Brussels in 6 Days: Budget Belgium Day Trips
Six Days in Brussels: City Base Plus Four Belgium Day Trips
Six days in Brussels adds Leuven, the cheapest and shortest of the four day trips, easy to run as a half day if the schedule needs slack somewhere. Two nights of Brussels sights, then four separate rail days out, Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp and Leuven in that order, each starting and ending at Brussels-Central or Midi regardless of where you sleep. Only 5 days? Drop to our 5-day version . Have a 7th day free? Our 7-day version adds Waterloo onto this same spine.
Book these before you go:
- Search Brussels hotels on Booking.com : book ahead around the Winter Wonders Christmas market and the biennial Flower Carpet (13 to 16 August 2026).
- Browse Bruges day tours on GetYourGuide : a fixed itinerary for the canal loop and the Belfry.
- Check Antwerp tours on Viator : a guided Rubens and Cathedral of Our Lady route.
- Search Antwerp hotels on Booking.com : worth checking if Day 5 turns into an overnight instead of a round trip.
| Day | Focus | Distance / train time from Brussels |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | Grand-Place, Manneken Pis, fritkot lunch, Delirium Cafe | Home base |
| Day 2 | Sablon, Marolles, one museum, EU Quarter | Home base |
| Day 3 | Ghent day trip: Graslei, Gravensteen, St Bavo Cathedral | about 50 km, 27 to 36 min direct |
| Day 4 | Bruges day trip: Markt, Belfry tower, canal loop | 53 to 65 min direct |
| Day 5 | Antwerp day trip: Cathedral of Our Lady, Rubens House | 45 to 48 min direct |
| Day 6 | Leuven day trip: Grote Markt, Town Hall, Oude Markt | 20 to 25 min direct |
Day 1: Grand-Place, Fries and a Very Small Statue
Start at the Grand-Place itself, free to enter and UNESCO-listed, ideally before 9am while the tour groups are still at breakfast. Walk five minutes to the Manneken Pis and get the disappointment out of the way early: the bronze boy is about 55 to 61cm tall, smaller than almost every visitor expects, so budget two minutes and move on rather than building a morning around it. Current opening times for both are on visit.brussels .
Lunch is a fritkot cone, not a sit-down restaurant. A proper paper cone of fries costs 3 to 5 euros standing up at a frituur and beats anything plated at a tourist-menu place nearby; Belgium holds UNESCO-recognized heritage status for the fritkot tradition specifically, so this is the real dish, not a downgrade from one. If a waffle is next, know there are two: the Brussels waffle is light, crisp and rectangular, the Liege waffle is dense and chewy with caramelized sugar baked into the dough. Vendors assume you know the difference.
Evening: Delirium Cafe, a short walk from Grand-Place, pours from a list of more than 3,000 beers, a genuine Guinness World Record holder. A standard glass runs 4 to 7 euros; ask for a trappist ale (Orval, Chimay, Westmalle) for the classic Belgian order rather than a novelty pick.
Day 2: Sablon, the EU Quarter and One Museum Choice
Morning: wander the Sablon for free, window-shop the chocolatiers (Wittamer and Pierre Marcolini both trace to this square), then walk into the Marolles for the daily flea market on Place du Jeu de Balle, stronger for real bargains Thursday or Friday than the weekend crush.
Pick one paid museum rather than three. The Magritte Museum runs about 13 euros and covers Belgium’s best-known painter in a tight, walkable collection, better value per euro than the Atomium’s 17 euro entry for an elevator ride and a view, even though the Atomium photographs better. If money is tighter, skip both paid options and do the Parlamentarium and the House of European History in the EU Quarter instead, both free, both self-guided, about 90 minutes each. Brussels hosts the EU institutions and, separately, NATO’s headquarters since 1967, two different organizations sharing one city.
