12 Top Places to Visit in Brussels, Belgium - 2026 Guide

12 Top Places to Visit in Brussels, Belgium - 2026 Guide

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Tomas AchmedovasTomas Achmedovas·Last updated March 30, 2026·1 min read

When travellers ask for the top places to visit in Brussels, the answers tend to surprise them. Most people arrive expecting a grey city of Eurocrats and administration - and find instead a wonderfully eccentric capital overflowing with Baroque architecture, world-class museums, cutting-edge Art Nouveau, some of Europe's finest beer, and enough chocolate to make Willy Wonka jealous. Brussels is a city that consistently punches above its weight - and in 2026, it is one of the most rewarding city-break destinations in Europe.

Brussels sightseeing reveals extraordinary contrasts: a Grand Place widely considered the most beautiful medieval square in Europe sits just minutes from a 1958 World's Fair molecular sculpture. Medieval churches stand around the corner from the birthplace of Tintin and the Smurfs. And behind the city's business-capital reputation lurks one of Europe's most vibrant food, beer, and contemporary art scenes. From the iconic to the lesser-known, this guide covers the 12 best places in Brussels - with exact addresses, metro stops, transport details, practical tips, and complete travel information for 2026.

Grand Place (Grote Markt) - Europe's Most Beautiful Medieval Square

1. Grand Place (Grote Markt) - Europe's Most Beautiful Medieval Square

Address
Grand Place / Grote Markt, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
De Brouckère (M1/M2/M5/M6) - 5 min walk; or Bourse (pre-metro) - 3 min walk
Distance from Centre
0 km (city centre)

No guide to the top places to visit in Brussels could begin anywhere other than the Grand Place - UNESCO World Heritage Site, and widely considered the most beautiful medieval square in Europe. Surrounded on all four sides by extraordinary 17th-century guild houses built after the French bombardment of 1695, the square is a theatre of architectural magnificence: the Gothic Brussels Town Hall (begun 1401), the neo-Gothic King's House (now the Brussels City Museum), and nearly 40 guildhalls each representing a different medieval trade - their gilded facades competing in baroque splendour.

The Grand Place is theatrical at any hour. At night, dramatic lighting transforms it into one of Europe's most beautiful illuminated spaces. In summer (even-numbered years, mid-August), the Flower Carpet event covers the entire cobbled square in a 75m x 24m tapestry of begonias. At Christmas, Winter Wonders fills the square with a giant tree, ice rink, and market stalls. Enter the square from any side street for maximum impact - the reveal as you step into the full square from a narrow lane is one of Europe's great architectural moments.

Atomium - Brussels' Most Iconic Modern Monument

2. Atomium - Brussels' Most Iconic Modern Monument

Address
Square de l'Atomium 1, 1020 Laeken, Brussels
Nearest Transit
M6 to Roi Baudouin (10 min walk)
Distance from Centre
6 km northwest

Built for the 1958 Brussels World's Fair and originally intended for demolition, this 102-metre structure represents an iron crystal magnified 165 billion times - nine steel spheres connected by tubes with escalators running through the connecting tunnels. Saved by popular demand, it has become Brussels' most recognisable symbol. Inside, the spheres house exhibitions on the 1958 World's Fair, design, and contemporary art. The top sphere contains an observation deck with panoramic views across Brussels.

Allow 90 minutes minimum. Buy tickets online to avoid queues. Combine with Mini-Europe park next door (scaled models of 350 European monuments) and the nearby Royal Domain of Laeken. The Atomium is particularly photogenic at dusk when the spheres begin to glow. The adjacent Design Museum Brussels opened in 2023 as an offshoot of the Atomium's design collection.

Manneken Pis & the Manneken Pis Wardrobe - Brussels' Cheeky Symbol

3. Manneken Pis & the Manneken Pis Wardrobe - Brussels' Cheeky Symbol

Address
Corner of Rue de l'Étuve and Rue du Chêne, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
De Brouckère or Bourse - 5 min walk
Distance from Centre
0.2 km south of Grand Place

Belgium's most famous - and most unexpectedly tiny - landmark, the Manneken Pis is a small bronze statue of a little boy urinating into a fountain, standing at a mere 53 cm tall. Created in 1619 by sculptor Jérôme Duquesnoy (a replica - the original is in the Brussels City Museum), the statue has accumulated a wardrobe of over 1,000 costumes donated by nations and organisations worldwide. Two related statues complete the trio: the Jeanneke Pis (a female counterpart in Impasse de la Fidélité) and the Zinneke Pis (a dog on Rue des Chartreux).

