TikTok · Belgium · Hospitality
TikTok has gone from "app for teenagers" to a genuine discovery platform used by millions of Belgians across all age groups. But does that mean your café or restaurant should be on it? The honest answer is: it depends — and this guide will help you decide.
TikTok has over 3.5 million active users in Belgium. The fastest-growing demographic is no longer Gen Z — it's 25–44 year olds, which overlaps significantly with the dining-out and travel-booking audience. The platform is particularly strong in Brussels and Antwerp, and growing steadily in Ghent and Bruges.
More importantly for hospitality: TikTok has become a food and travel discovery platform. "Restaurant in Ghent" and "café Antwerp" are searched thousands of times per month on TikTok's own search bar — which now functions similarly to Google for younger audiences.
TikTok is a video-first platform. Unlike Instagram, where a well-shot photo can perform strongly, TikTok rewards authentic, engaging short video — ideally 15–60 seconds. If the idea of filming and editing video feels completely out of reach, TikTok may not be the right starting point for you.
That said, "video" on TikTok doesn't mean expensive production. Some of the best-performing restaurant content on Belgian TikTok is filmed on a phone, in a kitchen, in under two minutes.
If your food is visually interesting — a dramatic burger reveal, a layered cocktail, a pasta being tossed — TikTok is made for you. "Food porn" content performs extremely well and is highly shareable across age groups.
If your target customer is 18–35, TikTok is where they spend time. A single well-performing Reel can drive hundreds of profile visits, and many restaurant owners report direct bookings coming from TikTok within weeks of starting.
Open kitchen? Family recipe? Unique sourcing story? TikTok audiences love authenticity and process. A 30-second video of your baker starting work at 4am, or your chef explaining the story behind a dish, can outperform months of polished Instagram posts.
Accommodation works on TikTok, but the content needs to be compelling. Room tours, local area guides ("5 things to do near our hostel in Bruges"), and authentic guest moments can work well. But if your property isn't visually distinctive, it's harder to make TikTok content that performs.
If your primary audience is 45+ or if the tone of your establishment is formal and intimate, TikTok may not be the best use of your time. The platform skews casual and energetic. A Michelin-starred restaurant can make TikTok work, but it requires a very deliberate creative approach. For most quiet B&Bs targeting mature travellers, Instagram and Google are better investments.
Based on the best-performing Belgian food and hospitality content on TikTok, these formats consistently work:
Posting 2–3 times per week on TikTok is the minimum for meaningful growth. Each video takes 20–45 minutes including filming and basic editing (using TikTok's built-in editor). That's roughly 1.5–2 hours per week on top of your existing social media effort.
The key question is whether you have someone in your team — ideally someone comfortable on camera or behind it — who can own this. TikTok content shot and edited by a 22-year-old staff member will outperform anything produced by an agency trying to fake authenticity.
Don't start TikTok until your Instagram and Facebook presence is solid. Those platforms have higher intent (people actively searching to eat somewhere, not just browsing for entertainment) and deliver more reliable conversion. Once your core social presence is working — which is what our audit helps you achieve — TikTok is a powerful next layer, especially if you're targeting a younger Belgian audience.
A Neven audit analyses your current presence and tells you exactly where your effort is best spent — including whether TikTok makes sense for your specific business.
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