22 Best Restaurants in Brussels, Belgium

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We've compiled the best of the best in Brussels - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Gus

$$$ | Upper Town Fodor's Choice

There are a cluster of bars and restaurants around the Cirque Royal. This "brassonomie" experiment is a cut above the rest, taking the usual brasserie fare and elevating it to a fine-dining bistro experience, and throwing in its own brewery for good measure. A beef-cheek carbonnade arrives drizzled in a silken gravy made from its house Santana beer. The small menu rotates frequently.

Rue des Cultes 36, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-265--7961
Known For
  • Inventive takes on Belgian classics
  • The seasonal beers are pretty good
  • The menu isn't huge but it is special
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends. No dinner Mon.–Wed.

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In 't Spinnekopke

$$ | Lower Town Fodor's Choice

True Flemish cooking flourishes in this reliable old favorite. The low ceilings and benches around the walls remain from its days as a coaching inn during the 18th century, and little has changed since---including the menu. Its drinks selection is equally single-minded, with a choice of some 100 artisanal beers. The specialty here is the sour lambic variety, which is also used in the cooking, such as lapin à gueuze (rabbit stewed in fruit beer). Go with an appetite, because portions are huge. The knowledgeable waiters can recommend beers to go with your food but can be on the brusque side.

Pl. du Jardin aux Fleurs 1, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-512--9205
Known For
  • Incredible selection of Belgian gueuze (fruity and bitter) beers
  • Great, old-fashioned Flemish cooking, with stews aplenty
  • Belgium-size portions
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Maison Antoine

$ | Schuman Fodor's Choice

The Maison Antoine frites stand sells the best fries in the capital, say some people, accompanied by a dizzying range of condiments; try either local fave "Bicky" or the indulgent vol-au-vent sauce. The surrounding bars on Place Jourdan are used to patrons munching on frites (so long as you order a beer), so grab a seat and savor your twice-fried snack.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Au Vieux Saint Martin

$$ | Upper Town

Even when neighboring restaurants on Grand Sablon are empty, this one is always full. It's run by the Niels family, who have been restaurateurs in Brussels since 1915, and its short menu emphasizes local specialties. Its filet Americain—a popular local take on steak tartare (packed with pickles and capers) —was even invented by grandfather Joseph Niels. Ownership has passed to the next generation, but standards remain high and it still serves unusually good wine (the family also has a wine import business) for the price, by the glass, or bottle. It also has a sister restaurant, Au Savoy, located in Ixelles.

Grand Sablon 38, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-512–6476
Known For
  • Longevity—this location opened in 1968
  • Nothing too fancy, but exquisitely good Belgian fare
  • The portions are substantial
Restaurant Details
Reservations not accepted

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Berlaymont Café Brasserie

$$ | Cinquantenaire

Moules (mussels), pastas, and steaks, along with a small handful of the usual Belgian standbys, set the pace at this much-adored brasserie. Breakfast, lunch, dinner, drinks—it's pretty much all things to the large contingent of expats who have made this a popular local spot. There are plenty of burgers to keep the kids happy, too.

Rue Archimède 6, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-720--6630
Known For
  • Simple, quick, crowd-pleasing brasserie food
  • There's a terrace outside for the warmer weather
  • The pubby interior shows sports on some evenings

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Café Belga

$$

Café Belga, in an ocean-liner-like Art Deco building, is a favorite among Brussels's beautiful people. Sip a cocktail or mint tea at the zinc bar, or sit outside on a deck chair and gaze at the swans on the Ixelles ponds.

Pl. Eugène Flagey 18, Ixelles, B1050, Belgium
02-640–3508
Known For
  • A good spot to end the night

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De Ultieme Hallucinatie

$$ | Schaerbeek

This beautiful mid-18th-century town house was redone in the Art Nouveau style in 1904, adding an elegant bow window and balcony. It's been a brasserie since the early '80s, but remained empty for years after the previous owners went bankrupt. Mercifully, it's been resurrected and restored to its former glory. The menu is solidly Belgian, with not an ounce of desire to add anything to the classics. Well-made beer stews, moules, américains, and Liège-style meatballs accompany the one international caveat: an array of tagliatelle dishes.

Rue Royale 316, Brussels, 1210, Belgium
02-889--0316
Known For
  • Solid Belgian cooking
  • Guided tours of the building are sometimes held on Saturdays and Sunday, the latter accompanied by Sunday brunch—check out the website for dates
  • They have the odd jazz night
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Domus

$$

This sprawling brewpub-restaurant is pretty much the city's old standby for when you've run out of ideas. It's particularly good for families, it's always packed, the menu is littered with Flemish favorites (carbonnade, meatballs, vol-au-vent), and the service is impossibly quick no matter how full it is. A lot of the food is slathered in the house beer (typically Con Domus and Nostra Domus), which funnels directly from the neighboring brewery into the restaurant. You can even get guided tours and tastings for €11. If you're there for the food, stick to the Flemish classics for a solid meal.

