
Amsterdam

Brussels

Bruges
Low Countries · Multi-city itinerary
Benelux Highlights itinerary — November 2026
By Tripsapien Research · Updated May 20, 2026
November 2026 is a shoulder-season time for the Benelux Highlights trip (Amsterdam, Brussels & Bruges). Daytime highs sit around 10°C / 50°F across the route. Plan around 6–8 days for the full Amsterdam, Brussels & Bruges loop. Tripsapien checks every place on your list against your exact dates — hours, closures and booking pressure at each stop.
The route
About 6–8 days · 3 cities
The Low Countries by rail: canal-ringed Amsterdam, the EU-capital and Art-Nouveau Brussels, and the medieval postcard of Bruges. Fast trains link all three in under two hours per leg.
Amsterdam
Amsterdam in November
Temperature
49°F / 41°F
9.6°C / 5.1°C
Precipitation
19d
2.5in · 62.7mm
Daylight
9.6h
November is dark and rainy, so book Anne Frank House and major museums around cafe breaks.
November is dark and rainy, so book Anne Frank House and major museums around cafe breaks.
City overview
Amsterdam sits where the Amstel meets the IJ, with the Canal Ring, Jordaan, De Pijp, Museum Quarter, Noord, Oost, and Plantage dividing Golden Age canals, museums, markets, ferries, nightlife, and cycling routes into clear visitor zones. The 17th-century canal belt is the city's core structure, while NDSM, Albert Cuyp Market, Vondelpark, and Amsterdam Noord keep the trip from staying inside the postcard center.
Food & drink
Amsterdam food works through markets, brown cafes, and former-colonial kitchens: stroopwafels press caramel syrup between thin waffle rounds, bitterballen are ragout croquettes for beer tables, broodje haring puts herring with onion and pickles in a roll, and kibbeling fries battered white fish. Albert Cuyp Market, Foodhallen, Noordermarkt, Dappermarkt, Haarlemmerbuurt, and De Pijp add Dutch cheese, poffertjes, Indonesian rijsttafel, Surinamese roti, and apple pie.
Top sights
Ranked for November suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Rijksmuseum
- 2Van Gogh Museum
- 3Royal Palace Amsterdam and Dam Square
- 4Anne Frank House
- 5NEMO Science Museum
- 6Stedelijk Museum
- 7Vondelpark
- 8A'DAM Lookout and EYE Filmmuseum
- 9Canal Ring cruise and Herengracht
- 10Albert Cuyp Market
1Rijksmuseum
4.7★ · 112,117indoorOpen dailyThe national museum reopened after major renovation with Rembrandt, Vermeer, Frans Hals, ship models, Delftware, weapons, and Dutch history in a Pierre Cuypers building from 1885. It anchors Museumplein beside the Van Gogh Museum.
Wikipedia
2Van Gogh Museum
4.6★ · 105,570indoorOpen dailyThe Museumplein museum holds the world's largest Van Gogh collection, including self-portraits, letters, still lifes, drawings, and works by peers. It is close to tram stops and the Stedelijk.
WikipediaTimed tickets are mandatory for most visits and should be reserved early.
3Royal Palace Amsterdam and Dam Square
4.6★ · 26,273indoorOpen dailyJacob van Campen designed the former city hall, completed in the 17th century and later converted for royal use. The palace faces Dam Square beside Nieuwe Kerk and the main shopping streets.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Anne Frank House
- 5NEMO Science Museum
- 6Stedelijk Museum
- 7Vondelpark
- 8A'DAM Lookout and EYE Filmmuseum
- 9Canal Ring cruise and Herengracht
- 10Albert Cuyp Market
Neighborhoods
1Canal Ring and Binnenstad
The old center is dense with Dam Square, Nieuwmarkt, Red Light District lanes, canal houses, shops, churches, and late crowds.
2Jordaan
Jordaan is canal-side and residential, with Westerkerk, Anne Frank House, Noordermarkt, Haarlemmerstraat, galleries, brown cafes, and small bridges.
3Museum Quarter and Oud-Zuid
Museum Quarter and Oud-Zuid feel polished, with Rijksmuseum, Van Gogh Museum, Stedelijk, Concertgebouw, Vondelpark, and P.C. Hooftstraat.
4De Pijp
De Pijp is food-and-market heavy, with Albert Cuyp Market, Sarphatipark, cafes, Indonesian and Surinamese restaurants, and busy tram streets.
5Amsterdam Noord
Noord is ferry-linked and post-industrial, with NDSM wharf, A'DAM Lookout, EYE Filmmuseum, street art, waterfront bars, and bike routes.
6Oost and Plantage
Oost and Plantage add Artis Zoo, Hortus Botanicus, Oosterpark, Dappermarkt, Jewish Quarter sites, and quieter residential streets.
