Amsterdam to Bruges is one of the most romanticised day trips in Europe — and one of the longest at nearly 3 hours each way by train. So is it actually worth the 6+ hours of total travel time? This honest 2026 guide covers the realistic train journey, ticket prices (€23 if you book early; €100 last-minute), what you can actually see in 6 hours on the ground, and whether Bruges deserves a day trip or a proper 2-night stay. Plus: alternatives that deliver similar charm with half the travel time.

The Honest Answer: Worth It?
- Yes, if: you’ve seen most of Amsterdam, you love medieval architecture, you’re booking trains 6+ weeks ahead for cheap fares, you can leave Amsterdam by 7am.
- No, if: it’s your first 3-4 days in Amsterdam, you don’t love long train rides, you’re booking last-minute (€100+ each way), you have less than 6 hours on the ground.
- Better alternative: stay 2 nights in Bruges if you have the time. The town is far better experienced at sunrise and after dark when day-trippers leave.
The Train Journey

- Distance: 175 km from Amsterdam to Bruges.
- Fastest journey: 2h 51min (Eurostar ECD to Antwerp + IC to Bruges).
- Most common journey: 3h 22min.
- Frequency: 34 trains/day.
- Change at Antwerp Central: one of Europe’s most beautiful stations; budget 15-20 minutes for the connection.
- Alternative: change at Brussels Midi (slightly slower; ICE-Eurostar combo).
Train Tickets & Booking
- Book on: nsinternational.com, eurostar.com, or thetrainline.com.
- Cheapest fares: €23-40 if booked 6+ weeks ahead.
- Mid-range: €60-80 booking 2-3 weeks ahead.
- Last-minute: €80-110 same-week.
- First class: €20-50 extra; worth it for a 3-hour journey.
- Return fares: book both legs together for best prices.
- Flexibility tickets: cost more but allow you to change trains.
Recommended Day-Trip Plan
- 6.30am: Leave hotel; quick breakfast at Centraal.
- 7.10am: Eurostar to Antwerp Central (1h 10min).
- 8.40am: Connect to Belgian IC to Bruges (1h 5min).
- 9.45am: Arrive Bruges station; 15-min walk to Markt (Market Square).
- 10.00am-3.30pm: 5.5 hours in Bruges.
- 4.00pm: Belgian IC to Antwerp.
- 5.30pm: Antwerp Central — explore for 30 minutes if you like.
- 6.30pm: Eurostar back to Amsterdam.
- 9.45pm: Arrive Amsterdam Centraal.
What to Do in 5.5 Hours in Bruges

- Markt (Market Square) — the central square; pause for photos.
- Belfry Tower — climb 366 steps for the city’s best view. €15. Book ahead in summer.
- Burg Square — Renaissance City Hall and Basilica of the Holy Blood.
- Canal cruise — 30-minute boat tour, €12. The best way to see Bruges from water level.
- Rozenhoedkaai — the most-photographed corner of Bruges.
- Groeningemuseum — Flemish Primitives (Jan van Eyck, Hans Memling). €15.
- Begijnhof — 13th-century almshouse complex.
- Minnewater Lake — "Lake of Love"; a quiet southern stop.
- Sint-Salvator Cathedral — Romanesque-Gothic; free entry.
- Chocolate shop crawl: Dumon, The Old Chocolate House, Chocolate Line.
- Beer tasting at De Halve Maan brewery — combine tour + tasting €15.
What to Eat in Bruges

