Brussels

Best Sports Bars in Brussels

13 sports bars ranked by our editors. From Ixelles Irish pubs showing Premier League to city-centre venues built for Champions League nights. Belgian beer included.

  1. 01

    The Wild Geese

    Ixelles · Chaussee de Boondael 2 · $$

    Brussels' best sports bar earns its top spot through sheer commitment: 12 screens of varying sizes, every football package available on the continent, and a Guinness pour that the bar has been refining for two decades. The crowd on Champions League nights is mixed EU-institution professionals and Irish expats, which gives it a more interesting atmosphere than the tourist-trap equivalents near the Grand Place. Arrive 45 minutes early for the big fixtures.

  2. 02

    O'Reilly's

    City Centre · Place de la Bourse · $$

    Centrally located on the Place de la Bourse and running three floors of screens, O'Reilly's is the most visible sports bar in Brussels and handles it well. The beer list goes well beyond standard Irish pub fare — the Belgian tap selection includes Chimay and Westmalle alongside the Guinness — and the kitchen produces wings and burgers that can absorb a long afternoon session without complaints. Booking essential for weekend Premier League fixtures.

  3. 03

    Bar Bier

    Saint-Gilles · Chaussee de Waterloo 183 · $

    A neighbourhood sports bar in Saint-Gilles that makes the case for watching football with proper Belgian beer rather than mass-market lager. Eight screens and 24 Belgian taps, with a knowledgeable staff who can match your order to the game if you ask. The Red Devils fixtures bring in the neighbourhood families alongside the regulars, which makes it the most authentically Belgian sports bar in the city.

  4. 04

    The Fuse

    City Centre · Rue Blaes 208 · $$

    The only bar in Brussels that takes American sports seriously: NFL Sunday Ticket, NBA League Pass, and the only venue we know of that opens at 6am for West Coast playoff games. The bar runs American-style food alongside it — proper smash burgers, loaded nachos, and a hot sauce selection that exceeds what most American sports bars manage. The Brussels expat community found this place before anyone else and hasn't left.

  5. 05

    Delirium Cafe

    City Centre · Impasse de la Fidelite · $$

    Famous for its 2,000-beer list, less famous for the fact that it screens major sporting events on nights when half the city wants to drink Belgian ale while watching football. The Guinness World Record for beer selection is genuine and the atmosphere on a match night is what Brussels does best: an international crowd sharing a genuinely Belgian experience. Avoid on tourist weekends; go on a Tuesday Champions League night when the crowd actually wants to watch the game.

  6. 06

    The Cellar Door

    European Quarter · Rue du Luxembourg 24 · $$

    The European Quarter's go-to for rugby internationals, Six Nations weekends, and any match with a significant British or Irish dimension. Located between the Schuman metro and the European Parliament buildings, the post-work crowd on match nights includes enough actual rugby players to lend the occasion credibility. The cask ales are real and well-kept, which is rarer in Brussels than it should be.

  7. 07

    Moeder Lambic

    Saint-Gilles · Place Fontainas · $$

    Brussels' most serious craft beer bar shows football on a single screen in the back corner with the sound low, which is the exact right volume for a place where you're supposed to be paying attention to the Lambic. But the Anderlecht fixtures bring out the neighbourhood, and a Red Devils qualifying match turns the 50-tap bar into one of the more unique sports viewing experiences available anywhere in Europe. Worth knowing about.

  8. 08

    Kitty O'Shea's

    City Centre · Boulevard Charlemagne 42 · $$

    The Grand Duchy of Irish pubs in Brussels, operating since 1989 and showing every major fixture since before most of its current regulars were born. 8 screens, a terrace that fills on summer match days, and the kind of staff who know which nationality needs which channel running on which screen. The proximity to the European institutions means the match-night crowd spans 20 nationalities without feeling like a tourist trap.

  9. 09

    Arcadi

    City Centre · Rue d'Arenberg 1 · $$$

    More restaurant than sports bar during daylight hours, Arcadi transforms for evening fixtures with screens that lower from the ceiling and a bar service that accelerates to match the pace of a proper Belgian football crowd. The kitchen keeps running through halftime, which distinguishes it from venues where you have to choose between eating and watching. The moules-frites at half-time during a Red Devils game is one of Brussels' genuine pleasures.

  10. 10

    The James Joyce

    City Centre · Rue Archimede 34 · $$

    Named after the writer but operated for the football fan, The James Joyce sits in the European Quarter and draws a reliable crowd of Irish and British expats alongside Commission and Parliament staff who discovered it during orientation week and never looked elsewhere. The Saturday morning Premier League opener starts at 1pm Brussels time, and the bar is reliably full from 12:30 for any top-six fixture.

  11. 11

    Brasserie de la Gare

    Midi · Avenue Fonsny 2 · $

    The sports bar for Brussels-Midi commuters who want to catch a match before their train home. Conveniently located, screens facing every seat, and a beer selection that does justice to the Belgian context. The crowd is hyperlocal Brussels — working-class, mix of French and Dutch speakers, genuinely invested in the sport — which makes it one of the most authentic football atmospheres in the city for important Belgian league matches.