Check the official Brussels website for costume-wearing dates - he changes outfits 130+ times per year. The wardrobe museum inside the Maison du Roi at Grand Place (€8) displays the full collection of over 1,000 costumes from around the world.

Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert - Europe's Oldest and Most Beautiful Arcade

4. Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert - Europe's Oldest and Most Beautiful Arcade

Address
Galerie du Roi 5, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
De Brouckère or Gare Centrale - 5 min walk
Distance from Centre
0.1 km east of Grand Place

Inaugurated in 1847, the Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert is Europe's oldest surviving glass-roofed shopping arcade and one of the most beautiful interior spaces in Brussels. Three interconnected galleries - Galerie du Roi, Galerie de la Reine, and Galerie des Princes - form an elegant Florentine-inspired arcade with a 213-metre glass-and-iron barrel vault that floods the interior with light. Today it houses boutique chocolatiers (including Neuhaus - inventors of the Belgian praline in 1912), booksellers, perfumeries, a theatre, and elegant cafés.

Visit in the evening when the arcade's lighting is most atmospheric. The chocolatier Neuhaus at Galerie de la Reine 25 is not only the oldest but most historically significant praline shop in the world - worth a purchase and a visit to the original shop interior.

Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium - The Greatest Art Collection in Belgium

5. Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium - The Greatest Art Collection in Belgium

Address
Rue de la Régence 3, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
M1/M5 to Gare Centrale (10 min walk) or Tram 92/93 to Royale
Distance from Centre
0.8 km south of Grand Place

The Royal Museums of Fine Arts constitute Belgium's greatest art collection, spanning Flemish Primitives (Roger van der Weyden, Hans Memling), the Flemish masters (Rubens, van Dyck, Bruegel), 19th-century Belgian art, and a world-class Surrealist collection. The Magritte Museum within the complex devotes three floors to 200 works by Belgium's most famous artist, including iconic pieces like The Son of Man and The Treachery of Images. Allow at least 2.5 hours for both collections.

The combined ticket (€15) covers the Old Masters collection and the Magritte Museum. Pre-book online to skip queues. The Magritte Museum gift shop has some of the best art prints and gifts in Brussels.

Belgian Beer World - Beer History in a Stunning Setting

6. Belgian Beer World - Beer History in a Stunning Setting

Address
Place de la Bourse 1, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
De Brouckère or Bourse - 3 min walk
Distance from Centre
0.2 km west of Grand Place

One of Brussels' newest and most impressive attractions, Belgian Beer World opened in 2021 inside the spectacularly renovated 19th-century Bourse building (the former Brussels Stock Exchange), just steps from the Grand Place. The immersive experience traces 5,000 years of beer culture from ancient Mesopotamia to Belgian trappist traditions across multiple interactive floors, culminating in a rooftop bar - the Beerlab - with panoramic views and a selection of 100 Belgian beers. Belgium has 1,500+ breweries and over 1,000 distinct beers, and Belgian beer is inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list.

The Beerlab rooftop terrace is accessible separately without museum entry and offers arguably the best views of the Grand Place area. In summer, it is one of the best outdoor terraces in the city. Book via the official website to guarantee a table.

Horta Museum - The Masterpiece of Art Nouveau Architecture

7. Horta Museum - The Masterpiece of Art Nouveau Architecture

Address
Rue Américaine 23–25, 1060 Saint-Gilles, Brussels
Nearest Transit
Tram 81 (Defacqz) or Tram 92/97 (Janson) - 5 min walk
Distance from Centre
2.5 km south of Grand Place

Victor Horta was the architect who invented Art Nouveau - and his own house and studio in the Saint-Gilles district, now the Horta Museum, is widely considered the purest and most perfect expression of the style ever created. Built between 1898 and 1901, every element of this remarkable double townhouse was designed as an integrated whole: the structural iron, the curved staircases, the stained glass, the mosaic floors, the furniture, the door handles, the light fittings - all flowing together in sinuous, organic lines inspired by natural forms. The museum is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The museum is small and visitor numbers are limited - book online in advance. Arrive in Saint-Gilles 20 minutes early and walk the surrounding streets (Rue Defacqz, Rue Faider, Rue Paul-Émile Janson) to see the neighbourhood's Art Nouveau streetscape before entering Horta's personal masterpiece.

