For Couples

For Couples Home Exchange in Belgium

Intimate spaces for romantic getaways and weekend escapes.

1 matching home in Belgium

Belgium rewards couples who linger. Beyond the postcard squares of Brussels and Bruges lie quieter rhythms: Sunday morning markets in Walloon villages, Art Nouveau staircases glimpsed through half-open doors, the kind of bistro where the waiter remembers how you take your coffee by day three. The country's compact geography means you can wake in a Flemish townhouse, cycle through flat polder lanes to a canal-side lunch, and still make evening Mass at a Gothic belfry. For twos traveling slowly, Belgium offers not grand gestures but accumulating intimacies—a language border crossed on foot, a beer brewed by monks, a park bench under lime trees where the light turns honey-coloured at six. The homes below put you inside that slower cadence, in neighbourhoods where you'll shop for dinner, not reservations.

Why Belgium works for for couples

Homes, not hotel rooms

Live in a real Belgium home — kitchen, balcony, neighbourhood rhythm — instead of a generic hotel room.

Fair by design

1 credit = 1 night. Every home is worth the same. No bidding, no haggling, no price surges.

Curated for for couples

We prioritise wifi, kitchen · apartment, villa, cottages — the kind of homes that actually fit the travel style.

Matching homes in Belgium

Guides for for couples in Belgium

Frequently asked questions

How does home exchange on SwappaHome work?

You list your home, earn 1 credit for every night you host a guest, and spend those credits to stay at any other home in the network — always 1 credit per night. No money changes hands between members. New accounts start with 7 free credits — one full week — so you can book your first trip before you've hosted anyone.

Is it safe to swap homes with strangers?

Every member goes through identity verification before they can list or book. All conversations happen inside the SwappaHome platform — you never have to share your personal email or phone number to coordinate a swap. After each stay, guests and hosts leave mutual reviews — reputation is the foundation of the whole community, and members with low ratings lose access. For extra peace of mind, we recommend confirming house rules in writing before arrival.

Do I need to swap directly with the same person?

No. SwappaHome uses a credit system, not direct 1-to-1 swaps. You can host a family from Berlin and use the credits you earn to stay with a completely different host in Tokyo six months later. It makes travel dates, destinations and group sizes much easier to match.

Can I join if I don't own a home?

Yes — you can earn credits by hosting in a spare room, a long-term rental (if your lease allows guests) or by gifting/receiving credits from other members. You can also buy a starter pack if you want to travel before you host. Listing your primary home is the most common path, but it's not the only one.

How many homes are available for exchange in Belgium?

Right now there are 1 verified home available for exchange in Belgium. The list you see on this page is pulled live, so it stays in sync as new members join the community.

What kind of homes can I expect to find in Belgium?

The current Belgium catalog includes apartment. You can filter by property type, number of bedrooms and amenities directly on the listings page — and because this information comes straight from the database, it reflects what's actually available today, not a generic description.

What makes Belgium romantic for couples outside the main tourist cities?

Belgium's charm for couples deepens in its small towns and countryside. The Flemish Ardennes around Gavere offer rolling hills perfect for tandem cycling, while Wallonia's river valleys hide half-timbered inns and thermal baths. Weekend rituals matter here: shared plates of grey shrimp croquettes, antiquing in Tongeren, or catching vespers in a Romanesque abbey. Trains connect everything within an hour, so you can base yourselves in a quiet residential street and still reach Ghent's canals or the Meuse cliffs for day trips. The real romance is in Belgium's unshowy domesticity—markets, bakeries, the assumption that meals are meant to be long.