REVIEW · BRUSSELS
Beer Tasting Tour in Brussels
Book on Viator →Operated by Brussels Beer Project · Bookable on Viator
A beer tour with real personality. You start on Rue Antoine Dansaert and get the BBP story plus a small-group tasting that stays relaxed and easy to follow. It is a great way to learn how Belgian beer gets made without needing a class first.
I love how the experience mixes a guided brewery explanation with hands-on sipping. You also get a focused tasting flight—4 x 15 cl beers—so you can compare styles and actually notice differences. One thing to consider: the brewery area feels more practical than picture-perfect, and the space can come across as a bit informal.
If you want a low-stress evening in central Brussels, this is a solid pick. It runs about an hour, it’s in English, and you can choose beers that fit your comfort level, including alcohol-free options.
In This Review
- Key Things You’ll Notice During This Brussels Beer Tasting
- Entering Rue Antoine Dansaert: Your Start Point and First Impression
- The Welcome Drink and Brewing Story That Sets the Tone
- The 40-Minute Brewery Walk: What You’re Really Getting
- The Tasting Panel: How the Flight Works (and How to Get More Out of It)
- Timing, Getting There, and Why This Tour Fits a Brussels Evening
- Price and Value: Four Beers Plus Real Context
- Who Should Book This Beer Tasting Tour in Brussels
- Should You Book the Brussels Beer Project Tasting?
- FAQ
- How long does the Beer Tasting Tour in Brussels take?
- Where does the tour start?
- Where does the tour end?
- Is the tour offered in English?
- How many beers are included?
- What is included in the price?
- Are extra drinks included?
- What is the maximum group size?
- What is the minimum legal drinking age for beer in Belgium?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key Things You’ll Notice During This Brussels Beer Tasting

- Welcome beer right at the start so you’re tasting immediately, not waiting around
- 40-minute brewing and process walk-through with a clear, story-driven explanation
- A tasting panel of 3 latest beers plus your welcome pour, totaling 4 x 15 cl
- English-language hosting with passion, including guides like Joub
- Max 12 people, which keeps questions easy and the pace sane
- A 10% store discount after the tasting, handy if you want to take bottles home
Entering Rue Antoine Dansaert: Your Start Point and First Impression

This tour begins at Rue Antoine Dansaert 188, 1000 Bruxelles. It’s easy enough to reach with public transportation, and it also helps that the experience ends back at the same meeting point—no tricky last-mile scramble.
Once you’re there, the first thing you notice is the vibe: you’re not walking through a museum. You’re walking into a working brewery environment where you’ll get a short story, a brewing overview, and then tasting. The location is central enough that you can pair it with dinner or a night stroll afterward.
The entrance itself may not look like a big “tourist attraction,” and that’s part of the charm. Don’t expect a glossy welcome hall. Expect people, beer talk, and a practical setting where the focus stays on the tasting.
Other Brussels food tours we've reviewed in Brussels
The Welcome Drink and Brewing Story That Sets the Tone
Right when the group comes together, you get a welcome drink. In practice, that means you’re tasting early, which keeps the whole hour from feeling like classroom time. You can choose from a wide selection, and the experience includes both traditional and alcohol-free choices, plus options with higher alcohol content.
Then the host explains the brewing process and shares the story about BBP—their project and how they approach brewing. In the reviews, the guides are praised for sharing this with energy, and one name that comes up is Joub. The best part is that the story is tied to what you’re tasting, so the facts don’t feel random.
One practical tip for you: when you select your welcome beer, think ahead to your tasting flight. If you start with something very heavy or very high alcohol, it can make the later samples harder to compare. If you want clarity across styles, it helps to start mid-range.
The 40-Minute Brewery Walk: What You’re Really Getting

The heart of the tour is a 40-minute brewery walk and explanation. This is where the experience earns its keep. Instead of just handing you glasses and calling it education, you get a structured run-through of how brewing works and what makes each beer different.
In plain terms, this portion helps you build a framework:
- You learn what to pay attention to when you taste (not just whether you like it).
- You connect brewing choices to the flavor you’re sensing.
- You get context for the “latest beers” you’ll try next.
This is especially valuable if you’re new to Belgian beer styles or if you usually order based on hype. After the explanation, you can taste with more intention—think aroma, balance, and how the beer changes from start to finish.
Because the group is capped at 12 people, you also have room to ask questions. That small size matters more than you might think. Big-group tours often sprint through explanations. This one tends to stay conversational.
The Tasting Panel: How the Flight Works (and How to Get More Out of It)
Your tasting comes at the end of the brewery story. You’ll experience a panel featuring 3 of their latest beers, and that combines with your welcome drink to total 4 x 15 cl beers.
Each pour is 15 cl, which is a nice amount. It gives you enough beer to actually evaluate aroma and flavor, but it doesn’t turn the hour into a heavy drinking contest. The tour stays focused on comparison, not just consumption.
Here’s how I’d make the tasting flight work for you:
- Pick one beer you expect to like so you have a “comfort win” early.
- Pick one beer that sounds unusual so you get that learning payoff.
- If alcohol content matters to you, remember you can choose alcohol-free beers too.
Also, alcohol-free options are more than an afterthought here. That means you can enjoy the tasting process even if you’d rather not drink alcohol. You still get the guided experience and the chance to explore styles.
If you’re the type who forgets what you tasted, bring your memory back by doing quick mental labels: light/dry, fruity/spicy, or malty/caramelly. The tour is short, so those labels help you keep track.
Timing, Getting There, and Why This Tour Fits a Brussels Evening