Belgian Comic Strip Centre - The Museum of Tintin, the Smurfs & Europe's 9th Art

8. Belgian Comic Strip Centre - The Museum of Tintin, the Smurfs & Europe's 9th Art

Address
Rue des Sables 20, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
De Brouckère (M1/M2/M5/M6) - 10 min walk; or Rogier (M2) - 8 min walk
Distance from Centre
0.8 km northeast of Grand Place

Belgium is arguably the world capital of the comic strip - birthplace of Tintin (Hergé, 1929), the Smurfs (Peyo, 1958), Lucky Luke, Spirou, Blake & Mortimer, and dozens of other beloved characters. The Belgian Comic Strip Centre is housed in a stunning Victor Horta-designed Art Nouveau building - the Magasin Waucquez (1906) - and pays homage to this creative tradition across multiple floors with dedicated rooms, original artwork, interactive exhibits, and a comprehensive bookshop.

Brussels is also an open-air comic strip museum: the Comic Book Route features over 60 giant murals on building walls across the Lower Town depicting scenes from iconic Belgian comics. Pick up the free route map from the Brussels tourist office near Grand Place.

Cinquantenaire Park & Museums - Brussels' Triumphal Monument and Museum Complex

9. Cinquantenaire Park & Museums - Brussels' Triumphal Monument and Museum Complex

Address
Parc du Cinquantenaire, 1040 Etterbeek, Brussels
Nearest Transit
M1/M5 to Merode or Schuman - 10 min walk
Distance from Centre
3 km east of Grand Place

Built in 1880 to celebrate Belgium's 50th anniversary of independence, the Cinquantenaire is one of Brussels' grandest public spaces - a formal French garden flanked by neoclassical palace wings, crowned by a massive triumphal arch added in 1905. Within the complex: the Art & History Museum (200,000+ objects from ancient civilisations to decorative arts), Autoworld (one of Europe's finest vintage car collections), and the Royal Military Museum.

The Cinquantenaire arch climb is free and provides excellent views over the park and the European Quarter skyline. The Art & History Museum is often overlooked - its Art Nouveau decorative arts wing is outstanding and the collection of Egyptian antiquities rivals major national museums.

Musical Instruments Museum (MIM) - Sound, Design & Spectacular Views

10. Musical Instruments Museum (MIM) - Sound, Design & Spectacular Views

Address
Rue Montagne de la Cour 2, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
M1/M5 to Gare Centrale (5 min walk uphill)
Distance from Centre
0.5 km south of Grand Place

The Musical Instruments Museum occupies one of Brussels' finest Art Nouveau commercial buildings - the Old England department store (1899) - with remarkable iron-and-glass facades overlooking the Mont des Arts garden. The collection of over 8,000 instruments from across 5 continents and 5,000 years of musical history is one of the world's largest. The museum's distinctive feature is its audio guide - wireless headphones that automatically play music from any instrument you approach.

The rooftop bar and restaurant at MIM is open even to non-museum visitors and offers the best panoramic view in central Brussels for the price of a coffee or glass of wine. The building's exterior Art Nouveau ironwork is best photographed from the Place Royale side.

Cantillon Brewery - One of the Last Traditional Lambic Breweries in the World

11. Cantillon Brewery - One of the Last Traditional Lambic Breweries in the World

Address
Rue Gheude 56, 1070 Anderlecht, Brussels
Nearest Transit
M2/M6 to Clemenceau (7 min walk); or 15 min walk from Brussels-Midi
Distance from Centre
2 km southwest of Grand Place

Cantillon is one of the most remarkable Brussels attractions for any serious lover of food, drink, or craft heritage. This family-owned lambic brewery has operated without interruption since 1900 and remains one of only three traditional lambic brewers still in Brussels. Lambic is unique to the region - a wild fermentation beer brewed with local wheat and spontaneously fermented by wild airborne yeasts and bacteria, aged in oak barrels for 1–3 years. The resulting beers (gueuze, kriek, framboise) are unlike any other beers in the world.