Getting around
GVB runs trams, metro, buses, and IJ ferries with OVpay contactless, while NS trains cover Schiphol and day trips. Walk the canal core, use trams for Museumplein and De Pijp, rent bikes only if confident in traffic, and take free ferries for Noord.
Brussels
Brussels in November
Temperature
50°F / 40°F
10°C / 4.4°C
Precipitation
12d
3in · 75mm
Daylight
8.6h
November is damp and dark, so keep chocolate shops, Magritte Museum, and galleries central.
November is damp and dark, so keep chocolate shops, Magritte Museum, and galleries central.
City overview
Brussels sits in the Senne valley with the Grand Place, Sablon, Marolles, European Quarter, Ixelles, Saint-Gilles, Heysel, and Matonge showing a bilingual capital split between medieval guild halls, EU institutions, Art Nouveau streets, comic-strip culture, beer, chocolate, and immigrant neighborhoods. It is compact in the center but politically and culturally layered, with French, Dutch, Belgian, European, and Congolese cues all visible on the same transit map.
Food & drink
Brussels food is fry-shop, cafe, seafood, and chocolate driven: Belgian fries are double-fried and eaten with mayonnaise or andalouse, Brussels waffles are light and rectangular, Liege waffles are denser and pearl-sugar sweet, moules-frites pairs mussels with fries, and carbonnade flamande braises beef in beer. Grand Place lanes, Sablon chocolate shops, Place Sainte-Catherine seafood streets, Maison Antoine, and Marolles cafes add stoemp, waterzooi, pralines, speculoos, gueuze, lambic, and Trappist beer.
Top sights
Ranked for November suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Grand Place / Grote Markt
- 2Mont des Arts
- 3Cinquantenaire Park and museums
- 4Manneken Pis
- 5Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium
- 6Royal Saint-Hubert Galleries
- 7Atomium
- 8Horta Museum
- 9Magritte Museum
- 10Belgian Comic Strip Center
1Grand Place / Grote Markt
4.7★ · 174,026outdoorThe UNESCO square is framed by guild houses, the Town Hall, and the King's House, with most facades rebuilt after the 1695 bombardment. It sits at the center of the pedestrian old town.
Wikipedia
2Mont des Arts
4.6★ · 17,226outdoorOpen dailyThe cultural slope links the royal district with the lower old town through gardens, viewpoints, museums, and the Brussels Central Station area. Sunset views back toward the Town Hall spire are useful for orientation.
Wikipedia
3Cinquantenaire Park and museums
4.6★ · 40,239outdoorOpen dailyThe park was built for Belgium's 1880 jubilee and has a triumphal arch, lawns, Autoworld, the Art & History Museum, and the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces. It borders the European Quarter.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Manneken Pis
- 5Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium
- 6Royal Saint-Hubert Galleries
- 7Atomium
- 8Horta Museum
- 9Magritte Museum
- 10Belgian Comic Strip Center
Neighborhoods
1Grand Place and Centre
The central core is medieval and tourist-dense, with Grand Place, Galeries Saint-Hubert, Bourse, Rue des Bouchers, waffles, fries, and beer bars.
2Sablon and Marolles
Sablon and Marolles mix antiques, chocolate shops, Notre-Dame du Sablon, Place du Jeu de Balle flea market, Palace of Justice, and hillside streets.
3European Quarter and Cinquantenaire
The European Quarter is institutional and park-linked, with European Parliament, Commission buildings, Leopold Park, Schuman, and Cinquantenaire museums.
4Ixelles and Matonge
Ixelles and Matonge add Avenue Louise, African restaurants, bars, Flagey, ponds, galleries, and a younger multilingual street life.
5Saint-Gilles
Saint-Gilles is Art Nouveau and bohemian, with Horta Museum, Parvis de Saint-Gilles, cafes, Portuguese and Spanish food, and Midi station access.
6Heysel and Laeken
Heysel and Laeken are fairground-and-royal, with Atomium, Mini-Europe, royal greenhouses, parks, stadiums, and wider boulevards.
Getting around
STIB/MIVB runs metro, premetro trams, trams, and buses with contactless payment, while SNCB trains link Central, Midi, Nord, airport, and day-trip cities. Walk the central core, use metro lines for Schuman and Heysel, and use trains for Bruges, Ghent, and Antwerp.
Bruges
Bruges in November
Temperature
51°F / 44°F
10.4°C / 6.6°C
Precipitation
10d
3.1in · 78mm
Daylight
8.6h
Sea
52°F
11.1°C
November is wet and dark, so lean on churches, breweries, and chocolate breaks.
November is wet and dark, so lean on churches, breweries, and chocolate breaks.
City overview
Bruges is a small West Flanders canal city where brick guild houses, stepped gables, churches, breweries, and quiet water lanes preserve the wealth of a medieval trading port. The Markt and Burg form the civic core, the southern canals lead to the Begijnhof and Minnewater, and the northern Sint-Anna side gives calmer windmills and residential lanes.