Tiensestraat 8, Leuven, 3000, Belgium
016-201--449
Known For
  • It's a cheap, popular spot for families
  • It's worth it to try the beer, which is pretty good
  • The "Belgian dinner plate"
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Fin de Siècle

$$ | Lower Town

Despite its minimal signage, Fin de Siècle holds to that peculiarly obstinate breed of restaurant that flourishes despite itself. Its brown interior, big communal tables, and hearty cooking---stews smothered in beer-infused gravy, sausages atop heaving mountains of stoempe mash, and the odd North African influence---has ensured a healthy popularity and lively spirit. Covid finally forced them to get a reservation system, but in a city of old-school estaminets trying to out-tradition each other, Fin de Siècle is the eccentric granddaddy of them all.

Rue des Chartreux 9, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-732–7434
Known For
  • Old-fashioned Flemish cooking in a traditional brown café
  • A great draft beer selection
  • Generous portions

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Gastrobar Hop

$$$$

It's a bit of a walk from the center (about 20 minutes) to get there, but it's worth it not just for the food, which lies at the more educated end of traditional Belgian comfort food (think thick cuts of meat slow-cooked for 24 hours, flaking off the bone into beery sauces), but for the setting. Located in the Vaartcom area, a once run-down industrial and brewing site resurrected into a trendy dining and shopping area that spills into the neighboring park, Gastrobar Hop lies in part of the old Stella Artois brewery. Its vast collection of craft beers powers a seasonal set menu that cherishes the simpler things and relies on local brewers and producers.

Vaartkom 1a, Leuven, 3000, Belgium
016-356--153
Known For
  • A great selection of craft beers and wines
  • Lunch is a great deal at €35 for the four-course menu
  • There is a vegetarian alternative for each course
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Het Fenikshof

$$

While tours of the Grimbergen Abbey brewery aren't possible, you can taste the fruits of its labor at its brasserie in town, which is slightly more upmarket than you'd imagine. A pretty terrace overlooks the abbey, while the food served is unrepentantly Flemish: beery stews, grey-shrimp croquettes, Oostend-style fish stew. Everything on the menu, unsurprisingly, has a suggested beer pairing, as if you needed an excuse to try any of the nine varieties on offer. The quadruple weighs in at a hefty 10% ABV, so it may be a sleepy bus journey back.

Abdijstraat 20, Grimbergen, 1850, Belgium
02-306--3956
Known For
  • Frites, meat, and delicious, delicious beer
  • The terrace is a nice spot in summer
  • It's open every day

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Kline

$$ | Lower Town

Kline's concrete, brutalist interior reflects the shock-and-awe spirit of its location on fashionable Rue Antoine Dansaert. It's certainly a palate cleanser for the often delicate fare that arrives on your plate. Offering a refined locavore's take on old-school comfort food, its open kitchen and back-to-basics design is more of a clue to chef Nico Corbesier's zero-waste approach, squeezing everything out of his ingredients. Simply named dishes such as glazed slow-cooked bacon and pickles, or the poetically named "The first of the mushrooms—the last tomatoes" move with the seasons and belie the skill with which they're crafted.

Vlaamseseteenweg 162, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
472-964--636
Known For
  • Locally sourced ingredients
  • A stylish, if bold, interior with the kitchen on full display
  • Pared down comfort food with a gastronomic twist
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Kroket

$ | Ixelles

The main menu is more polished than you'd expect, dishing up soups, burgers, and salads, as the odd cultured surprise, but you come here for the titular croquette (breadcrumbed parcels of potato and various fillings). These come with several wild stuffings, ranging from carbonnade flamande (beef stew) to the classic grey shrimp. Order a few for an indulgent pit stop.

Rue Caroly 37, Brussels, 1050, Belgium
0489-458--866
Known For
  • Crispy croquettes with pillowy centers and inventive fillings
  • The odd interesting local beer, plus a rare low-alcohol option
  • The ingredients are all locally sourced
Restaurant Details
Closed weekends

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La Brasserie des Alexiens

$$ | Lower Town

A new restaurant that elevates the more traditional brasserie fare, proving there is a life beyond carbonnades and meatballs (though they do a highly passable version of both). Chef Alex Cardoso, who made his name with the equally impressive Caves des Alex in Ixelles, embraces the kind of dishes that La Roue d'Or made its name on: here you'll find ox tongue in Madeira sauce and veal kidney in mustard sauce alongside the usual stewy Belgian hits. A fine selection of wines accompanies a reasonably small menu that knows what it does best.  

Rue des Alexiens 63, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-387--4769
Known For
  • A chance to taste more old-school Belgian dishes
  • A pretty space—all red brick, green walls, and oak floors
  • Good-value dining
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Sat.

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La Fleur en Papier Doré

$$ | Lower Town

From Magritte to Hergé, this convent-turned-estaminet was once a regular meeting point for Brussels's art elite—photos and doodles (traded for booze) are found everywhere. It went out of business in 2006, only to be rescued by the community regulars that adore it, and little has changed. Its nicotine-yellow walls are still bedecked in all manner of clutter from ages gone by, with antiques (and junk) scattered on almost every surface. The tiny menu focuses on local favorites such as ballekes in tomatensaus (meatballs in tomato sauce) and stoempe, pottekeis et bloempanch (cream cheese mash and blood sausage).

