Where to Eat in Brussels (Tourist Traps vs Real Local Spots
/Brussels is one of the easiest cities in Europe to eat extremely well.
It is also one of the easiest cities to accidentally spend €28 on a frozen waffle next to a plastic lobster menu.
The difference between an unforgettable meal and a tourist trap is often… one street.
So here is a local guide to where you should actually eat in Brussels — and what to avoid if you want the real version of the city.
First: how to recognize a tourist trap in Brussels
There are signs.
Usually:
giant menus with photos
someone outside trying to convince you to enter
waffles covered in twelve toppings
“traditional Belgian restaurant” written in six languages
empty restaurant next to another empty restaurant
And somehow:
all of them serving pizza, pasta, burgers and fondue at the same time.
Impressive, honestly.
The biggest tourist trap area in Brussels
Rue des Bouchers
People end up there because:
it is central
it looks lively
somebody waves at them with a laminated menu
We understand. It happens.
BUT
There are exceptions:
Ogenblick - Maison Vincent - Bouillon - La Pierre Bleue - Aux Armes de Bruxelles - Chez Léon.
We’ll show you which ones are good and which ones to avoid!
Where do locals actually eat outside of the touristy areas?
1. In Saint-Gilles
Saint-Gilles is where Brussels starts feeling less like a capital city and more like an organized collection of very opinionated villages.
You will find:
small wine bars
creative Belgian cooking
excellent brunches
places where nobody is trying to sell you a waffle the size of your head
The atmosphere is relaxed, slightly chaotic, and much more local.
2. Around Sainte-Catherine
This area is one of the best balances between:
central
lively
genuinely good food
Especially if you like:
seafood
natural wine
modern Belgian cuisine
bars that become slightly dangerous after midnight
Which, to be fair, is part of Brussels culture.
3. In local cafés and bars
Some of the best food experiences in Brussels are not in restaurants at all.
They are:
fries eaten standing outside
cheese and beer in old cafés
random daily specials written on chalkboards
tiny places with terrible lighting and amazing food
Brussels rewards curiosity.
What you SHOULD eat while you are here
Forget trying to “eat healthy” for three days.
This city was not designed for that.
Focus on:
fries
beer
croquettes
chocolate
waffles
stoemp
carbonnade flamande
And ideally:
eat slowly.
Belgian food is not sophisticated in the minimalist Scandinavian sense.
It is generous. Comforting. Slightly excessive sometimes.
That is part of the charm.
The problem with “Top 10 Restaurants in Brussels” lists
Most are written by:
people who stayed two days
AI-generated websites
travel bloggers who photographed their coffee longer than they drank it
Brussels does not reveal itself immediately.
The best places are often:
slightly hidden
understated
full of locals
impossible to identify from the outside
Which is why food tours actually make sense here.
Not because people cannot find food alone.
But because they would never know what is worth walking into.
So… where should you REALLY eat?
Honestly?
A mix of:
proper local restaurants
neighborhood bars
street food
hidden specialty shops
That is how Brussels works best.
And if you want help separating the genuinely great spots from the expensive disappointments…
👉 Join our food tour at Hungry Mary Food Tours and we will show you the city the way locals actually eat it:
slightly tipsy, and very happy :)