Dinner: walk past Rue des Bouchers, prices there are set for tourists and the food doesn’t earn them. Sainte-Catherine, ten minutes further, has better seafood and moules-frites for similar or less money.
Day 3: Day Trip to Ghent
Ghent is a 27 to 40 minute direct train from Brussels-Central, Midi or Nord, with several departures an hour; the standard one-way fare runs about 10 to 13 euros in second class, less with the weekend or under-26/65+ discounts. Belgiantrain.be has the live timetable and fare calculator for this route.
It gets you the same canal-and-guildhouse scenery as Bruges for a shorter ride, a cheaper ticket and noticeably fewer tour buses. Walk the Graslei waterfront, climb into Gravensteen castle, and see the Ghent Altarpiece inside St Bavo Cathedral, full listings sit on visit.gent.be . Eat lunch in the Patershol district, cheaper than anything comparable in central Bruges.
Day 4: Day Trip to Bruges
Bruges is a 53 to 65 minute direct train from Brussels-Midi, Central or Nord, departures every 15 to 20 minutes; the standard weekday one-way fare runs about 16 to 18 euros in second class, closer to 10 to 12 euros with the weekend discount. Belgiantrain.be has the live fare calculator, and visitbruges.be covers current hours for the Belfry and the historic core.
Bruges earns the reputation: the Markt square, the Belfry’s 366-step climb (no lift, timed tickets can sell out in peak season), and the canal loop are genuinely worth the trip, though the day-trippers vastly outnumber overnight guests and the Markt can feel like a theme-park queue at midday in summer. Walk the canal loop for free rather than paying for the boat-tour upsell.
Day 5: Day Trip to Antwerp
Antwerp is a 45 to 48 minute direct train from Brussels-Central, departures roughly every 15 minutes; the standard one-way fare runs about 9 to 11 euros in second class, the cheapest of the day trips before Leuven. Belgiantrain.be covers the live timetable, and visit.antwerpen.be has current hours for the sights below.
Antwerp is the biggest city after Brussels and the one gateway stop that genuinely rewards an overnight rather than a rushed day trip. The Cathedral of Our Lady holds several Rubens triptychs, Rubens House covers the painter’s own studio and home, the Diamond District by Centraal Station is worth a browse without buying (much of it is Jewish-owned and closed Saturdays and Jewish holidays), and Antwerp Centraal itself, often ranked among the world’s most beautiful stations, costs nothing to admire.
Day 6: Day Trip to Leuven
Leuven is a 20 to 25 minute direct train from Brussels-Central, very frequent service; the standard one-way fare runs about 6 to 9 euros, the cheapest and shortest of the four day trips here. Belgiantrain.be has the live timetable, and visitleuven.be covers current opening hours.
Leuven is compact enough that half a day covers most of it: the ornate Gothic Town Hall facade on the Grote Markt, KU Leuven, the oldest university in the Low Countries, founded in 1425, and Stella Artois’s home city, where a beer at the source costs less than the same bottle in a Brussels bar. The Oude Markt strip, sometimes called the longest bar in Europe, is a cheap, lively evening spot surrounded by students rather than tourists. Don’t block out a full dedicated day for it, the sights run out faster than the day does; use the leftover afternoon back in Brussels for the Sablon or last-minute shopping instead.
Is Leuven worth a full day from Brussels?
No, and that’s the appeal. Most of Leuven’s sights, the Town Hall, the university quarter, the Oude Markt, fit into half a day, which makes it the easiest of these four day trips to combine with a relaxed morning or a last afternoon back in Brussels rather than a full round-trip day.
Do I need a rail pass for four Belgium day trips?
No. A Belgium rail pass only pays off well past ten journeys a year; four single one-way tickets at 6 to 18 euros each, cheaper still on weekends or with an under-26/65+ discount, cost less than most pass products for a single week-long trip.
Do Leuven last, not third. It is the shortest ride on the list, which makes it the easiest day to shorten or skip entirely if an earlier day trip runs long.