Ghent
City Guide

Ghent

Belgium · Best time to visit: Apr-Oct.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget €65.00/day
Best season Apr-Oct
Language French / Dutch
Currency EUR
Time zone Europe/Brussels
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Three Towers and a River — Ghent in One Golden Stride

09:00

St. Bavo's Cathedral

Religious
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

Start at Sint-Baafsplein, where the Gothic bulk of St. Bavo's rises like a stone cliff above the cobblestones. You are not going inside today — the exterior alone justifies the stop: crumbling gargoyles, soaring buttresses, and a tower that anchors Ghent's famous three-tower skyline. The square is almost deserted at this hour, and the low eastern sun carves every stone detail in sharp relief.

Tip: Stand at the northeast corner of the square near the lamppost for a clean shot of the full tower with no wires or signs. Before 09:30 you will have the square nearly to yourself — by 10:00 the tour buses start unloading on the south side.

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10:00

St. Michael's Bridge

Landmark
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €0

Walk west across Sint-Baafsplein, past the Belfry and the elegant grey nave of St. Nicholas' Church — all three towers are strung like beads along your five-minute path. St. Michael's Bridge is where it all clicks: turn east and the three towers stack in a single frame above the Leie, the medieval Graslei facades glowing in the morning light. This is the most photographed view in Ghent, and at this hour the sun is behind you, painting every gable gold.

Tip: Position yourself on the western railing and face east — you get all three towers plus the canal in one shot without a wide-angle lens. Morning is the only time the light works for this angle; by afternoon the Graslei facades fall into shadow.

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11:00

Graslei and Korenlei

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Step off the bridge's north side onto the Korenlei — the west bank of the old medieval harbor. Cross at the next small bridge to the Graslei opposite. These two quays are lined with guild houses spanning six centuries, from austere Romanesque to ornate Baroque, their reflections rippling in the canal below. Walk slowly up the Graslei; each facade has a story carved in stone above its door — the House of the Free Boatmen, the Grain Measurers' Hall, the old Toll House.

Tip: Walk the Korenlei (west bank) first and photograph the Graslei facades across the water — the morning sun lights them perfectly. The cafe terraces on Graslei start filling by 11:30, so shoot before then if you want the stone without the beer umbrellas.

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12:15

Het Groot Vleeshuis

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €12

From the north end of Graslei, turn left onto Groentenmarkt — a two-minute walk past the old fish market. Het Groot Vleeshuis is a 15th-century covered butchers' hall with a timber roof like an inverted ship's hull, now a showcase for East Flemish food. This is not a sit-down restaurant — it is a long wooden counter where you point at what you want and eat standing at high tables among locals on their lunch break.

Tip: Order the stoofvleessandwich — slow-braised Flemish beef stew on a crusty roll (~€8) — and pair it with a Gruut Blond (~€4), a local Ghent beer brewed with a medieval herb mix instead of hops, from a brewery three blocks away. Skip the packaged souvenirs near the entrance; the real food is at the counter in the back.

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13:30

Gravensteen

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

Walk north from Groentenmarkt along the narrow Sint-Veerleplein — three minutes and the Castle of the Counts appears like a scene from a siege painting, complete with crenellated walls, a moat, and a brooding stone keep. Built in 1180 by Philip of Alsace after he returned from the Crusades, it is the only surviving medieval castle in Flanders with an intact moat defense. The exterior is the spectacle: raw grey stone, arrow slits, and a drawbridge that still looks operational.

Tip: The best photo angle is from the small bridge on Sint-Veerleplein — stand on the south side to get the full castle with its moat reflection. Early afternoon sun lights the south-facing facade evenly. After your photos, wander into the Patershol lanes behind the castle — Ghent's oldest neighborhood, all crooked alleys and climbing ivy, perfect for aimless wandering until dinner.

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19:00

Pakhuis

Food
Duration: 1.5h Estimated cost: €35

From Gravensteen, walk southeast through the Patershol cobblestone alleys for five minutes to Schuurkenstraat. Pakhuis is a grand brasserie inside a converted 19th-century warehouse — soaring iron columns, an open kitchen, and a buzz that peaks around 19:30. This is where Ghent's office workers, professors, and theatre crowd come for a proper Flemish dinner without pretension.

Tip: Order the Gentse Waterzooi (~€24) — Ghent's signature creamy chicken stew with leeks and potatoes, the dish every food guide names as the city's soul. Pair with a Tripel Karmeliet (~€5). Reserve for 19:00 or arrive by 18:45; by 19:30 it is a 30-minute wait. Trap warning: the terrace restaurants lining the Graslei waterfront charge double for half the quality and locals avoid them entirely — if anyone steers you toward a 'great deal' on the Graslei, keep walking.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Ghent?

Most travelers enjoy Ghent in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Ghent?

The easiest season for most travelers is Apr-Oct, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Ghent?

A practical starting point is about €65 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Ghent?

A good first shortlist for Ghent includes St. Michael's Bridge, Gravensteen.