TripPick Belgium Belgium

Grand Belgium 7-Day — Brussels, Bruges, Ghent, Antwerp & More

Brussels in depth + Bruges + Ghent + Antwerp + an Art Nouveau / Waterloo day + a slow final day

Seven days does Belgium thoroughly from a Brussels base. Days 1-2 cover Brussels; Days 3-5 are day trips to Bruges, Ghent, and Antwerp; Day 6 digs into Brussels' Art Nouveau, comics, and a Waterloo battlefield option; Day 7 is a slow final morning and departure. All day trips are easy independent train rides. Pre-book the Atomium and the Ghent Altarpiece; pack a rain jacket and comfortable cobblestone shoes. It's the relaxed, complete way to see Belgium's small but rich core.

A full week is enough to actually understand Brussels. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$575

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,200

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$2,520

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Grand-Place + Manneken Pis + Galeries + Sablon + chocolate & beer

Grand-Place (UNESCO) - Manneken Pis - Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert - Sablon - chocolate & Belgian beer

Activities

  1. 09:30 Grand-Place — UNESCO guild-house square 1h

    Start in the Grand-Place (Grote Markt), Brussels' UNESCO-listed central square ringed by gilded 17th-century guild houses, the Gothic Town Hall (96m spire), and the King's House / Bread House (city museum). Free and always open, it's at its best in the morning light before the crowds build.

    Cost: Free (City Museum ~€10) TIP: Go early for photos before the square fills. Most guild houses were rebuilt after the 1695 French bombardment. The Town Hall and the City Museum (Maison du Roi) can be visited if you want to go inside. Come back at night when it's lit up.
  2. 10:30 Manneken Pis + comic murals 1h

    Walk a few minutes to Manneken Pis, the tiny (60cm) bronze peeing-boy fountain from 1619 — Brussels' cheeky symbol, often dressed in costume. Then follow a couple of the painted comic-strip murals (Tintin and others) that dot the surrounding streets on the free self-guided Comic Book Route.

    Cost: Free (costume museum ~€5) TIP: Manage expectations — he's small and easy to miss; the fun is the in-joke and the costumes (1,000+ shown at the nearby GardeRobe museum). Look out for his 'siblings' Jeanneke Pis and the dog Het Zinneke nearby. The comic murals are a free, fun detour.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — frites or a brasserie classic 1h30

    Lunch on something quintessentially Belgian — a cone of frites from a friterie (Fritland near the Bourse is central), or a sit-down brasserie plate of carbonnade flamande or shrimp croquettes near the Grand-Place.

    Cost: €8-25 per person TIP: For frites, order 'avec' (with a sauce — mayo, andalouse, or samouraï). If you want a sit-down meal, Nüetnigenough near the Grand-Place does an excellent carbonnade but is tiny and busy. Save the famous moules-frites for dinner.
  4. 14:30 Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert + chocolate 1h30

    Stroll the Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert (1847), one of Europe's oldest covered shopping arcades — a glass-roofed gallery of chocolatiers, cafés, and boutiques. Visit Neuhaus here, where the filled praline was invented in 1912, and browse the other chocolate shops.

    Cost: Free (chocolate extra) TIP: The arcade is beautiful and sheltered — ideal in the frequent Brussels rain. Neuhaus's original boutique is here; buy a mixed praline ballotin. Mokafé under the glass roof is a classic spot for a waffle-and-coffee break.
  5. 16:30 The Sablon — chocolate, antiques & church 1h30

    Head uptown to the Sablon, an elegant neighborhood built around the Grand Sablon square, home to artisan chocolatiers (Pierre Marcolini's flagship, Wittamer since 1910), antique dealers, and the lovely Gothic church of Notre-Dame du Sablon.

    Cost: Free (chocolate extra) TIP: This is where to taste artisan Belgian chocolate — buy a small box rather than bulk. There's an antiques market on the square at weekends. Notre-Dame du Sablon's stained glass is worth a look. A short uphill walk or tram from the lower town.
  6. 19:30 Dinner — moules-frites + Belgian beer 2h30

    Dinner on the city's signature dish — a big pot of moules-frites — followed by Belgian beer. Chez Léon (since 1893) near the Grand-Place is the classic; Le Pré Salé in Sainte-Catherine is more local. Finish at a beer bar like À la Mort Subite (traditional lambic) or the lively Delirium Café.

