
Voyspark · Routes · France → Netherlands
Paris → Amsterdam.
Paris to Amsterdam in 1h20 by air — or direct by Thalys train.
Paris to Amsterdam is one of Western Europe's most consistent short-haul routes: three carriers split the market, direct flights clock in at 1h20, and fares range from € 100 on a genuine sale to over € 250 at peak. Knowing when to buy is the difference between the floor and the ceiling.
Competition keeps deals alive year-round. Travelers who shift dates by ±3 days and book 60+ days out consistently pay 25–40% below the average fare. This guide covers the full price calendar, every airline operating the route, and the hacks that cut up to 60% off the rack rate.
Ready to find your flight?
We compare dozens of airlines and live offers via Aviasales. No markup — you pay the best available price.
When to fly.
We blend historical average price, climate, crowding and seasonal events. Green = good, gold = great, red = avoid.
€ 250
Peak season — prices surge
€ 150
Middling fares, unpredictable weather
€ 150
Worth booking early for a solid deal
€ 100
Ideal balance of supply and demand
€ 100
Best value window of the year
€ 100
Fares at historic lows
€ 250
Summer holidays push fares 2–3x above floor
€ 250
Book 6 months out or reconsider your dates
€ 100
Best value window of the year
€ 100
Fares at historic lows
€ 150
Worth booking early for a solid deal
€ 250
Book 6 months out or reconsider your dates
Voyspark AI suggests: Best months for this route are abril, maio, junho, setembro, outubro. Buy 60–90 days in advance, prefer Tuesdays and Wednesdays, and enable price alerts.
Airlines flying this route.
Honest analysis — no advertising, no courtesy. What works, what doesn’t.
01
Air France
1h20 direct · € 100–€ 200
✓ Solid inflight quality
✓ Flying Blue earns well on European routes
✓ CDG well-connected for onward travel
⚠ Strikes are a real risk — check before booking
⚠ Fares tend to run higher
⚠ Tight economy cabin
02
KLM
1h20 direct · € 100–€ 200
✓ Schiphol is an efficient hub
✓ Flying Blue is a strong loyalty program
✓ Above-average on-time record
⚠ Often pricier than alternative routings
⚠ Hub gets congested in peak season
⚠ Fewer off-peak departures
03
easyJet
1h20 direct · € 100–€ 200
✓ Main airports, not secondary ones
✓ Competitive base fares
✓ Clean app and hassle-free check-in
⚠ Checked baggage fees apply
⚠ Tight legroom
⚠ Delays common at peak season
How much.
Real ranges based on 24 months of history. No lies, no optimistic promise.
Real deal
€ 100–€ 100
Book 90+ days out, off-peak season, flexible on Tuesday or Wednesday travel.
Fair price
€ 100–€ 150
Standard 30–60 day booking window, low or shoulder season.
High price
€ 150–€ 200
Last-minute purchase or early high season.
Peak fare
€ 200–€ 300
School holidays, public holidays, seasonal peak. Book 6 months out or postpone.
Money-saving hacks.
Real strategies used by nomads, frequent flyers and travel hackers. No magic — just careful reading of rules.
01
Compare low-cost vs full-service on this route
On short European hops, easyJet almost always undercuts on base fare. But factor in checked bag fees, departure times, and peak-season delay risk. Run the total cost before buying — the gap narrows fast once you add one or two extras.
02
Take the Thalys train when it makes sense
Paris–Amsterdam by Thalys takes 3h20 but delivers you from city center to city center, no security lines, no baggage claim. Cost: € 50–120 booked ahead. For many travelers the experience is worth the extra time.
03
Redeem Flying Blue or Miles&More
Flying Blue is the Air France/KLM program and works efficiently on this corridor. Award tickets Paris–Amsterdam run 10,000–15,000 points. Accumulate via an international credit card and redeem whenever cash fares climb above € 100.
04
Consider FlixBus for budget trips
FlixBus connects Paris to Amsterdam for € 15–40 in 5–6 hours. It doesn't compete on speed, but for flexible travelers on a tight budget it's a genuine alternative.
Complete route guide.
The Paris–Amsterdam route links CDG to AMS, one of the most stable origin-destination pairs in Western European aviation. Regular direct services take about 1h20. Airlines operating the route: Air France, KLM, easyJet.
On timing: the best months to fly are April, May, June, September, and October — below-average fares, reasonable weather at the destination, and competitive supply. The worst are July, August, December, and January, when summer holidays and school breaks push prices up to 2.5x the floor. Shifting dates by ±3 days saves 25–35% on average.
On booking windows: aim for 60–90 days out in low or shoulder season, 120–180 days for high season. Last-minute purchases under 14 days rarely pay off — except for occasional error fares surfaced by deal trackers. Set alerts on Google Flights, Skyscanner, and Hopper.
On carrier choice: each airline has its own pricing profile, loyalty program, and service standard. Air France leads in frequency and cabin quality. KLM offers a codeshare alternative with a highly efficient hub at Schiphol. easyJet undercuts on specific date windows. Always compare — the spread between operators can reach 40% on the same departure date.
On miles: a 1h20 flight earns meaningful points in any frequent-flyer program. Flying Blue and Miles&More are most relevant for European travelers on this route. Award redemptions typically land at 30–70% of the cash fare — worth playing long-term for anyone who transfers points through a credit card.
On the flight itself: 1h20 is short but still worth a few minutes of preparation. Hydrate before boarding, bring noise-canceling headphones, and upgrade your seat if you can (exit row, bulkhead, or premium economy). Evening departures mean an early arrival the next morning with a full day at the destination.
Voyspark curation · data updated monthly by the Wing team.
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