34 Best Nightlife in Brussels, Belgium

Bonnefooi

Lower Town Fodor's choice

This small, two-floor bar manages to be both laid-back and achingly hip with good beer and cocktails, a vintage Photomatique machine, chandeliers, free live jazz and electronica, and DJs on most nights. 

The Modern Alchemist

Fodor's choice

A fantastically hip, cozy, stylish brick-walled cocktail bar where the quality is never less than high and the drinks deceptively potent. A huge selection of rums and whiskeys also adorn the menu, but you can't go wrong with the slightly sour "Last Shot"—you can even order a bottle of it to take away. 

À 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. 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 their (and the staff's) gruff charm.

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Achille

Schaerbeek

An intriguing neighborhood wine bar that does a roaring trade in crowd-pleasing sharing plates, from shiitake arancini to frites drizzled in Parmesan and truffle. It's mostly good-quality French wines, though you can just as easily bag a beer or kombucha. 

Au Soleil

Lower Town

A slightly scruffy interior (complete with resident cat) belies what is essentially a delightful old-school café-bar with a terrace on the street outside. It's popular with locals, who fill the tables outside in the evening. Just grab a beer and a croque monsieur and watch the world go by.

Rue du Marché-au-Charbon 86, Brussels, Brussels Capital, 1000, Belgium
02-512–3430

Bier Circus

Upper Town

One of the best beer pubs in the city is Bier Circus, out by the Cirque Royale, which has a huge list of obscure, small-batch Belgian beers, including some excellent organic brews. Part of the bar has now also become a shop, with some 250 bottles to choose from. 

Brasserie & Bar de la Mule

Schaerbeek

A brand-new local brewery and tap house set in a former stables. This used to be where they kept the mules that pulled Schaerbeek's trams until the first electric line was installed in 1894. Now tables have been strewn across the old stable yard, and its friendly, mulleted owner pours out glasses of his own brewed German-style wheat beers, along with the odd saison and lager. 

Brussels Beer Project

Lower Town

You might have thought that U.S.-style craft beer would go down like a lead balloon in the notoriously old-fashioned world of Belgian beer, but that's rather the point of this iconoclastic project. BBP's 24-tap taproom has quickly become an essential stop for any hop lovers in the city and was the first step to world domination---they're now even in Paris and Tokyo. A new taproom also recently opened in Ixelles on rue de Bailli. 

Café Belga

Set in an ocean-liner-like Art Deco building, this is a favorite among Brussels’s beautiful people. It's the kind of place you'd spot a local TV star sipping a cocktail or mint tea at the zinc bar or outside gazing at the swans on the Ixelles ponds. DJs play until late; it's also a popular brunch spot for hungover locals on Sunday. 

Pl. Eugène Flagey 18, Ixelles, Brussels Capital, 1050 Ixelles, Belgium
02-544--0100

Café Commerce

A charming bar set on the corner of Ladeuzeplein. Old wooden floors, high ceilings, and a stash of board games you can play while having a beer make it a laid-back escape. There's also always a pot of soup on the go if you're hungry. 

Café des Halles

Lower Town

Set within a late 19th-century brick-and-iron covered market, Halles St-Géry was originally built to house the old meat market. The building itself was abandoned by traders in the 1970s though, and it lay derelict until the turn of the millennium, when it was renovated into an exhibition space (upper floor) and a bustling café-bar with a fine line in leather sofas and cocktails. Down in the vaulted cellar, you'll also find Club des Halles, which dishes up oodles of classic house music on weekends. Bring 50 cents for the toilet, though. 

Cafe Maison de Peuples

The hipster-dense Parvis de Saint-Gilles area is stuffed with great bars, but this popular joint is among the more pristine. It does a great brunch, and late-night DJs often go on until late on weekends. It's named after a demolished Victor Horta--designed building, the loss of which is often used as one of the worst examples of Brussels's gentrification.

Parvis de Saint-Gilles 39, Saint-Gilles, Brussels Capital, 1060, Belgium
02-850–0908

Cafe Roskum

Lower Town

This cozy café-bar has a good lineup of free jazz (mostly) concerts on Sunday night at 8 pm. At any other time though, it's typical of most Belgian bars in the city: noisy, friendly, and pretty lively, with a good selection of beers.

Chez Maman

Lower Town

Maman herself presides over this disco with a drag show (in French) every Friday and Saturday.

Chez Moeder Lambic

The first bar of the Moeder Lambic brewery opened in the 1980s. It's an icon on the Brussels beer scene, and alongside its own brews, it claims to stock 300 Belgian beers and quite a few foreign ones. Soak up the old-school vibe and pore over a fine collection of comic books while you sip. It has a second branch on place Fontainas in the center. 