    Cost: €25-45 per person TIP: Mussels are at their best September-April. Be wary of the cheap moules touts on the touristy Rue des Bouchers. For beer, try a Belgian style you can't get at home — a Trappist ale or a sour gueuze. Each beer comes in its own glass.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel or café breakfast

Lower town · €5-12

Coffee and a pastry, or a waffle at Maison Dandoy near the Grand-Place.

Lunch

Frites (Fritland) or Nüetnigenough

Near the Grand-Place · €8-25

A cone of frites 'avec', or carbonnade flamande at a brasserie.

Dinner

Chez Léon or Le Pré Salé + beer bar

Rue des Bouchers / Sainte-Catherine · €25-45

Moules-frites, then Belgian beer at À la Mort Subite or Delirium.

Transit:

Everything today is walkable in the compact center — the Grand-Place, Manneken Pis, the Galeries, and the Sablon are all within a short walk (the Sablon is a gentle uphill). No transit needed.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $75 Mid $160 Luxury $350
DAY 2

Atomium + Mini-Europe + Magritte Museum + EU quarter

Atomium - Mini-Europe - Magritte Museum - Mont des Arts - EU quarter (Parlamentarium)

Activities

  1. 09:30 Atomium — 1958 World's Fair icon 2h

    Take Metro line 6 out to Heysel/Heizel for the Atomium, the 102m sculpture of an iron crystal magnified 165 billion times, built for the 1958 World's Fair. Ride up through its spheres to the panoramic top, with exhibition spaces inside (about €16).

    Cost: ~€16 (combo with Mini-Europe ~€30) TIP: Pre-book online to skip the queue. It's a deliberate trip out to the Heysel area, not a city-center stroll — combine it with Mini-Europe next door. Metro line 6 to Heysel/Heizel runs straight there. The top sphere has the city view.
  2. 11:30 Mini-Europe (optional, great for families) 1h30

    Next to the Atomium, Mini-Europe displays 350+ European monuments at 1:25 scale — the Eiffel Tower, Big Ben, Venice canals, and more. A fun, walkable park, especially good with children, and bookable on a combo ticket with the Atomium.

    Cost: Combo with Atomium ~€30 TIP: Best for families and architecture fans; skip it if you're short on time or travelling without kids. The Atomium combo ticket saves money over separate entries. Allow about 1.5 hours to walk the park.
  3. 14:00 Lunch + Mont des Arts viewpoint 1h30

    Head back toward the center and lunch near the Mont des Arts, the landscaped hillside garden with one of the best free views over the lower town and the Town Hall spire. A scenic spot between the upper and lower town.

    Cost: €12-25 per person TIP: The Mont des Arts terrace is a free, classic Brussels photo viewpoint. It sits between the Royal Palace area and the lower town, near the museums for the afternoon. Plenty of cafés and the Royal Library area nearby for lunch.
  4. 15:30 Magritte Museum — surrealism 1h30

    Visit the Magritte Museum on the Place Royale, home to the world's largest collection of works by the Belgian surrealist René Magritte — the bowler hats, pipes, and dreamlike paintings (about €15). Part of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts complex.

    Cost: ~€15 TIP: Buy a combined ticket if you also want the Royal Museums of Fine Arts (Old Masters, Bruegel, Rubens) next door. Museums in Brussels often close on Mondays — check the day. A great rainy-afternoon plan.
  5. 18:00 EU quarter — Parlamentarium & Cinquantenaire 1h30

    Finish in the EU quarter: the free Parlamentarium (the European Parliament's visitor center) and the House of European History explain how the EU works, and the nearby Jubelpark/Cinquantenaire has a grand triumphal arch and museums.

    Cost: Free (Parlamentarium & House of European History) TIP: Both EU visitor centers are free and modern; check closing times, as they shut earlier than nightlife. A free guided tour of the Parliament can be booked online in advance. The Cinquantenaire arch is a good final photo. Maison Antoine frites are nearby on Place Jourdan.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café breakfast

Center · €5-12

A quick coffee and pastry before the metro to the Atomium.

Lunch

Mont des Arts area café

Mont des Arts / Royale · €12-25

A relaxed lunch with a view over the lower town.

