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Brussels vs Berlin

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Quick Verdict

Pick Berlin for Brandenburg Gate gravity, East Side Gallery murals, and Berghain weekends that don't end. Pick Brussels for Grand Place guildhalls, Délirium's 2,000 beers, and 90-minute hops to Bruges, Ghent, and Amsterdam.

🏆 Berlin wins 81 OVR vs 75 · attribute matchup 35

Brussels
Brussels
Belgium

75OVR

VS
Berlin
Berlin
Germany

81OVR

80
Safety
78
78
Cleanliness
83
57
Affordability
65
79
Food
79
72
Culture
92
65
Nightlife
99
90
Walkability
79
64
Nature
64
94
Connectivity
86
74
Transit
95
Brussels

Brussels

Belgium

Berlin

Berlin

Germany

Brussels

Safety: 68/100Pop: 1.2MEurope/Brussels

Berlin

Safety: 74/100Pop: 3.6M (city)Europe/Berlin

How do Brussels and Berlin compare?

An odd-couple pairing that comes up mostly when travelers are stitching together a Northern European route — and Brussels is genuinely underrated against Berlin's louder reputation. Berlin is the sprawling reinvention capital — Brandenburg Gate, the Reichstag dome, East Side Gallery's Wall murals, Berghain and Watergate weekends that don't end, currywurst at Curry 36, and Kreuzberg-Neukölln as cheap creative hubs. Brussels is the smaller, denser one — the Grand Place's gilded guildhalls (Victor Hugo called it the most beautiful square in Europe), Manneken Pis as a tourist obligation, the Magritte Museum, Sablon antique shops, mussels-and-fries at Chez Léon, Saint-Géry's nightlife, and Belgian beer cafés like Délirium pouring 2,000+ varieties.

Berlin is significantly cheaper — Berlin $40 hostel / $100 mid / $280 luxe, Brussels $55 / $140 / $390. Safety in Berlin around 78, Brussels around 80 — both safe enough, with Berlin's pickpocket pressure on the U8 and around Görlitzer Park at night, and Brussels' flags being Brussels-Midi station and the Molenbeek edge after dark. Berlin wins on nightlife, museums, scale, and value. Brussels wins on chocolate (Pierre Marcolini, Mary, and the smaller artisans around Sablon), beer culture, food per square meter, and as a 90-minute Eurostar from London or 1.5-hour Thalys from Paris — the easiest base for a Western Europe loop.

Both peak May, June, September, October. Pro tip: in Brussels, skip Manneken Pis crowds and head to Galeries Royales Saint-Hubert (Europe's first covered shopping arcade, 1847) for chocolate plus the actual best moules-frites at La Roue d'Or. In Berlin, the WelcomeCard pays for itself in a day with two museums. Pick Berlin for nightlife, history, and scale. Pick Brussels for chocolate, beer, and a compact base for hopping the Benelux.

💰 Budget

budget
Brussels: $55-80Berlin: $45-70
mid-range
Brussels: $130-200Berlin: $110-170
luxury
Brussels: $300-500Berlin: $280+

🛡️ Safety

Brussels70/100Safety Score78/100Berlin

Brussels

Brussels is generally safe for tourists but has higher petty crime than other Belgian cities. The area around Gare du Midi can feel sketchy, particularly at night. Pickpocketing is the main concern.

Berlin

Berlin is generally safe for travelers. Violent crime against tourists is rare, but petty theft occurs at major tourist sites and on public transit, particularly the U-Bahn and S-Bahn. Some neighborhoods feel rougher at night but are rarely dangerous.

🌤️ Weather

Brussels

Brussels has a maritime climate — mild but often grey and rainy. Rain is possible any time of year, so always carry a jacket. Summer is the most pleasant season.

Spring (March - May)5-17°C
Summer (June - August)13-23°C
Autumn (September - November)5-17°C
Winter (December - February)1-6°C

Berlin

Berlin has a continental climate with warm summers and cold, grey winters. The city gets less rainfall than London but the overcast winter days can feel relentless. Summer days are long with sunset after 9:30 PM in June.

Spring (March - May)4-19°C
Summer (June - August)14-26°C
Autumn (September - November)3-18°C
Winter (December - February)-2-4°C

🚇 Getting Around

Brussels

Brussels has an integrated STIB/MIVB network of metro, tram, and bus lines. The historic center is compact and walkable, but the metro is useful for reaching outer attractions.

Walkability: Very good in the center — Grand-Place, Manneken Pis, Sablon, and the Royal Museums are all within a 15-20 minute walk of each other. The Atomium requires metro or tram.

Brussels Metro€2.10 single, €8.40 for 5 trips, €14 for 10 trips
Trams€2.10 single (same ticket as metro)
STIB/MIVB Buses€2.10 single (same ticket)

Berlin

Berlin has one of Europe's best public transit systems run by BVG (buses, trams, U-Bahn) and S-Bahn Berlin. The network is divided into zones A, B, and C. Most visitors only need AB. A single AB ticket costs €3.20 and a day pass €8.80. The 49-Euro Deutschlandticket covers all local transit nationwide for a calendar month.

Walkability: Berlin is very flat and extremely bikeable — consider renting a bike from Nextbike or Swapfiets. Walking between sights in Mitte is easy but distances across the city are large. The city has over 900 km of dedicated bike lanes.

U-Bahn (Underground)€3.20 single; €8.80 day pass (AB zone)
S-Bahn (Suburban Rail)€3.20 single; €8.80 day pass (AB zone)
Tram (Strassenbahn)€3.20 single; same ticket as U-Bahn/S-Bahn/bus

📅 Best Time to Visit

Brussels

May–Jun, Sep

Peak travel window

Berlin

May–Sep

Peak travel window

The Verdict

Choose Brussels if...

you want Grand Place waffles + chocolate + beer, Atomium, Manneken Pis, EU-quarter political gravitas, and 90-minute hops to Bruges, Ghent, and Amsterdam

Choose Berlin if...

you want legendary techno nightlife, powerful history, edgy street art, and a creative, multicultural atmosphere at great prices

BrusselsvsBerlin

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