De Metafoor

On Parijsstraat, this aging but very cozy bar heaves with both young and old. It's unpretentious, has a really good choice of local beers, and there's just nothing else to it—no elaborate effort to make it more than it is. That in itself makes it special. Plus you can bring your own food. 

Parijsstraat 34, Leuven, Flanders, 3000, Belgium
0496-254--465

Deja Vu

Cinquantenaire

A friendly neighborhood wine bar near the eastern entrance to Cinquantenaire. There's a good choice of organic wines, decent cocktails, and a smattering of beers. 

Av. des Celtes 42--44, Brussels, Brussels Capital, 1040, Belgium
02-346--9678

Delirium Cafe

Lower Town

Yes, it's horrifically touristy, but the beer selection at the city's most popular bar now tops 3,000 brews, and that deserves sampling, even if most are only available at the tiny bar downstairs. Over the years it's expanded to more than three floors, with a taproom and the quieter "Hoppy Loft" offering respite from the barrel tables, tourists, and clutter on the first floor. Floris Bar, which is owned by the same people and specializes in absinthe, tequila, and a Dutch-style gin known as jenever, sits across the alleyway, and offshoot Little Delirium lies a short walk away at 9 rue du Marche aux Fromages.

Impasse de la Fidelite 4A, Brussels, Brussels Capital, 1000, Belgium
02-514–4434

Dynamo (Bar de Soif)

This likable craft beer bar usually has at least 15 draft beers on tap and an ace in its pocket. The selection is huge, the staff are friendly and knowledgeable, but you can also order Japanese food from the rather fine restaurant across the street (Tokidori). A definite winner. 

Chau. d'Alsemberg 130, Saint-Gilles, Brussels Capital, 1060, Belgium
02-539--1567

Ethylo

Schaerbeek

An excellent and discreet neighborhood cocktail bar buried among the houses a street back from Parc Josephat. It's surprisingly good given its location and dishes up drinks with no little amount of flair.  

Groupil Le Fol

Lower Town

Groupil Le Fol skirts a fine line between curiosity shop and bar, complete with jukebox, comfy old sofas, and no beer for once. The drinks menu consists of an array of fruit wines and punches, while its owner usually sprawls spiderlike in a corner cubbyhole watching TV. If the conversation ever drags, there's always something weird to look at.

Jane's

Jane’s has the air of a chill afterparty, with guests from the city's art world occasionally invited to soundtrack the evening by their genial host (the bar's own Jane Haesen, a veteran of the city's party scene). A good selection of natural wines, cocktails, and beers make the evening swim. 

Chau. de Waterloo 393, Ixelles, Brussels Capital, 1050, Belgium
02-851--1039

L'Apéroterie

Upper Town

A specialist food shop that doubles as a fine apéro bar as the sun sets. Locals spill onto the pavement terrace, where a good choice of small tapas bites, cocktails, and lesser-seen wines keeps out the cold in winter. 

L'Archiduc

Lower Town

The Art Deco design of L'Archiduc attracts a thirtyish, fashionable crowd, which is hardly surprising given the upmarket shopping area in which it resides. Add to the mix live jazz on weekends and fine cocktails, and it makes for one of the more polished entries in the city's bar scene.

La Porte Noir

Lower Town

A popular option, this lively, dimly lighted cellar bar is all brick, benches, and radio-friendly rock music. It does a good line in beers and (more unusually for Brussels) whiskies, though there's a certain Logan's Run vibe to the joint, and anyone over 30 might want to look elsewhere.

Le Berbator Bierotheque

Schaerbeek

A great little local beer bar with an excellent selection of bottled and draft (usually around 20) brews, all typically from the smaller breweries that don't find their way onto most bar menus. 

Av. Louis Bertrand 23, Brussels, Brussels Capital, 1030, Belgium
0470-832--172

Madame Moustache

Lower Town

Rather out of place in the otherwise refined Ste-Catherine area, this buzzing, vaudeville-theme after-hours bar/club is trashy, fun, and does good cocktails and theme nights. It's not a secret, though, so be prepared to queue after midnight—and bring change for the bathroom. 

Monk

Lower Town

A favorite with the artsy crowd and lovers of a quiet afternoon with a board game, this former schoolhouse is now a bar that draws crowds late into the night with live music, a central location, and good beers. Its spaghetti isn't bad, either.

Rue Ste-Catherine 42, Brussels, Brussels Capital, 1000, Belgium
02-511–7511

Nabu

Cinquantenaire

Wrapped in the streets off the eastern exit of Cinquantenaire is this cheerful neighborhood natural-wine bar (from the people behind Tarzan in Ixelles) with a good choice of tapas. Its redbrick interior and friendly vibe make it a charming spot. 

Av. Albert-Elisabeth 35, Brussels, Brussels Capital, 1200, Belgium
02-479--6887

Sounds

Sounds has been dishing up contemporary jazz along with decent Italian food since 1986, and it shows no signs of losing its rhythm.