Dinner

Maison Antoine frites or an Ixelles bistro

Place Jourdan / Ixelles · €8-30

Famous frites on Place Jourdan, or a bistro dinner in lively Ixelles.

Transit:

Metro line 6 to Heysel/Heizel for the Atomium and back; the rest is walkable or one or two short metro/tram hops. A 24-hour STIB/MIVB pass (~€8) covers the day's transit.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $80 Mid $170 Luxury $360
DAY 3

Bruges day trip — medieval canals

Train to Bruges - Markt & Belfry - canals & Begijnhof - Flemish art - return to Brussels

Activities

  1. 08:30 Train to Bruges 1h

    From Brussels-Central or Brussels-Midi, take the train to Bruges (about 1 hour, several times an hour, ~€15-30 round trip). One of Europe's best-preserved medieval towns and the classic Brussels day trip.

    Cost: ~€15-30 round trip TIP: No reservation needed for domestic Belgian trains — just buy a ticket and go. Look at the weekend return discount if it's a weekend. Bruges station is a 15-20 minute walk (or short bus) from the historic center.
  2. 10:00 Markt square + Belfry climb 1h30

    Start in the Markt, Bruges' central square ringed by stepped-gable guild houses, dominated by the medieval Belfry (Belfort). Climb its 366 steps for a sweeping view over the red-roofed town (small fee).

    Cost: Belfry ~€15 TIP: Go to the Belfry early to beat the queue — entry is timed and capacity-limited. The 366-step climb is steep and narrow. The Markt and the nearby Burg square are the historic heart. Horse-carriage rides start here if you want one.
  3. 12:00 Canals + Begijnhof + lunch 2h30

    Wander the canals that give Bruges its 'Venice of the North' nickname, take an optional canal boat (~€12), and visit the peaceful Begijnhof (a former beguine community) and the Minnewater 'Lake of Love'. Lunch on Flemish fare or, of course, more moules-frites.

    Cost: Boat ~€12 + lunch €15-30 TIP: A canal boat is the classic Bruges thing to do, weather permitting. The Begijnhof and Minnewater are a quieter, prettier corner away from the central crowds. Bruges has its own excellent chocolate and beer scene — try a local brew.
  4. 15:00 Flemish art — Groeninge or Basilica 1h30

    See Bruges' art and history: the Groeninge Museum (Flemish Primitives — Van Eyck, Memling) or the Basilica of the Holy Blood on the Burg square. Then wander the cobbled lanes and bridges for the postcard views.

    Cost: Museum ~€14 / Basilica small fee TIP: The Groeninge holds masterpieces of early Flemish painting if you like art; otherwise just wandering Bruges is a pleasure. Late afternoon, once the coach day-trippers thin, is the most atmospheric time. Watch the time for your return train.
  5. 18:00 Return train to Brussels + farewell dinner 2h30

    Take the 1-hour train back to Brussels for a final evening — a last Belgian beer, a waffle, or a relaxed dinner in the lower town or Sainte-Catherine.

    Cost: Train included + dinner €20-40 TIP: Confirm your return train time before settling into the afternoon — services run several times an hour but check the last convenient one. Back in Brussels, the Grand-Place lit up at night is a fitting send-off.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Quick café or station breakfast

Brussels-Central · €4-10

Coffee and a pastry before the early train.

Lunch

Bruges brasserie

Bruges center · €15-30

Flemish stew or moules-frites by the canals.

Dinner

Brussels farewell dinner

Sainte-Catherine / lower town · €20-40

A final Belgian meal and beer back in Brussels.

Transit:

Train Brussels ↔ Bruges, about 1 hour each way (~€15-30 round trip, several times an hour, no reservation needed). On foot within Bruges (15-20 min from the station to the center).

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $85 Mid $175 Luxury $360
DAY 4

Ghent day trip — castle, canals & the Ghent Altarpiece

Train to Ghent - Gravensteen castle - Graslei waterfront - St Bavo's & the Ghent Altarpiece - return

Activities

  1. 09:00 Train to Ghent 45min

    From Brussels, take the train to Ghent (about 30 minutes, several times an hour, ~€15-25 round trip). A larger, more lived-in medieval city than Bruges, and many travelers' favorite for being beautiful but less touristy.