  12. 12

    Zebra

    Saint-Gery · Place Saint-Gery 33 · $$

    A large terrace bar on one of Ixelles' best squares that installs outdoor screens for summer tournament football and pulls the neighbourhood together for World Cup and European Championship fixtures in a way no indoor venue can replicate. The Belgian wheat beer on draft tastes better in the open air, the square fills within minutes of kick-off on warm match evenings, and the atmosphere is what Brussels does best: casual, multilingual, actually watching the game.

  13. 13

    Le Falstaff

    City Centre · Rue Henri Maus 19 · $$$

    The Art Nouveau grand cafe near the Bourse shows football on a screen that looks slightly incongruous against the 1903 interior, but the contrast works: there are few more memorable places to watch a major tournament match than a room designed with this level of ambition. The Belgian beer list is 50 deep, the frites arrive in the proper cone, and the crowd during major international matches represents Brussels at its most cosmopolitan.

Centrally located on the Place de la Bourse and running three floors of screens, O'Reilly's is the most visible sports bar in Brussels and handles it well. The beer list goes well beyond standard Irish pub fare — the Belgian tap selection includes Chimay and Westmalle alongside the Guinness — and the kitchen produces wings and burgers that can absorb a long afternoon session without complaints. Booking essential for weekend Premier League fixtures.

A neighbourhood sports bar in Saint-Gilles that makes the case for watching football with proper Belgian beer rather than mass-market lager. Eight screens and 24 Belgian taps, with a knowledgeable staff who can match your order to the game if you ask. The Red Devils fixtures bring in the neighbourhood families alongside the regulars, which makes it the most authentically Belgian sports bar in the city.

The only bar in Brussels that takes American sports seriously: NFL Sunday Ticket, NBA League Pass, and the only venue we know of that opens at 6am for West Coast playoff games. The bar runs American-style food alongside it — proper smash burgers, loaded nachos, and a hot sauce selection that exceeds what most American sports bars manage. The Brussels expat community found this place before anyone else and hasn't left.

The local view

Watching sport in Brussels

Brussels follows football with real intent, and two local sides give the city its edge. RSC Anderlecht play at Lotto Park in the west, while Union Saint-Gilloise, based in Saint-Gilles, took the Belgian Pro League title in 2025 for the first time in 90 years.

The Red Devils, Belgium's national team, pull the biggest crowds and play home matches at the King Baudouin Stadium in Heysel. On matchdays the bars fill early for the Pro League, the Premier League, the Champions League and the Six Nations.

Irish pubs cluster near the Grand Place and the Îlot Sacré, and beer halls spread through Ixelles and Saint-Gilles. The metro links all of them.

What makes a great sports bar in Brussels

A good Brussels sports bar reads the schedule around continental football. Evening kickoffs for the Champions League land at 21:00 local time, so the best rooms hold their crowd late and keep several screens running at once.

Beer matters here more than almost anywhere. Belgian beer culture carries UNESCO recognition, and places like Moeder Lambic and Delirium Cafe treat the list as seriously as the football. Delirium Cafe near the Îlot Sacré holds a Guinness World Record for its beer selection.

Location decides the atmosphere. Irish pubs such as O'Reilly's, The Wild Geese and Kitty O'Shea's near the centre pull the loudest Premier League and Six Nations crowds. Saint-Gilles and Ixelles rooms like Zebra draw a more local Union crowd. Every neighbourhood sits within a short metro or tram ride.

Brussels rewards anyone who plans around the fixture list. Base yourself near the Grand Place for the loudest Premier League and World Cup nights at The Wild Geese, O'Reilly's or Delirium Cafe, then head to Saint-Gilles or Ixelles when Union Saint-Gilloise or Anderlecht play. Moeder Lambic and Le Falstaff prove you can pair a serious beer list with a live match. The metro moves you between them in minutes.

Good to know

Sports bars in Brussels: your questions

Where do locals watch football in Brussels?

Locals split between neighbourhood cafes and the Irish pubs near the Grand Place. For big Pro League and Champions League nights, rooms like The Wild Geese and O'Reilly's fill fast in the city centre. In Saint-Gilles and Ixelles, spots such as Moeder Lambic and Zebra draw supporters of Union Saint-Gilloise. Check listings on /brussels/ before you go.

Which Brussels neighbourhood is best for sports bars?

The city centre around the Grand Place and the Îlot Sacré holds the densest run of sports pubs, including Delirium Cafe and Kitty O'Shea's. It suits visitors because the metro and trams converge there. Saint-Gilles and Ixelles offer a quieter, more Belgian feel, with strong beer lists at Moeder Lambic and The James Joyce nearby.

Can I watch the Premier League and the Belgian Pro League in Brussels?

Yes. Irish pubs such as O'Reilly's and The Wild Geese show Premier League fixtures across their screens, alongside the Champions League and the Six Nations. Belgian Pro League matches featuring Anderlecht and Union Saint-Gilloise appear widely too, especially in Saint-Gilles bars close to the clubs. Ask staff which screen carries your game on busy evenings.

Where can I watch the 2026 World Cup in Brussels?

Expect the big Irish pubs and beer halls to screen every 2026 World Cup match, with Belgium games drawing the largest crowds. The Wild Geese, O'Reilly's and Delirium Cafe near the centre are safe bets for atmosphere. Arrive early for Red Devils fixtures and evening kickoffs. See our World Cup bar guide for more.

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