400-year-old coffee shop set to close thanks to overtourism and and rising rents still has drop of hope
It will soon be serving its last drop.
A 400-year-old tea and coffee shop is slated to shut its doors this month.
The spot in Amsterdam, called ‘t Zonnetje, which means “little sun” in Dutch, said rising rents and gentrification caused by overtourism were prompting the closure — even though the owner hopes to save the business.
Amsterdam, which is about to celebrate its 750th anniversary, has been grappling with preserving the country’s history while welcoming an influx of tourists.
But the tourists frequent chain coffeehouses, ones they’ve seen on TikTok or others that specialize in marijuana, not independently owned shops like ‘t Zonnetje.
The shop stands in a building dating back to 1642 on the Haarlemmerdijk, a popular shopping street located in the city center filled with more than 230 independent stores.
Its owner, Marie-Louise Velder, who has been at the helm since 1999, said she’s received an outpouring of support after the closure was announced in a Dutch newspaper in mid-April.
The 76-year-old shopkeeper hopes to spread the story to avoid the demise of her beloved business.
“I had a lot of phone calls, and so I think perhaps help is coming from above,” Velder told CNN Travel. “That’s what I hope.
The shop grew from its humble beginnings of “a bucket of coal, and a bucket of water and herbs,” Velder continued. “And then later on, the tea came … And then later the coffee.”

The ambience at ‘t Zonnetje makes guests feel as though they have stepped into the past.
Its wooden floors are original and its shelves are filled with old tins of loose-leaf tea and spices.
The store offers 15 types of coffee, with beans are sourced from around the world and weighed on a vintage Berkel scale.
Longtime customers are crushed by the news.
“It is a heritage site, the building itself, the history behind it, the street,” Kate Carlisle told the outlet.
“So I’m really hoping that something can happen to start to protect this. Otherwise, it’s just going to be like strip malls. And that’s not what Amsterdam is about. That’s not why people come here.”
Its employees are equally saddened to see it go.
“It is more than a shop — it also has a very important social role,” Nathalie Teton, who has worked at ‘t Zonnetje on and off since 2021, told the outlet.
“There were a lot of people also living alone coming here, having a cup of tea and coffee, talking with Marie-Louise. You will hear all the gossip, who is sleeping with who, and also old stories, because there were also a lot of senior people coming in … Of course, there are other tea and coffee shops in Amsterdam. But they are more mainstream. This one is really unique.”