    Cost: ~€15-25 round trip TIP: No reservation needed — just buy a ticket. Ghent's main station (Gent-Sint-Pieters) is a short tram ride or 25-minute walk from the historic center; the tram is easy and signposted.
  2. 10:00 Gravensteen castle 1h30

    Visit Gravensteen, the moated medieval Castle of the Counts in the heart of Ghent — ramparts, towers, and city views, with a famously witty audio guide. A rare intact medieval fortress right in the city center.

    Cost: ~€13 TIP: The audio tour is genuinely entertaining and worth doing. The ramparts give a great view over Ghent's rooftops and spires. Go in the morning before it gets busy.
  3. 12:00 Graslei waterfront + lunch 2h

    Stroll the Graslei and Korenlei, the photogenic medieval guild-house quays along the Leie river — the most beautiful spot in Ghent — and lunch at a waterfront café or browse the surrounding lanes.

    Cost: Lunch €15-30 TIP: The Graslei is the postcard view of Ghent, lovely day or evening. A canal boat from here is an easy way to see the city from the water. Plenty of lunch options along and just off the quays.
  4. 15:00 St Bavo's Cathedral + the Ghent Altarpiece 1h30

    See St Bavo's Cathedral, home to the Ghent Altarpiece ('The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb') by the Van Eyck brothers — one of the most important paintings in Western art, recently restored.

    Cost: Altarpiece visit ~€12-16 TIP: Book the Altarpiece (Mystic Lamb) visit ahead in peak season — it's a major artwork with timed entry and an augmented-reality element. Allow time for the cathedral itself. A highlight for art lovers.
  5. 18:00 Return train to Brussels + dinner 1h30

    Take the 30-minute train back to Brussels for the evening, or linger for dinner in Ghent first — it has a lively student and food scene. Either way, a relaxed Belgian dinner and beer to finish.

    Cost: Train included + dinner €20-40 TIP: Ghent's nightlife and dining are good if you want to stay for dinner before the short ride back. Trains run late and frequently. Back in Brussels, a last beer in the lower town rounds off the day.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Brussels café breakfast

Brussels · €4-10

Coffee and a pastry before the short train to Ghent.

Lunch

Graslei waterfront café

Ghent (Graslei) · €15-30

Lunch by the medieval guild-house quays.

Dinner

Ghent or Brussels dinner

Ghent / Brussels · €20-40

A Belgian dinner in Ghent's food scene or back in Brussels.

Transit:

Train Brussels ↔ Ghent, about 30 minutes each way (~€15-25 round trip, several times an hour, no reservation needed). In Ghent, a short tram or walk from the station to the center.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $85 Mid $175 Luxury $360
DAY 5

Antwerp day trip — diamonds, fashion & Rubens

Train to Antwerp - Central Station - Cathedral of Our Lady (Rubens) - Grote Markt - fashion district - return

Activities

  1. 09:00 Train to Antwerp + Central Station 1h

    Take the train to Antwerp (about 40 minutes, ~€18-30 round trip), arriving at Antwerp Central — one of the world's most beautiful railway stations, a cathedral-like 1905 hall worth seeing in its own right.

    Cost: ~€18-30 round trip TIP: No reservation needed for the domestic train. Don't rush out of Antwerp Central — the soaring marble-and-glass concourse is a sight. The diamond district sits right by the station if you want to peek.
  2. 10:30 Cathedral of Our Lady — Rubens 1h30

    Visit the Cathedral of Our Lady, Belgium's largest Gothic church, home to several masterpieces by Antwerp's own Peter Paul Rubens, including 'The Descent from the Cross'. Its spire dominates the skyline.

    Cost: ~€12 TIP: The Rubens altarpieces are the highlight — Antwerp was his home city. The cathedral is in the heart of the old town near the Grote Markt. Allow time to look up at the soaring interior.
  3. 12:30 Grote Markt + lunch 2h

    See the Grote Markt, Antwerp's central square of ornate guild houses, the Renaissance city hall, and the Brabo fountain, then lunch on Flemish fare or moules-frites in the old town.

    Cost: Lunch €15-30 TIP: The Grote Markt and the streets toward the Scheldt river are the historic core. The Brabo fountain references the legend behind Antwerp's name ('hand-throwing'). Plenty of lunch options around the square.
  4. 15:00 Fashion & MAS or the Rubens House 1h30

    Choose your afternoon: Antwerp's fashion district and the MoMu fashion museum (the city is a global fashion name), the riverside MAS museum with its rooftop view, or the Rubens House (the artist's home and studio).

