Quick Verdict
Pick Brussels for Grand Place gilded guildhalls, Délirium's 2,000 beers, and Eurostar hops to London or Amsterdam. Pick Cannes for Belle Époque grand hotels, Le Suquet old-town climbs, and Lérins fortress ferries past Cap d'Antibes.
🏆 Cannes wins 76 OVR vs 75 · attribute matchup 4–2
Cannes
France
Brussels
Belgium
Cannes
Brussels
How do Cannes and Brussels compare?
These are two different Western European weeks. Brussels is the EU-quarter capital of Belgium — the Grand Place's gold-leafed guildhalls, Manneken Pis as the smallest tourist trap on earth, the Atomium standing 102 metres tall in Heysel, world-class Belgian beer at Delirium and À la Mort Subite, frites stands on every other corner, and 90-minute train hops to Bruges, Ghent, and Amsterdam built into the geography. Cannes is the French Riviera's film-festival capital — La Croisette palm-lined seafront, the red-carpeted Palais des Festivals, Belle Époque grand hotels, Le Suquet medieval old town climbing the western hill, and ferry access to the Lérins Islands and Fort Royal where the Man in the Iron Mask was held.
Mid-range budgets diverge meaningfully — Brussels at $165 a day, Cannes at $240 — and the gap shows up at every coffee, every hotel, every dinner once you cross south. Brussels wins on transit access (Eurostar to London, Thalys to Paris and Amsterdam, ICE to Cologne), value, beer culture, chocolate (Pierre Marcolini, Mary, Wittamer), and the architectural variety of an Art Nouveau-rich capital where Victor Horta's townhouses run as a UNESCO ensemble. Cannes wins on weather, walkability inside a tiny seafront footprint, the Mediterranean light, and the coastal-train hop to Antibes, Nice, and Monaco. Brussels peaks May through September; Cannes peaks May–June and September–October, with July and August both overrun.
Connecting them takes a 2-hour direct flight from BRU to NCE for around $90 on Brussels Airlines or easyJet booked three weeks out, then a 30-minute SNCF train hop down the coast to Cannes. Pro tip: if you are visiting Brussels in October through April, book a hotel near the Grand Place rather than the EU quarter — the medieval centre shelters under colonnades and the metro becomes optional in horizontal rain. Pick Brussels for beer-and-chocolate culture, transit-hub access to half of Western Europe, and EU-quarter political gravitas; pick Cannes for Riviera glamour, Mediterranean light, and a polished coastal week of Belle Époque hotels and ferry day trips.
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Cannes
Cannes is a safe city by any objective measure — violent crime against tourists is rare. The main risks are pickpocketing on La Croisette and around the Palais des Festivals (especially during the Film Festival when the city fills with high-net-worth visitors), occasional hotel-room burglaries during major events, and aggressive scooter traffic. The Suquet old town is safe day and night but can feel deserted very late at night because most residents leave after dinner.
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.
🌤️ Weather
Cannes
Classic Mediterranean climate — hot dry summers, mild damp winters, and 300+ days of sunshine a year. The Estérel mountains immediately west and the Maritime Alps to the north shelter Cannes from the Mistral wind that scours the western Côte d'Azur, making the local microclimate notably calmer than Marseille. Sea temperature reaches 25°C in August. Spring (April–June) and autumn (September–October) are the most pleasant; midsummer is hot and crowded; winters are mild but lower-rainfall.
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.
🚇 Getting Around
Cannes
Cannes is a small, walkable city — the Croisette, Vieux Port, Le Suquet old town, Marché Forville, and Rue d'Antibes are all within a 20-minute walk of each other. The TER coastal train connects Cannes seamlessly to Nice, Antibes, Monaco, and Menton — by far the best way to explore the rest of the Côte d'Azur. City buses fill local gaps. Taxis and ride-share (Uber/Bolt) are available but the city is rarely worth one.
Walkability: Cannes is highly walkable — the entire main interest area (La Croisette, Vieux Port, Le Suquet, Marché Forville, Rue d'Antibes shopping) is a flat 1 km × 0.5 km zone walkable in 20 minutes end-to-end. Only Le Suquet has steep climbs.
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.
📅 Best Time to Visit
Cannes
May–Jun, Sep–Oct
Peak travel window
Brussels
May–Jun, Sep
Peak travel window
The Verdict
Choose Cannes if...
you want the French Riviera's film-festival glamour — Croisette palm-lined seafront, the medieval Le Suquet old town, the Lérins Islands, Marché Forville, and Antibes / Nice / Monaco all reachable by coastal train
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
Brussels
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