Bruges rewards wandering. Step away from the Markt in almost any direction and within five minutes the crowds vanish and you get the storybook city to yourself. These are the corners locals love.
The almshouses (godshuizen)
Scattered across the city are tiny whitewashed courtyards built centuries ago as charitable housing. Many are still lived in, hushed and flower-filled — push open an unlocked gate (respectfully) and step into another era.
The eastern ramparts & windmills
The grassy earthen banks on the east edge of town carry a footpath past a line of historic windmills. Locals jog and walk dogs here; tourists almost never make it this far.
Sint-Janshuismolen
The one windmill you can still step inside, on those eastern ramparts. A small, characterful visit and a perfect excuse for the walk out.
The quiet canals of the east side
The Groenerei and the lanes around it offer the same mirror-still water and leaning houses as the famous postcard views — minus the crowds and the selfie sticks.
Jerusalem Chapel & the lace district
A strange and striking private chapel modelled on the Holy Sepulchre, in a quiet quarter once home to Bruges' lace-makers. Genuinely unusual, and rarely busy.
A bench in the Astrid Park
A leafy, local park a short walk from the centre — the kind of place to sit with a coffee or a cone of fries and watch Bruges go about its day.
There are 40+ more hidden gems in the app
Bring a Local maps every one of them, with a local's tip on each and a "Guide Me" planner that points you to the quiet spots near you right now.
See the passes — from €2,50