Save up to $1,322 on our trips! Limited spots. Book Now.

The Best Art and Culture Hotels in Brussels

The Grand-Place Grote Markt Big Market square in Brussels city historical center with people, sunset view, Kings House Brussels City Museum, House Dukes Brabant and Guilds of Brussels, Belgium
The Grand-Place Grote Markt Big Market square in Brussels city historical center with people, sunset view, King's House Brussels City Museum, House Dukes Brabant and Guilds of Brussels, Belgium | Shutterstock

Melding with the city’s vibrant arts and cultural scenes, hotels in Brussels range from cartoon-inspired dorm rooms to impossibly chic boutiques. Check out our selection of the trendiest.

Architecturally varied and culturally metropolitan, Brussels offers so much more than European Union offices, beer and fries. It’s a place of art nouveau houses, museums and galleries, a rich tradition of cartoon heroes like Tintin and a meeting place for exiles like Victor Hugo. The city’s hotels contribute to its cultural legacy by preserving ancient buildings and incorporating imaginative new interiors. You can stay in a 1920s mansion or an ornate 19th-century shopping arcade, among decor inspired by Belgium’s classic comic strips, paint colours or the 1970s.

Hotel Amigo

Chain Hotel, Luxury

RFH_Hotel_Amigo__Grand-Place_Suite
Courtesy of RFH

Situated in the heart of Brussels, Hotel Amigo combines historical charm with modern luxury. As part of the esteemed Rocco Forte Hotels collection, it is renowned for exceptional service and elegant design. Just steps from the Grand Place, Hotel Amigo offers 173 stylish rooms and suites, blending Belgian tradition with contemporary comfort. Guests can enjoy authentic Italian cuisine at the award-winning Ristorante Bocconi and sophisticated cocktails at Bar Magritte, the world’s first bar dedicated to Belgian Surrealist genius René Magritte. Ideal for both business and leisure, the hotel features versatile event spaces equipped with modern facilities. Led by a dedicated team, Hotel Amigo ensures a personalised and memorable stay for every guest.

Le Dixseptieme

Boutique Hotel

Le Dixseptieme Brussels
Courtesy of Le Dixseptieme / Expedia

A grand 17th-century staircase with carved wooden bannisters winds up through the centre of this mansion on cobbled Rue de la Madeleine. There is a gothic church across the road, a gallery a few doors down and the landscaped Mont des Arts, with its gardens and museums, at the end of the road. Features like original parquet floors and fireplaces, a private terrace, ivy-curtained patio and brick-vaulted sitting area make the bedrooms distinctive while contemporary paintings hang near the open fire in the bar and cabinets full of antique porcelain line the walls of the lounge.

Pantone Hotel

Hotel

The Pantone Hotel in Brussels, Belgium is a color themed boutique hotel based on the pantone color matching system.
© Tim Clark / Alamy Stock Photo
Photographed paint pots and extracts from prismatic charts are a recurring feature in the vivid décor for this modern block, commissioned by colour company Pantone. Designer Michael Penneman, who won several awards for his work here, has created a customisable lobby and a different palette for each of the seven floors. Behind the futon-style beds, one striking paint-based work of art fills each of the 60 bedroom walls. The classy boutiques of Avenue Louise are at the end of the road if you’re not distracted on the way by art galleries like Theorema, with cutting-edge Greek and other European works on display almost next door to the hotel.

Yooma Bruxelles

Hotel

Yooma Bruxelles lobby
Courtesy of Yooma Bruxelles / Expedia
Belgian comic book veteran Le Lombard – the original publisher of Tintin back in 1946 – and Dargaud, who published the first Asterix books in 1961, are among the partners helping to create this immersive “urban lodge”, inspired by classic Franco-Belgian comic strips. Groups of two to six people can stay together in rooms with pod-style bunk beds, surrounded by huge pictures of the adventures of Spirou and Fantasio or the bouncy, long-tailed, leopard-like Marsupilami. Yooma opened in 2020 and is less than a 10-minute walk from the Gare du Midi train station. Don’t miss the old-style brewery tours in the Gueuze Museum almost next door to the lodge.