- Belgian waffles: Liège-style or Brussels-style; €4-6 from any street stall.
- Belgian chocolate: try Dumon (since 1992), The Old Chocolate House.
- Belgian fries (frites): with mayo, andalouse, or curry sauce — €5-7.
- Moules-frites: mussels with chips; €18-25 at a brasserie.
- Carbonade flamande: Flemish beef stew in dark beer — comforting and local.
- Belgian beer: Trappist beers (Westmalle, Chimay), local Bruges Zot. €4-6 a glass.
- De Halve Maan brewery: local Bruges beer brewed since 1856.
- Best lunch spots: Cambrinus, De Garre (hidden tavern), Brouwerij De Halve Maan.
Better Alternatives
- Haarlem: 15 minutes by train; similar medieval charm at 1/10 the travel time.
- Delft: 1 hour by train; Vermeer’s birthplace; Royal Delft pottery; far fewer crowds than Bruges.
- Utrecht: 30 min by train; vibrant university city with split-level canals.
- Antwerp: 1h 10min by Eurostar; a real city with diamond district, fashion district, and Rubens.
- Ghent: 2h 30min; arguably more beautiful than Bruges with fewer tour groups.
- Brussels: 1h 50min; capital with chocolate shops + Grand Place.
If You Can: A 2-Night Bruges Stay
- Best part: Bruges is magical at sunrise and after dark when day-trippers leave.
- 2 nights costs: €200-400 hotel + €60-200 trains + €120 food = €500-800 per person.
- What you gain: empty cobbles at dawn, dinner in a candle-lit medieval tavern, evening boat trips, sunrise photos, time to visit Damme village (3 km away).
- Top hotels: Hotel Heritage, Hotel De Tuilerieën, Hotel Karel de Stoute.
- Combine with: a day in Ghent (45 min away) for a 3-night Belgian getaway.
Practical Tips
- Book trains 6+ weeks ahead for best fares.
- Belgian holidays: avoid; Bruges shops close.
- Pack a light jacket: even summer weather can shift.
- Cobble shoes: Bruges is virtually all cobblestones.
- Bring cash backup: small shops often Maestro-only.
- Many shops close 12-1pm: French/Belgian lunch closing common.
- Belfry climb: book in advance summer; queues can be 60 minutes.
- Tour groups peak 10am-3pm; arrive earlier or visit Begijnhof & Minnewater first.
- Language: Dutch (Flemish) is local; almost all locals speak English.
Alternative Routes
- Bus (FlixBus, BlaBlaCar Bus): 4-5 hours; €15-35. Cheap but adds 2 hours each way.
- Drive: 2h 45min one-way; not recommended (Bruges has limited parking, fees ~€20/day, complex restricted zones).
- Organised day-trip coaches: 12-hour bundled trips with Amsterdam → Bruges → Amsterdam, including some local guidance; €65-95 from operators like TopDeck or Tours & Tickets. Useful for zero logistics; less time on the ground than independent.
Weather & Best Time
- Best months: May-September for warm canal walking.
- April: tulips along the Belgian canals — early-spring bonus.
- December: Christmas market and ice skating in the Markt; magical.
- Avoid August Saturdays: peak tour-group density.
- Sunday mornings: quietest; coaches arrive later.
Total Cost of an Amsterdam-to-Bruges Day Trip
- Train (book 6 weeks ahead, return): €60-90 per person.
- Bruges Belfry climb: €15.
- Canal cruise: €12.
- Museum entry (1-2): €15-30.
- Lunch & chocolate: €25-40.
- Total per person: €130-200 for a day trip.
Who Should Do This?
- Yes: returning Amsterdam visitors, medieval-architecture lovers, chocolate enthusiasts, people who like long train rides through Belgian countryside.
- Maybe: travellers on tight budget — book trains 6+ weeks ahead.
- No: first-time Amsterdam visitors who haven’t seen the city yet; anyone with motion sickness for long train rides; people stuck on short last-minute fares.
Amsterdam to Bruges: FAQ
Is Amsterdam to Bruges worth the day trip?
If you’ve seen Amsterdam and love medieval cities, yes. If it’s your first 3-4 days in Amsterdam, no — there’s too much closer.
How long does the train take?
2h 51min fastest; 3h 22min typical. Includes a change at Antwerp Central.
How much does the train cost?
€23-40 booked 6+ weeks ahead; €80-110 last-minute.
Can I do Bruges and Ghent in one day from Amsterdam?
Possible but rushed — you’d have 2 hours in each. Better to do them on separate days or extend to 2 nights.
What’s better than Bruges as a day trip?
Haarlem (15 min train, similar charm). Delft (1 hour, Vermeer + Royal Delft). Antwerp (1h 10min, real city + Rubens).
Should I stay overnight in Bruges?
If you can afford the time and money — yes. Bruges is magical at dawn and after dark when day-trippers leave.
Final Thoughts
Amsterdam to Bruges is a 6+ hour total travel day for 5-6 hours on the ground. Beautiful destination but a punishing day trip. Recommended only for returning Amsterdam visitors who book trains 6+ weeks ahead. If you can extend to 2 nights, do — the difference between Bruges-as-day-trip and Bruges-overnight is enormous. Otherwise, Haarlem (15 min train) delivers similar medieval charm at a fraction of the cost.
For more, see our Day Trips from Amsterdam hub, our Haarlem Day Trip, our Zaanse Schans, and our Keukenhof guides.