Bring a Local — Bruges Get your pass

Where to eat in Bruges — a local's food guide

Bruges does comfort food brilliantly — if you know what to order and where to avoid. Here's what's worth your appetite, and how to skip the overpriced traps on the main square.

The golden rule in Bruges: step at least one street back from the Markt. The restaurants right on the square pay the highest rents and rarely cook the best food. A block or two away, prices drop and quality climbs. Here's what to look for.

The classic

Moules-frites (mussels & fries)

The signature dish: a steaming pot of mussels with a cone of fries. Best in mussel season (roughly autumn). Look for places that cook them to order, not in advance.

Comfort food

Flemish beef stew (stoofvlees / carbonade)

Beef slow-braised in dark Belgian beer, usually served with fries. Rich, sweet-savoury and deeply local — the thing to order on a grey day.

Street food

Real Belgian fries (frietjes)

Twice-fried, crisp outside, fluffy inside, served in a cone with a sauce. Belgians take them seriously — a good frituur beats any restaurant side. Try them with andalouse or samurai sauce.

Sweet

Waffles — Brussels vs Liège

Two kinds: the light, rectangular Brussels waffle (dusted with sugar) and the dense, caramelised Liège waffle you can eat on the move. Skip the towering, over-topped tourist versions.

Sweet

Belgian chocolate

Bruges is full of chocolatiers. Buy from the small, independent makers rather than the slick chains on the main drag — the difference in a fresh praline is night and day.

Drink

Belgian beer (and where it's brewed)

From Trappist classics to local Bruges brews, the beer list is half the meal. A traditional brown café with a long beer menu is the place to settle in for the evening.

Morning

Brunch & proper coffee

A small wave of good brunch and specialty-coffee spots has opened just outside the centre — a calmer, more local way to start the day than the touristy cafés on the squares.

A local's tip: a busy room full of people speaking Dutch is the best sign you've found the right place. Empty restaurants with photo menus and a host waving you in from the Markt are the ones to walk past.

Want the exact spots a local eats at?

The app names the specific restaurants, frituurs, chocolatiers and cafés worth your time — with a map, opening hours and a local's tip on each.

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