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Things to Do in Brussels 2026: Top Attractions

Discover Brussels beyond the European Parliament. From UNESCO Grand Place to Art Nouveau architecture and world-class beer culture, explore Europe's most eclectic compact city.

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By Brussels News Desk · Published 3 July 2026, 9:45

2 min read

Updated 1 d ago· 3 July 2026, 17:10

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This article was generated by AI from the linked public sources. The Daily Brussels is independently owned and covers Brussels news free from advertiser or sponsor influence. It is provided for general information only and is not professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Read our editorial standards →

Things to Do in Brussels 2026: Top Attractions
Photo: Photo by Noah Frohn on Pexels

Brussels is a city that consistently surprises. Behind its reputation as a bureaucratic capital — home to the European Parliament, NATO and a hundred lobbying firms — lies one of Europe's most genuinely eclectic cultural destinations, where Art Nouveau architecture, world-class comic book culture and some of the continent's best beer converge in a relatively compact, walkable city centre.

The Grand Place is the obvious starting point. Unesco-listed and framed by gilded guild houses built in the late 17th century, it ranks among the most spectacular public squares in the world. But Brussels rewards those who push beyond it. The Marolles flea market, running every morning on the Place du Jeu de Balle, is a genuine institution where antique dealers, students and retirees browse together through furniture, vinyl and bric-a-brac. The Comic Strip Centre on the Rue des Sables celebrates Belgium's extraordinary contribution to the art form, from Tintin and the Smurfs to the darker contemporary work being produced today.

For architecture enthusiasts, the city is a pilgrimage site. Victor Horta's Hotel Tassel and the Maison et Atelier Horta — now a museum — are essential viewing, but the Art Nouveau trail extends across dozens of private houses in Ixelles and Saint-Gilles. The Atomium, built for the 1958 World's Fair and beautifully restored, remains a genuinely joyful piece of mid-century optimism. The BOZAR Centre for Fine Arts hosts an ambitious year-round programme of visual art, music and film.

Brussels in 2026 has also become a serious food and drink destination in its own right, beyond the waffles and chocolates that line the tourist-facing streets near the Grand Place. The Parvis de Saint-Gilles on a warm evening, with its pavement restaurants and diverse crowd, offers a vision of the city at its best — cosmopolitan, unhurried and entirely itself.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Brussels

Covering lifestyle in Brussels. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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