than visitors expect: euros are standard, but any major currency is accepted — US dollars, pounds, Swiss francs and their peers — at sensible conversion, agreed in the chat if you want it pinned down beforehand. This is a genuine convenience for the just-landed: the guest who arrives at midnight with a wallet full of dollars and no Dutch cash does not need to find an ATM before booking. Two practical notes. First, hotel-room ATMs do not exist and canal-side ones can be a walk, so if you intend to pay cash, the airport or the afternoon is the time to think of it. Second, larger notes are fine; your therapist arrives able to make reasonable change, though exact-ish amounts are always the smoothest version of the moment.
Card payment works at the door — the therapist carries what she needs to take a card on arrival, and the major networks pose no problem. It is the right method for the guest who stopped carrying cash in 2019 and is not restarting for a massage. One discretion note that card users care about: the booking does not touch your hotel folio — this is a direct payment to the service, not a room charge — so nothing about the evening appears on the bill your company or travel agent sees. If the statement descriptor on your own card matters to you, ask in the chat before booking and you will get a straight answer about what appears.
Crypto is accepted and has a small, devoted constituency — partly enthusiasts, mostly people for whom payment privacy is the point. A crypto payment generates no card statement, no currency exchange record and no paper of any kind: the transaction exists between two wallets and nowhere else, which makes it the maximal-discretion option in a service already built on discretion. Mechanics: say crypto in the booking thread and the details are arranged there — which assets are current, the address, and the rate, all settled before arrival so the session starts as frictionlessly as a cash one. Confirm the transfer before or at arrival as agreed; the chain is not fast at flattering moments, so initiating it a little ahead of the knock keeps the first five minutes serene.
A short anti-list, since payment pages usually hide their caveats here — this one has none to hide. There is no charging to the hotel room: the service is independent of your hotel and never appears on its systems, which most guests consider a feature. There are no invoices or expense receipts: a discreet service does not generate paperwork, and we decline this weekly with the same apology. There is no surge pricing, no weekend rate, no holiday rate, no after-midnight rate. There is no tipping line item — gratuities exist, are entirely optional, and are covered honestly in our tipping guide. And there is no negotiation at the door, in either direction: the published price is the price, which is precisely what lets the door moment take thirty seconds.
Decide your method when you book; mention it in the thread if it is card or crypto so your therapist arrives prepared. Have the agreed amount ready at the start — notes on the desk, card in hand, or transfer initiated. Watch it take half a minute. Then forget money exists for an hour, which was the entire design goal of everything above.
At the start, on arrival. Settling payment in the first minutes is universal practice: it removes money from the room so the session itself contains no commerce. There are no deposits — you pay nothing until your therapist is at your door.
Yes — cash is accepted in any major currency at sensible conversion, which is a genuine convenience if you've just landed without euros. If you want the conversion pinned down beforehand, ask in the WhatsApp thread.
Never — this is a direct payment to the service, not a room charge, and nothing touches the hotel folio. If the descriptor on your own card statement matters to you, ask in the chat before booking for a straight answer.
Privacy, mostly — a crypto payment leaves no card statement, no exchange record and no paperwork at all. Arrange it in the booking thread (current assets, address, rate) and initiate the transfer just before arrival so the session starts without friction.
Inside the Amsterdam ring, none: no travel fee, no booking fee, no night or weekend surcharge — €180 per hour is complete. Schiphol and out-of-ring destinations involve travel arranged and agreed in the chat before anyone moves, so the confirmed figure is always final.