Top 5 Neighborhoods for Shopping
Shopping in Brussels
The Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert near Grand Place are Europe's oldest covered shopping galleries, and they remain genuinely useful rather than purely decorative. Neuhaus and Mary chocolatiers have flagship shops here, and the boutiques sell leather goods and Belgian fashion. The arcades are beautiful on rainy afternoons.
Rue Antoine Dansaert in the Sainte-Catherine area is the street for Belgian fashion designers. Labels like Dries Van Noten, Ann Demeulemeester, and younger designers have shops along this stretch and the surrounding streets. Stijl is a multi-brand store that curates the best of Belgian design across fashion and accessories.
The Sablon area is Brussels' antiques quarter. The Place du Grand Sablon hosts an antiques market on weekends, and the surrounding streets have galleries and dealers specializing in art deco furniture, Belgian surrealist art, and vintage jewelry. Pierre Marcolini's chocolate shop on the square is also worth a visit -- his Grand Cru collections treat chocolate with the seriousness of wine.
For everyday shopping with character, Rue du Midi and the streets around it near the Bourse have independent record shops -- Veals and Geeks for vinyl -- alongside fabric stores and electronics shops. The Marolles flea market at Place du Jeu de Balle runs every morning and is best visited early for genuine finds among the jumble.
Matongé along Chaussée de Wavre is where you go for wax-print African fabrics, hair braiding salons, and imported food products you will not find elsewhere in the city. It is one of Brussels' most vibrant commercial streets and entirely authentic.
For food shopping, the Marché du Midi near Gare du Midi on Sunday mornings is the largest market in Belgium, drawing shoppers from across the region for fresh produce, clothing, and household goods.