Business arrival checklist
- Allow extra time in Brussels for traffic, security checks, station confusion, protests and transport disruption.
- Confirm the exact building entrance, ID requirements, meeting language and nearest public transport stop before arrival.
- For EU, NATO, diplomatic or conference visits, keep documents and appointment details easy to reach.
- Plan airport-to-hotel and hotel-to-meeting transport around Brussels or your actual arrival city.
- Cards and contactless payments are widely accepted in cities, hotels, restaurants, museums and many shops.
- Tipping is usually modest and not as automatic as in some countries; rounding up or leaving a small tip is common when service is good.
- Language choice matters: Dutch is central in Flanders, French in Wallonia, French and Dutch in Brussels, and German in the German-speaking area. Be polite and pragmatic about regional identity instead of assuming one language or culture fits everywhere. Punctuality matters for business, appointments and restaurant reservations.