The Netherlands is the world’s cycling capital, and The Hague is no exception. With over 500 kilometers of dedicated bike paths, getting around on two wheels is often the fastest and most enjoyable way to explore the city. Here’s your essential guide.
1. Understanding the Bike Lane System
Red asphalt lanes are your friends. These are dedicated fietspaden (bike paths) separated from car traffic. White dashed lines on roads indicate shared lanes. Always stay to the right, pass on the left, and use hand signals when turning.
2. Where to Rent or Buy a Bike
For short stays, Swapfiets offers monthly bike subscriptions from €16.50/month with free repairs. For daily rentals, Haagsche Stadsfiets near Centraal Station charges about €12/day. Looking to buy? Check out used bikes at Grote Markt bike shops — expect to pay €80-200 for a decent second-hand omafiets.
3. Parking Your Bike
The Hague has several massive underground bike garages, most notably the one under Centraal Station (free for the first 24 hours). Never park your bike outside designated racks in the city center — it will be removed by the municipality, and retrieval costs €25.
4. Traffic Rules You Must Know
Cyclists have strong legal protections, but you must follow the rules. Red lights apply to you too — fines for running them are €95. Right of way: yield to traffic from the right at unmarked intersections. And yes, you can cycle after a beer, but the legal blood alcohol limit is 0.5‰ (same as driving).
5. Lock It or Lose It
Bike theft is real. Always use two locks: a ring lock on the rear wheel and a chain lock to secure the frame to something immovable. Never rely on just the built-in lock.
6. Cycling to the Beach
The ride from the city center to Scheveningen takes about 20-30 minutes. Take the dedicated path through the Westbroekpark for the most scenic route. There’s ample bike parking at the beach.
7. Weather Preparedness
This is the Netherlands — it rains. A lot. Invest in a good rain poncho or accept that you’ll get wet. Dutch cyclists are famously unfazed by drizzle. In winter, bike lights are mandatory after dark (fine: €55 for no lights).
8. Electric Bikes (E-Bikes)
E-bikes are everywhere in 2026. They’re great for longer commutes or if you’re not in Tour de France shape. Rent one from Donkey Republic via their app for around €20/day. Just be mindful of speed — e-bikes can surprise pedestrians.
Happy cycling! Remember: fietsen is gezond — cycling is healthy!