Rue des Alexiens 53, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-511–1659
Known For
  • Local icon with a colorful history (literally) writ large across its walls
  • Excellent range of beers
  • Menu packed with hearty Flemish fare
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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A la Mort Subite

$ | Lower Town

A Brussels institution named after a card game called "Sudden Death," A la Mort Subite is practically unchanged since its 1920s heyday; and with its distinctive high ceilings, wooden tables, and mirrored walls, it remains a favorite of beer lovers from all over the world. Balancing a vast drinks menu with a choice of simple snacks (sandwiches and omelets), it still brews its own traditional Brussels beers (Lambik, Gueuze, and Faro). These sour potent drafts may be an acquired taste, but, like singer Jacques Brel, who came here often, you'll find it hard to resist the bar's gruff charm.

Le Waterloo

$$ | Saint-Gilles

A really solid and reliable Belgian brasserie that rarely lets you down. One thing you are guaranteed: all food will be slathered in creamy, beery, or mustardy sauces and frites will fall from the air like raindrops on the battlefield this restaurant is named after. All the classic Belgian dishes are here, they're cheap, and they're well made. It might not be all that hip, but it's popular, and who needs a cellar of natural wines when you have squeezy sauce and friendly staff.

Chau. de Waterloo 217, Brussels, 1060, Belgium
02-539--2804
Known For
  • Simple brasserie cooking done right
  • A nice selection of local beers (and on draft)
  • All the Belgian favorites
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Maison Antoine

$

The Maison Antoine frites stand sells the best fries in the capital, accompanied by a dizzying range of condiments; try either local fave "Bicky" or the indulgent vol-au-vent sauce. It's a bit out of the way, but it's a great place to try Belgium's famous snack (the country's secret is frying the potatoes twice in beef tallow) and most of the bars that line the square will let you sit down either inside or outside and order a beer to go with your paper cone of frites. Although don't leave your greasy paper behind or you will get told off.

B1040, Unknown
02-230–5456
Known For
  • Finger-licking-good frites
  • Wide range of condiments that accompany amazing frites

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Nüetnigenough

$$ | Lower Town

This modest, well-executed Flemish restaurant comes with a superb beer menu and is named after the Dutch phrase for those who "can't get enough." Diners clearly share that sentiment, and queue dutifully alongside its Art Nouveau facade, clutching beers from the bar for warmth—the restaurant's brief dalliance with a booking system has ended. The food leans into the best of Belgian comfort food: stews slow-cooked in fruity beers and meat flaking off in gravy-soaked, hop-flavored chunks onto crisp frites and chicory. It's simple food executed well, and its selection of local lambic beers is a connoisseur's dream.

Rue du Lombard 25, Brussels, 1000, Belgium
02-513--7884
Known For
  • Beer-drenched stews to die for
  • A fine selection of lambic and local brews, with some rare finds
  • It's still got that hip factor
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Restaurant 3 Fonteinen

$$

Some brewery restaurants tend to be slightly chaotic affairs, relying on their draft brews to pick up where the food falls short. Not so this dining offshoot from the local 3 Fonteinen lambic brewery. The menu and cooking here are spot on and embrace more than the usual carbonnades, with a good selection of mussels in various sauces accompanying some interesting game options. Afterwards, visit its nearby Lambik-O-Droom brewpub, which has a tasting room and garden terrace. Brewery tours are on Friday and Saturday at  3 pm, and on Sunday at 2 pm, with no reservation required.

Herman Teirlinckplein 3, Beersel, 1650, Belgium
02-331--0652
Known For
  • A cut above the usual brewery eatery
  • The selection of lambic beers is naturally excellent
  • The mussels are heaven
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.–Thurs.
Brewery tours are free

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Restaurant Molensteen

$$$

Only a 10-minute walk from the castle, in the village of Gaasbeek, lies this pleasant country restaurant with a pretty courtyard. Its building dates back to the late 18th century, and it has been a brewery, a tavern, and a farm in its day. Expect dishes such as horse steaks, venison tornados, and goose-liver pie with fig jam, all of which offer a more rustic take on the usual brasserie fare. A few dishes even make ample use of the local lambic beer made in these parts.

Donkerstraat 20, Gaasbeek, 1750, Belgium
02-532--0297
Known For
  • Reliable dining in an old-world country setting
  • A friendly local welcome
  • It's one of few good options within easy walking distance of the castle
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues.–Thurs.

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Schievelavabo

$$ | Schuman

This sturdy Belgian chain nestles on the pedestrianized Chaussée de Wavre, just opposite place Jourdan, where you'll find slightly better dining options than around the square. It's as reliable as its gravy-soaked meats are tasty, dishing up the classics (meatballs, beery beef stews, ham and mustard sauce) amid walls plastered with old advertising posters from the '50s and '60s. It's one of a half-dozen in the city, but still worth a go.

Chau. de Wavre 344, Brussels, 1040, Belgium
02-280--0083
Known For
  • A reliable chain with few surprises but much to savor
  • It's one of the better options off place Jourdan
  • Really good value

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