
Self-guided audio tours written by people who actually live there.

Ghent hides a jagged edge beneath its postcard beauty where medieval gold masks centuries of blood and betrayal. Cobblestones here do not just pave streets. They bury the echoes of fallen empires and hidden rebellions. Unlock these secrets with a self guided audio tour designed to lead you far beyond the crowded tourist path. Uncover forgotten scandals and intense power struggles that most visitors walk right over without a second glance. Why was the defiant iron gate of the Friday Market stained by the fire of desperate political upheaval? What dark omen resides within the towering shadow of St Bavo’s Cathedral? And which eccentric local figure once used the majestic Saint Nicholas Church to orchestrate a citywide heist? Pulse through the heart of the city as history comes alive in every alleyway. Transform a simple walk into a cinematic journey of discovery. Ready to shatter the silence of the past? Start your walk now.

Cloaked in the morning mist, Ghent’s spires have witnessed betrayal, rebellion, and artistic triumph for centuries. This self-guided audio tour peels back the layers of a city that is anything but ordinary, revealing dramatic tales and secret histories behind the Roman Catholic Diocese, St Bavo's Cathedral, and the awe-inspiring City Hall. Why did an ancient cathedral’s masterpiece spark one of Europe’s most baffling thefts? What deals were struck in candlelit chambers to keep peace during violent uprisings? Which powerful cleric’s private scandal echoes through forgotten corridors today? Let these storied streets carry you from gilded altars to shadowy meeting rooms as you trace paths once stalked by saints, thieves, and revolutionaries. Feel Ghent come alive beneath your feet as drama and beauty collide around every corner. Unlock the city’s hidden depths now—your journey into Ghent’s secrets starts here.

Beneath Gent’s ornate spires and cobbled lanes lies a city of hidden power plays, rebellious crowds, and midnight melodies where every square whispers untold secrets. This self-guided audio tour turns you into an urban detective uncovering stories behind locked cathedral doors, echoing jazz beats, and centuries-old scandals that even locals overlook. Why did one emperor force the city’s proudest citizens to parade in their nightgowns in public shame? What vanished treasures are still missing from St. Bavo’s Cathedral’s vaults? And how did a near-bankrupt festival return with record-smashing crowds and legendary performers lighting up Gent’s night sky? Walk where bishops schemed, saints reformed, and wild crowds danced until dawn. Let Gent reveal its tangled web of triumphs, betrayals, and sweet musical rebellion. The story crackles beneath your feet. Curious? Let the city show you what most never see—your journey starts here.
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Ghent was one of the largest cities in northern Europe in the year 1300, a cloth-trading giant with 50,000 inhabitants at a time when London had fewer. Then the textile trade collapsed, and the city spent several centuries in genteel decline. The irony is that the decline saved it -- Ghent never had the money to tear itself down and rebuild, which is why you can still walk along the Graslei waterfront and look at intact medieval guild houses reflected in the Leie river. The Gravensteen castle, built in 1180, squats in the middle of the city like it has always been there, because it has.
The thing that distinguishes Ghent from the obvious Belgian tourist circuit is that people actually live here.
It is a university city -- the University of Ghent brings 44,000 students -- and the streets around Sint-Pietersplein and Overpoort are unmistakably young and alive. The Gentse Feesten, ten days of street music and theater every July, draws over a million visitors. The rest of the year, local life clusters around the Vrijdagmarkt and the cafes of the Patershol neighborhood, the medieval quarter of crooked lanes where the city's best restaurants have quietly colonized the old tanners' district. Cuberdons, those purple cone-shaped jellies sold from carts near the Groentenmarkt, are the kind of thing only locals would defend and visitors will eat three of before admitting they liked them.

Before you walk.
The historic center has some cobblestone streets that can be challenging, particularly around Gravensteen and the Patershol neighborhood. The main Graslei waterfront and most of the central squares are on relatively flat ground. Check individual tour descriptions for terrain details.
Ghent Sint-Pieters is the main railway station, about 2 km from the historic center. Trams 1 and 4 connect it to the Korenmarkt in the heart of the old city in about 10 minutes. The city is also very well served by cycling -- the 400 km of bike paths make it genuinely easy to arrive by bicycle.
Download the tour while on Wi-Fi before you set out. The historic center has good mobile coverage, but the medieval lanes of Patershol and the alleyways around Gravensteen can have patchy signal. Offline access means you never miss commentary at the important moments.
Waterzooi, the traditional Ghent stew -- originally made with fish from the Leie river, now often with chicken -- is the local dish you should eat at least once. Cuberdons are the local sweet. For something more contemporary, the Patershol quarter has some of Belgium's better restaurants packed into a very small area.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
This was a solid way to get to know Brighton without feeling like a tourist. The narration had depth and context, but didn't overdo it.
Started this tour with a croissant in one hand and zero expectations. The app just vibes with you, no pressure, just you, your headphones, and some cool stories.