Why Bruges needs a local guide
Bruges is small enough to walk end to end in 30 minutes. The Markt and the Belfry are on every postcard. The canals are genuinely beautiful. But the city has a 15,000-resident population dealing with 8 million visitors a year, which creates a specific kind of tension. The good chocolate shops are not on the main square. The best beer bar in town — 't Brugs Beertje — has 300 Belgian beers and seats for about 40 people.
Bruges gets around 8 million visitors a year into a city of 15,000 residents. Do the math. That is over 500 visitors for every person who actually lives here. The overwhelming majority arrive on a day trip, walk the Markt, buy chocolate from a shop on the main square that is not where locals buy chocolate, take a canal boat, and leave by 4pm. They miss Bruges entirely. The city after the day-trippers leave is a different place — quiet, beautiful, and moody in a way that the daytime crowd never sees. To become a tour guide in Bruges means knowing the timing. Early morning, before 9am, you can walk the canals without another person in sight. After 6pm, the city empties and the local pubs fill. The Sint-Anna quarter is residential and barely appears in any guidebook. The real chocolate shops are on side streets — Pierre Marcolini and The Chocolate Line are what the locals actually buy. Become a tour guide in Bruges and you rescue this city from its own popularity. You show people the stoofvlees from a pub off the tourist trail, the 't Brugs Beertje beer list, and the view from the Bonifacius Bridge at sunset. Become a tour guide in Bruges to prove that a medieval city can still be a living one.