ecobookingUnique stays in BelgiumTreehouse in Belgium
Treehouse in Belgium

Belgium · Treehouse

Treehouse in Belgium

Sleeping five metres above the ground, up in the canopy, with no power and no neighbours.

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The treehouse is the most searched-for unique stay of all — and the one where the gap between the dream and the reality is widest. A genuinely eco-built treehouse does not wound the tree: it hangs from adjustable straps and cables that follow the trunk as it grows, never from screws driven through it. The timber is local, the roof is often planted, and access is by ladder, spiral stair or suspended walkway.

Belgium is compact, and that is its strength: two hours from Brussels and you are deep in an Ardennes valley, without having taken a plane. Supply has concentrated in the Ardennes, the Famenne and the Kempen.

Our selection

Sorted by eco-score

What to check before you book

Three things the directories will not tell you, and that separate a good night from a bad one.

1

Check the fixing method: adjustable straps and cables, never screws into the trunk. It is the first marker of a treehouse that genuinely respects its tree.

2

Ask about the real height and the access. A cabin eight metres up reached by ladder suits neither young children nor anyone with a fear of heights.

3

Dry toilets and no running water are the norm in authentic treehouses: it is a technical choice, not a lack of comfort.

Typical price

150 – 250 €Observed range for two people, one night, outside peak season. Weekends, bank holidays and school holidays usually add 20–40%.

Frequently asked questions

Does a treehouse damage the tree?

Not if it is properly built. Modern treehouses rest on adjustable cables and straps, tightened as the tree grows. It is rigid fixings and screws driven through the trunk that wound it and eventually kill it. A serious host will explain their fixing system unprompted.

Is there electricity and running water?

Running water rarely; often a small solar supply limited to lighting and charging a phone. Most treehouses run on dry toilets with a water point at ground level. That stripping-back is exactly what makes the experience.

Can you get there without a car?

More easily than in France: the Belgian rail network is one of the densest in Europe. Several Ardennes hosts offer transfers from Marloie, Jemelle or Libramont stations.

Go further

Unique stays in BelgiumGuide · BelgiumUnique stays in BelgiumRead the full guide

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