Food & drink
Bruges food is Flemish beef stew, moules-frites, waterzooi, shrimp croquettes, waffles, chocolate pralines, and strong local beer. Vismarkt, De Halve Maan, ’t Brugs Beertje, Katelijnestraat chocolate shops, and canal-side restaurants cover the city’s staples.
Top sights
Ranked for November suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Rozenhoedkaai and the canals
- 2Markt and Belfry
- 3Minnewater Park
- 4Burg Square and Basilica of the Holy Blood
- 5Church of Our Lady
- 6Gruuthusemuseum
- 7De Halve Maan Brewery
- 8Groeningemuseum
- 9Sint-Janshospitaal
- 10Begijnhof
1Rozenhoedkaai and the canals
4.8★ · 2,732outdoorOpen dailyRozenhoedkaai is the postcard canal bend where brick houses, tour boats, and the Belfry align in one view. Boat trips usually loop through central canals from docks near the Markt and Dijver.
2Markt and Belfry
4.7★ · 16,610outdoorOpen dailyBruges’ market square is framed by guild-style facades and the Belfry, whose medieval tower grew between the 13th and 15th centuries above the cloth halls. The 366-step climb gives the clearest view over the compact old town.
Timed belfry entries are limited because the staircase is narrow.
3Minnewater Park
4.6★ · 11,340outdoorOpen dailyThe lake and park mark the southern gateway into the old city, with swans, bridges, and views toward the Begijnhof. It is the easiest green pause between the station and the historic center.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Burg Square and Basilica of the Holy Blood
- 5Church of Our Lady
- 6Gruuthusemuseum
- 7De Halve Maan Brewery
- 8Groeningemuseum
- 9Sint-Janshospitaal
- 10Begijnhof
Neighborhoods
1Markt, Steenstraat, and shopping core
The central core is busiest, with the Belfry, Markt terraces, Steenstraat shops, chocolate counters, and quick routes to Burg Square.
2Burg, Dijver, and Rozenhoedkaai
The civic-and-canal axis holds the city hall, Holy Blood basilica, Groeningemuseum, Gruuthusemuseum, boat docks, and the classic canal view.
3South canals, Begijnhof, and Minnewater
The southern side is quieter and greener, with Minnewater, the Begijnhof, Sint-Janshospitaal, De Halve Maan, and station approaches.
4Sint-Anna and north canals
Sint-Anna feels residential and slower, with windmills, Jerusalem Chapel, quiet canals, and fewer tour groups beyond the Markt radius.
5Ezelstraat and Sint-Gillis
Ezelstraat and Sint-Gillis add guesthouses, small restaurants, local bars, and calmer lanes north of the shopping spine.
6Sint-Andries and Sint-Michiels
The western and station-side suburbs are practical rather than medieval, with parking, hotels, residential streets, and access roads out toward the coast.
Getting around
Bruges’ historic center is best walked, with bikes useful for Damme, windmills, and canal edges. De Lijn buses connect the station with Markt-area stops, but cobbles and crowds make luggage easier by taxi or hotel shuttle.
Best time to do the Benelux Highlights trip
In November, the Benelux Highlights trip runs daytime highs near 10°C / 50°F, with nights down to about 4°C / 39°F at the coolest stop. It is one of the wetter months, with up to 13 rainy days at the wettest stop. Weighed across all 3 stops, November is a shoulder-season time to travel.
The most comfortable months across Amsterdam, Brussels & Bruges are June, July and September, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at every stop. November 2026 is a quieter shoulder season to go.
Check this route against your dates
Tripsapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure and neighborhoods for your exact November dates — across every city on the Benelux Highlights trip.
Plan this Benelux Highlights tripCommon questions about the Benelux Highlights trip
- When is the best time to do the Benelux Highlights trip?
- The most comfortable months across Amsterdam, Brussels, Bruges are June, July and September, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at each stop. November is a shoulder-season time — see the per-stop weather below for the exact picture in November 2026.
- How many days do you need for the Benelux Highlights trip?
- A comfortable Benelux Highlights trip runs about 6–8 days, allowing roughly Amsterdam 3, Brussels 2, Bruges 1 nights plus travel between stops. Add a day if you want a slower pace or extra day trips.
- What's the route for the Benelux Highlights trip?
- The classic order is Amsterdam, Brussels & Bruges. Each city below has its own November weather, events and top-sights list.
- Will the sights be open during my November Benelux Highlights trip?
- Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season and public holiday, and they differ from city to city on a multi-stop trip. Paste your Benelux Highlights list into Tripsapien and it checks every place in Amsterdam, Brussels, Bruges against your exact dates, flagging closures and what needs booking ahead before you go.