The experience lasts about 1 hour (approx.). That makes it a smart “anchor activity” if you want something scheduled but not exhausting. It’s long enough for a brewing explanation and tasting, but short enough that you can still move through Brussels afterward at your own pace.
A couple of practical notes that help you plan:
- You end back at the meeting point, so your night stays simple.
- The start location is near public transportation, which matters in Brussels where you may not want to taxi between small neighborhoods.
- The tour is offered in English, which makes it less stressful if your French is rusty.
Because the group size is small (up to 12), the timing usually feels smoother. There’s less waiting and more interaction. Still, I suggest arriving a few minutes early. In a small brewery environment, that buffer keeps the start calm.
Other Belgian beer tasting tours we've reviewed in Brussels
Price and Value: Four Beers Plus Real Context

You’re not paying just for beer. You’re paying for a short brewing education, guided tasting structure, and a genuine chance to compare styles.
What makes the value stand out is that the included portion is specific:
- A 40-minute tour
- A tasting of 4 x 15 cl beers
- Admission ticket included
- And in-store perks like a 10% discount after the tasting
That discount matters if you plan to buy bottles. If you find a beer you like during the tasting, you’ll likely want to bring something home. Getting a discount right after the tasting is a nice nudge toward that.
Also, “extra drinks” are not included. So if you want more beer beyond the four planned pours, you’ll need to order separately. That’s normal for beer tours, but it’s good to know so you can budget your evening.
If you’re hungry, there are also snack options mentioned by guests. One review notes nachos and says the kitchen opens at 6 pm. If your tour time is near the early evening, you might be able to pair it with food. If not, plan dinner afterward.
Who Should Book This Beer Tasting Tour in Brussels
This tour is a great match if you want:
- A beer-focused activity that’s not a full day commitment
- A short, guided introduction to how brewing connects to flavor
- Something friendly for people who like asking questions in a small group
It also works well for families in at least one context: one review mentions a parent and a son (though the son is 11, which is below Belgium’s legal beer age of 16). I can’t tell you how the operator handles minors in your exact booking. What you can rely on from the tour info is that Belgium’s minimum legal age for drinking beer is 16. If you’re booking with anyone under that age, I’d confirm the rules at booking before you go.
If you drink alcohol, you’ll get a guided tasting flight with a clear structure. If you don’t, you can still choose alcohol-free beers and enjoy the same tour framing. That flexibility makes it more inclusive than some tastings that act like non-drinkers are an afterthought.
If you’re mainly looking for landmark sightseeing, keep your expectations tight. This is a brewery experience, not a city tour.
Should You Book the Brussels Beer Project Tasting?
Yes, if you like your beer experiences guided and practical. This tour is strongest when you want to learn without overthinking it: a short brewing explanation, a story tied to what you’ll taste, and a flight of 4 beers in about an hour.
I’d skip it only if you want a long, sightseeing-heavy day or you’re expecting a polished showpiece venue. The space can feel plain and functional, and the vibe is more about beer than scenery.
If you book, do this: arrive with an open mind, choose your welcome beer thoughtfully (especially if you care about alcohol strength), and pay attention to what the host says before the tasting. You’ll get more out of the flight that way—and it makes your Brussels evening feel purposeful instead of random.
FAQ
How long does the Beer Tasting Tour in Brussels take?
The tour is about 1 hour (approx.).
Where does the tour start?
It starts at Rue Antoine Dansaert 188, 1000 Bruxelles, Belgium.
Where does the tour end?
The activity ends back at the meeting point.
Is the tour offered in English?
Yes, it’s offered in English.
How many beers are included?
You get a tasting of 4 x 15 cl beers.
What is included in the price?
A 40-minute tour and tasting of 4 x 15 cl beers, with an admission ticket included.
Are extra drinks included?
No, extra drinks are not included.
What is the maximum group size?
The tour has a maximum of 12 travelers.
What is the minimum legal drinking age for beer in Belgium?
The minimum legal age for drinking beer in Belgium is 16 years old.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel less than 24 hours before the start time, the amount paid is not refunded.
































