Register today! | Already registered? Sign in

traveldk.com

from Eyewitness Travel Guides: the world's bestselling travel guides
Member image
1. Empty guide

' Untitled'
includes 0 highlights.

  • Organize
Why register?
  1. Organize and personalize your very own tailor-made Travel Guide. Made by you, for you, with a little help from us.
  2. Publish these guides online to share your trip ideas with fellow travelers.
  3. When you return, add your own discoveries to the site and rate any of the attractions you visited.
Already Registered?

Brussels, Bruges, Antwerp and Ghent : Bars & Nightclubs

Submit an attraction

Make sure your favorite shops, restaurants, hotels and more are listed.

Submit an attraction illustration
Win a trip to Bolivia & Peru
Win a trip to Bolivia & Peru

Enter to win

Competition open to UK residents only

Join our free monthly newsletter

Advertisement

  • The decor may not be as authentic as its history, but this is a good place to sample traditional brews and authentic pub food.

  • “Sudden Death” may sound alarming, but this famous bar, redesigned in Rococo style in 1926, is named after a dice game. It is also the name of a gueuze beer (see Types of Belgian Beer).

  • A beer-drinking shrine of world class, with some 500 beers.

  • House, soul, disco and funk in an old warehouse in the red-light district. The best-known – and, to many, the best – disco in town.

  • A glamorous complex of themed Latin-American-style areas: Cuban market, high street, ballroom. It holds Saturday-night salsa, and Latin-American “fiestas” on advertised dates.

  • Café Vlissinghe

    Said to be the oldest Bruges tavern, founded 1515. Van Dyck apparently met local painters here. Serves light lunches. There’s a boules court in the garden.

  • Bruges has limited night life, but this jazz café has a welcoming crowd and good basic cooking.

  • Hidden away from the tourist throngs, the famous Toone puppet theatre (see Théâtre Royal de Toone, Brussels) has an atmospheric bar serving decent beers and light meals.

  • A lively nightspot, a few metres from the Grand Place, with Cuban DJs and an international crowd.

  • A famous old staminee (pub), at the foot of a folksy little alleyway. Also serves light snacks.

Advertisement

 Latest guides