    Cost: Museum ~€10-15 TIP: Antwerp is a stylish, design-led city — the fashion district (around the Nationalestraat) suits shoppers. The MAS rooftop is a free panoramic viewpoint even without the museum. The Rubens House is a treat for art fans.
  5. 18:00 Return train to Brussels + farewell dinner 1h30

    Take the 40-minute train back to Brussels for a final Belgian dinner and beer — a fitting end to the Belgium core, perhaps a last moules-frites or a waffle in the lower town.

    Cost: Train included + dinner €25-45 TIP: Confirm the return train — they run frequently. Back in Brussels, the lit-up Grand-Place at night is the classic farewell. Pick up a box of pralines for the journey home.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Brussels café breakfast

Brussels · €4-10

Coffee and a pastry before the train to Antwerp.

Lunch

Antwerp old-town brasserie

Antwerp (Grote Markt) · €15-30

Flemish fare or moules-frites near the square.

Dinner

Brussels farewell dinner

Brussels lower town · €25-45

A final Belgian meal and beer back in Brussels.

Transit:

Train Brussels ↔ Antwerp, about 40 minutes each way (~€18-30 round trip, no reservation needed). On foot within Antwerp's old town.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $90 Mid $185 Luxury $380
DAY 6

Brussels deep cut — Art Nouveau, comics & Waterloo

Horta Museum (Art Nouveau) - Comic Strip Center - Cinquantenaire museums - or a Waterloo battlefield trip

Activities

  1. 09:30 Horta Museum — Art Nouveau 1h30

    Start with the Horta Museum in Saint-Gilles, the house-studio of architect Victor Horta and a UNESCO World Heritage site — a masterpiece of Art Nouveau, with flowing ironwork, stained glass, and natural light. Brussels is a capital of the style.

    Cost: ~€12 TIP: Book ahead — entry is timed and capacity is limited, and photography is often restricted inside. Saint-Gilles and Ixelles have many more Art Nouveau façades to spot on a self-guided walk afterward.
  2. 11:30 Belgian Comic Strip Center 1h30

    Visit the Belgian Comic Strip Center, set in a Victor Horta Art Nouveau building, celebrating the country's comics heritage — Tintin, the Smurfs, Lucky Luke and more — then follow more of the city's painted comic murals.

    Cost: ~€13 TIP: A fun stop for the building alone (another Horta design) and for comics fans of any age. The free Comic Book Route of wall murals across the center is a good way to link the afternoon's wander.
  3. 14:00 Choice: Cinquantenaire museums or Waterloo 3h

    Pick your afternoon. Stay in town for the Cinquantenaire/Jubelpark — the triumphal arch and museums (Art & History, Autoworld) — or take a half-day trip to the Waterloo battlefield (1815), about 30-45 minutes south, with the Lion's Mound and memorial center.

    Cost: Museums ~€10-15 / Waterloo ~€20 + transport TIP: Waterloo is a worthwhile half-day for history buffs — the Memorial 1815 center and the climb up the Lion's Mound. Getting there is easiest by train/bus combination or a tour. If you'd rather stay in the city, the Cinquantenaire museums and arch fill the afternoon.
  4. 19:00 Dinner — a final Belgian feast 2h30

    Round off the day with a proper Belgian dinner — carbonnade flamande at Nüetnigenough, mussels at a brasserie, or a leisurely beer-and-food pairing — somewhere you haven't tried yet.

    Cost: €25-45 per person TIP: If you loved a beer earlier in the trip, seek out a bar that specializes in it. Reserve at the small, popular spots (Nüetnigenough fills fast). A relaxed, unhurried evening suits the back half of a long trip.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Saint-Gilles café

Saint-Gilles / Ixelles · €5-12

Breakfast in a leafy, local neighborhood near the Horta Museum.

Lunch

Cinquantenaire or Waterloo café

EU quarter / Waterloo · €12-25

A light lunch near the afternoon's sights.

Dinner

Nüetnigenough or a brasserie

Center · €25-45

Carbonnade flamande or mussels with a Belgian beer pairing.