The self-guided tour takes visitors through original 19th-century brewing equipment, barrel rooms, and blending room - all still in active daily use - ending with two pours of the current vintage. Arrive when they open on weekday mornings for the best experience. The brewery hosts two open brew days per year (October and November) that sell out immediately.

Sablon District & Place du Grand Sablon - The Antiques Quarter and the City's Best Chocolate

12. Sablon District & Place du Grand Sablon - The Antiques Quarter and the City's Best Chocolate

Address
Place du Grand Sablon, 1000 Brussels
Nearest Transit
Tram 92/93/94 to Grand Sablon; or 10 min walk from Grand Place (uphill)
Distance from Centre
0.8 km south of Grand Place

The Sablon is Brussels' most elegant and refined neighbourhood - a historic quarter of 17th-century townhouses, antique dealers, independent galleries, and world-class chocolatiers grouped around the Grand Sablon square. At its heart stands the magnificent Church of Our Lady of the Sablon - a flamboyant Gothic church begun in 1304 with outstanding stained glass. Every weekend, the square hosts one of Belgium's best antiques markets.

The adjacent Petit Sablon - a small enclosed formal garden with 48 bronze guild figure statues - is one of Brussels' most charming public spaces. For the definitive Brussels chocolate experience, do a self-guided Sablon chocolate walk: start at Wittamer (est. 1910), then Pierre Marcolini for single-origin chocolate, then Laurent Gerbaud for unconventional spiced varieties.

Brussels Travel Guide FAQ

The best months to visit Brussels are May to June and September to October, when temperatures are mild, gardens are in bloom, and crowds are smaller than in peak summer. Summer (June–August) offers the warmest weather and liveliest terrace culture, while the Christmas market season (late November to early January) is magical despite the cold.

Absolutely. The Grand Place is a UNESCO World Heritage Site widely considered the most beautiful medieval square in Europe. The 17th-century guild houses, Gothic Town Hall, and dramatic nighttime illumination make it an essential stop on any Brussels visit. It is free to enter at any time and transforms completely between day and night.

Two days is the minimum to cover the essential attractions (Grand Place, Atomium, Manneken Pis, a major museum, and the Sablon). Three days allows you to add the Horta Museum, Cinquantenaire Park, Cantillon Brewery, and the Comic Strip Centre. Four or more days lets you include day trips to Bruges, Ghent, or Antwerp.

Yes. The Atomium is about 15 minutes from the city centre by metro (M6 to Roi Baudouin). Allow 90 minutes for the Atomium visit, then take the metro back to De Brouckère for the Grand Place. You can comfortably combine both with the Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert, Manneken Pis, and Belgian Beer World in a full day.

Pre-booking is strongly recommended for the Horta Museum (limited visitor numbers), the Atomium (to avoid queues), and Belgian Beer World. The Royal Museums of Fine Arts and Magritte Museum also benefit from online booking during peak season. The Belgian Comic Strip Centre and Musical Instruments Museum are generally manageable without advance tickets.

Yes. Trip1 allows you to book hotels in Brussels and across Belgium using Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other major cryptocurrencies. Simply search for Brussels hotels on Trip1, select your dates, and pay with your preferred cryptocurrency at checkout — with no hidden fees and instant confirmation.

Essential dishes include moules-frites (mussels with fries), croquettes aux crevettes grises (grey shrimp croquettes), waterzooi (Flemish chicken or fish stew), and stomp (mashed potato with vegetables). Belgian fries from a friterie with andalouse sauce are a must. For sweets, artisan pralines from the Sablon chocolatiers and a fresh Belgian waffle are unmissable.

Tomas Achmedovas

Written by

Tomas Achmedovas

CEO and co-founder

Tomas is the co-founder and director of Trip1, an European company specializing in reservation services. He launched the company in 2025 with a focus on building scalable, efficient operations.

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