lifestyle
Brussels Residents Cut Waste and Transport Costs With Daily Sustainable Habits
Residents across Ixelles and Saint-Gilles describe the routines that cut their waste and transport costs without extra expense.
2 min read
lifestyle
Residents across Ixelles and Saint-Gilles describe the routines that cut their waste and transport costs without extra expense.
2 min read

Households in central Brussels report cutting monthly food and transport spending by 120 euros on average through daily habits built around local markets and short bike routes.
Global events such as the recent Spanish wildfire deaths and Nigeria’s bandit crackdown have sharpened attention on resource use, yet Brussels residents focus on immediate changes that fit their own streets and budgets. Rising energy prices since 2024 have pushed more people to track what they actually discard and how they move around the city each week.
Shoppers at the Place Flagey market on Sunday mornings bring their own containers to the cheese and vegetable stalls, avoiding single-use packaging. A few blocks away on Rue Blaes in the Marolles, the bulk-goods shop “Färm” stocks lentils and oats by weight, allowing customers to refill the same jars week after week.
Commuters who live near the canal in Molenbeek use the Villo! stations at Place Sainctelette for short trips into the European Quarter rather than driving. The city’s 2025 mobility data showed 34 percent of trips under 5 km now made by bike or foot, up from 27 percent in 2023, with the largest gains recorded along the canal corridor.
One resident who cycles daily from Ixelles to the Gare du Midi area keeps a spare rain jacket at the office and uses the covered bike parking under the station, which costs 1.50 euros per day. Another in Saint-Gilles switched to the tram line 81 for evening errands after calculating that the monthly pass saved 45 euros compared with occasional car use and parking fees near Avenue Louise.
Bruxelles Environnement’s latest household survey, released in May 2026, recorded an 18 percent drop in residual waste per person in the city since 2024. The same report noted that residents who joined community composting schemes in Laeken and Forest diverted an extra 28 kg of organic waste annually.
Locals recommend starting with one change: carrying a single reusable bag to the weekly market or setting a phone reminder to check the Villo! app before leaving home. Those adjustments, repeated over four weeks, produce the measurable drop in both waste and out-of-pocket costs that many Brussels households now track.
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Published by The Daily Brussels
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