Transit:

Metro/tram to Saint-Gilles for the Horta Museum and the Comic Strip Center; Cinquantenaire is on the metro. Waterloo is about 30-45 minutes south by train/bus combination or tour.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $90 Mid $185 Luxury $380
DAY 7

Slow Brussels morning + departure

A missed museum or market - last waffle & chocolate shopping - BRU departure

Activities

  1. 09:30 A final sight or a slow morning 2h

    Catch anything missed — the MIM musical-instruments museum (in a gorgeous Art Nouveau building, with a rooftop café view), the Royal Museums of Fine Arts, or the Sunday Place du Jeu de Balle flea market in the Marolles — or just a relaxed café breakfast.

    Cost: Museum ~€10-15 or free TIP: The MIM's rooftop café has one of the best free-ish views in the city. The Marolles flea market (daily, biggest on weekends) is fun for browsing. Keep it light on a departure day.
  2. 12:00 Last waffle + chocolate shopping 1h30

    A final Belgian waffle at Maison Dandoy and a last round of chocolate shopping — pick up pralines from Neuhaus in the Galeries or Pierre Marcolini/Wittamer on the Sablon to take home.

    Cost: €10-30 TIP: Buy chocolate last so it spends less time in the heat, and ask for it packed cool. A box of pralines and a few beers (sold at shops) make the classic Belgian gifts. The Galeries are a sheltered place to shop if it's raining.
  3. 14:00 Souvenirs + relaxed lunch 1h30

    Pick up any last souvenirs — Belgian beer, speculoos biscuits, comics — and a relaxed final lunch near the Grand-Place before heading to the airport.

    Cost: Lunch €12-25 + shopping TIP: Bottled Belgian beers travel well in checked luggage (wrap them). A final wander around the Grand-Place before you leave. Allow buffer time for the train to the airport.
  4. 16:00 Brussels Airport (BRU) departure 1h30

    Take the Airport Express train from a central station to Brussels Airport-Zaventem (about 17-25 minutes, ~€11-12), or a taxi (~€45, 25-35 min). BRU is northeast of the city.

    Cost: Train ~€11-12 / taxi ~€45 TIP: Arrive about 2 hours before a Schengen flight, 3 for long-haul or connections. The Airport Express runs several times an hour. If you flew into the budget Charleroi (CRL) airport, allow about an hour for the shuttle bus instead.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Café or MIM rooftop

Center / Mont des Arts · €5-12

A final coffee with a city view at the MIM rooftop café.

Lunch

Grand-Place-area brasserie

Center · €12-25

A relaxed last Belgian lunch before the airport.

Dinner

In-flight or airport dining

BRU / en route · €10-20

A light bite at the airport before departure.

Transit:

On foot in the center; the Airport Express train (~€11-12, 17-25 min) or a taxi (~€45) to BRU. Allow about an hour by shuttle bus if departing from Charleroi (CRL).

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $150 Luxury $330

Book Brussels Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Brussels 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Is 7 days too long for Belgium?
No — seven days lets you see Brussels in depth plus Bruges, Ghent, and Antwerp without rushing, and still have time for Brussels' Art Nouveau, comics, and a Waterloo or museum day. Belgium is small and well-connected, so a relaxed week covers a lot. If you only want the headline cities, 5 days works; 7 adds depth and breathing room.
What's special about Brussels' Art Nouveau?
Brussels is a world capital of Art Nouveau, largely thanks to Victor Horta, whose own house-studio (the Horta Museum, a UNESCO site) and other buildings — including the Belgian Comic Strip Center and the MIM museum's old department store — showcase the flowing ironwork, glass, and light of the style. Saint-Gilles and Ixelles are full of Art Nouveau façades to spot on a walk.
Is Waterloo worth a half-day?
For history buffs, yes — the 1815 battlefield is about 30-45 minutes south of Brussels, with the Memorial 1815 visitor center, panorama, and the climb up the Lion's Mound for views over the field. It's easiest by a train/bus combination or an organized tour. If history isn't your thing, the Cinquantenaire museums in the city are a fine alternative.
What are the best edible souvenirs to bring home?
Belgian chocolate is the obvious one — a box of pralines from Neuhaus, Pierre Marcolini, or Wittamer (buy it last and keep it cool). Bottled Belgian beers travel well wrapped in checked luggage, and speculoos biscuits (Maison Dandoy) are a lighter, sturdier option. Cuberdon raspberry candies are a distinctively Belgian sweet.

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Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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