Beer Pub entertainment in Brussels
- Sort by:
- Popular
-
Het Waterhuis aan de Bierkant
Staff with a passion for beer serve over 140 brews in Waterhuis’ cosy interior and on its sprawling riverside terrace. Exclusive house brews include a knockout amber Klokke Roeland (11% alcohol and often drunk as a nightcap; with a limit of three per person) and a blonde Gandavum Dry Hopping (7.5% and quite possibly the best beer this author’s ever tasted). Unmissable.
reviewed
-
‘t Poatersgat
Look carefully for the concealed hole in the wall and follow the staircase down into this cross-vaulted cellar glowing with ethereal pure-white lights and flickering candles. Opened in 2007, ‘t Poatersgat (which translates from the local dialect as ‘the Monk’s Hole’) has 120 Belgian beers on the menu, including a smashing selection of Trappists.
reviewed
-
Bierhuis Kulminator
Beneath a vine-draped ceiling, this cluttered pub is a veritable library of Belgian beers, with over 750 varieties catalogued in a menu so long the categories (including some vintages from the 1970s) are colour-coded. On-tap specials are listed on the blackboard.
reviewed
-
A
Chez Moeder Lambic
An institution. Behind windows plastered with beer stickers, this tattered, quirky old brown café is the ultimate beer spot in Brussels. Sample some of their hundreds of brews while flipping through the collection of dog-eared comics.
reviewed
-
De Garre
This tiny beer-specialist pub packs ‘em in for its exclusive Tripel de Garre beer. It’s hidden in a narrow cul-de-sac between the Markt and the Burg and is notoriously hard to find; look for the gate on the side of the building.
reviewed
-
‘t Waagstuk
Dozens of steins are suspended from the ceiling of this specialist beer pub accessed through a gate inside a medieval courtyard. It’s a favourite with students (and their professors) from the nearby university.
reviewed
-
Cambrinus
Traditional Belgian and Italian-inspired snacks, as well as good-value lunch and dinner menus help soak up the hundreds of varieties of beer at this 17th-century sculpture-adorned brasserie/pub.
reviewed
-
Brugs Beertje
Legendary throughout Bruges, Belgium and beyond for its hundreds of Belgian brews, this cosy brown café is filled with old advertising posters and locals who are part of the furniture.
reviewed
-
B
Le Bier Circus
In a forgotten residential quarter of the city, you’ll find beer connoisseurs debating the merits of Le Bier Circus’ hundreds of brews.
reviewed