Hotel Manos Premier

Hotel

Hotel Manos Premier
Courtesy of Hotel Manos Premier / Expedia
Every room is different at the creeper-coated 20th-century Hotel Manos on Chaussée de Charleroi, but they all channel the opulent styles of Louis XV and Louis XVI with antique furniture, opulent upholstery and touches of gold. Sip aromatic cocktails or eat Belgian chocolate mousse on the leafy terrace by the fountain or inside the Kolya restaurant under a glass roof and ostrich-egg chandelier. There’s an oriental flavour to the elegant spa, with its scalloped arches, ornamental tilework and filigree-laced lantern and, when you can tear yourself away, the Horta Museum, with its art nouveau stained glass and swirling mosaics, is but a 10-minute stroll away.

Vintage Hotel

Budget Hotel, Hotel

Vintage Hotel Brussels
Courtesy of Vintage Hotel / Expedia

Faux-fur cushions and swirling psychedelic wallpaper in the bedrooms, a silver Airstream caravan for glamping in the courtyard and mushroom-shaped polycarbonate lamps set the scene for a distinctive look in this 1970s-themed hotel. There are vinyl records serenading you at breakfast and a vintage motorbike on the balcony. But that doesn’t mean your stay can’t have 21st-century levels of comfort, so there are also plasma screens and power showers, wi-fi and air-conditioning throughout. Expect cocktail shakers and bulbous chrome pumps in the bar while the lounge is a mini design museum of gumball machines, fibre optic sidelights and cabinets of retro curiosities.

Odette en Ville

Boutique Hotel

Odette en Ville Brussels
Courtesy of Odette en Ville Brussels / Booking.com

On elegant Rue de Châtelain, all wrought-iron balconies and ornamental brickwork, Odette en Ville inhabits a 1920s mansion with bow windows and a recessed, arched doorway. Sip a pomme d’amour cocktail with rosemary at a table on the pavement outside, between two well-established sidewalk fruit trees, or dine on buttery sole meunière among the dark panelling, wine racks and black and white photos of the super-chic restaurant. In the surrounding side streets, with their art nouveau houses and artisanal boutiques, you’ll find innovative galleries like the Bernier-Eliades and the dynamic Hangar art centre, dedicated since 2020 exclusively to photography.

Made in Louise

Boutique Hotel, Budget Hotel

Made in Louise bedroom
Courtesy of Made in Louise / Expedia

From the breakfast buffet with its organic Belgian granola to a bar full of Brussels-brewed craft beers and Mad Lab savoury cookies, Made in Louise is all about local sourcing and attention to detail. There are crimson climbing roses and giant chess in the whitewashed courtyard or a wood-burning stove and pool table in the comfy indoor lounges. The receptionists can suggest a running route or give you a promo code for the Billy Bike app so you can cycle around the city. And the rooms are individually designed, with different wallpapers or wooden walls and views of the fragrant linden trees outside. The Patinoire art gallery, a few doors down, fills the light-drenched spaces of an old roller-skating rink with subtle, thought-provoking abstracts or bold, colourful forms.

Hotel des Galeries

Boutique Hotel, Luxury

Hotel des Galeries, Galeries Royales Saint Hubert
Courtesy of Hotel des Galeries / Expedia

The Galeries Royales Saint Hubert is a 19th-century shopping arcade with a high ceiling and ornate archways leading to luxury shops, elegant cafes and theatres. Here, the erstwhile Café des Arts attracted gatherings of surrealist painters and writers like Victor Hugo and Alexandre Dumas. The 23 rooms and suites of the Hotel des Galeries are part of this historic, cultural complex. Designers Fleur Delesalle and Camille Flammarion joined forces in 2014 to revamp the interiors, using bespoke ceramic tiles, original prints and beams, bright fabrics and wooden floors. In the hotel’s Comptoir des Galeries restaurant every delicate dish, from foie gras with mango to fig and raspberry pavlova, is a work of art and, for even more photo ops, don’t miss picturesque, cafe-lined Rue de Bouchers next door.

For more places to stay, check into one of the best hotels in Brussels – bookable on Culture Trip.

If you click on a link in this story, we may earn affiliate revenue. All recommendations have been independently sourced by Culture Trip.
close-ad