KEY HIGHLIGHTS
- Belgium recorded about 40.4 million tourist gifts sent home, equal to roughly 3.4 gifts for every resident.
- Brussels-Capital ranked first nationally for gift density, with about 530 tourist gifts sent home per 100 residents, around 1.5 times the national average.
- The Flemish Region accounted for 62.9% of all estimated gifts, sending home roughly three times the volume of the Walloon Region.
Behind every overnight stay in Belgium last year was a small ritual that often gets overlooked: the souvenir picked up at a market, the chocolate box tucked into a suitcase, the personalised gift sent home to mark the trip.
According to a new analysis by YourSurprise, drawn from Belgium’s Federal Statistical Office and Eurostat, about 9 in 10 visitors carry or send home a souvenir or gift after their stay. The analysis applies that proxy to convert overnight stays into estimated tourist gifts, ranked here at the regional level.
Belgium’s national picture: 40.4 million estimated tourist gifts from 44.9 million overnight stays
| Indicator | Belgium |
| Total overnight stays | 44,890,602 |
| Estimated tourist gifts | 40,401,542 |
| Average estimated gifts per day (366-day leap year) | 110,387 |
| Time between gifts | Once every 0.8 seconds |
| Total population | 11,763,650 |
| Gifts per 100 residents | 343.44 |
| Regions analysed | 3 |
These national totals form the baseline for the regional drill-down that follows, and the rankings show how unevenly Belgium’s estimated gift volume is distributed across the country.
Looking at the study, a spokesperson from YourSurprise commented,
“What stands out for us is the human story behind the numbers. An estimated 40.4 million gifts are 40 million minor acts of remembering: a niece, a colleague, a grandparent who could not make the trip. Travel is rarely just about the traveller, and these figures put a number on that instinct to bring someone else home with you.”
Brussels-Capital tops Belgium with 530 tourist gifts sent home per 100 residents
| Rank | Region | Estimated Gifts | Population | Gifts per 100 Residents |
| 1 | Brussels-Capital Region | 6,625,853 | 1,249,597 | 530.24 |
| 2 | Flemish Region | 25,412,570 | 6,821,770 | 372.52 |
| 3 | Walloon Region | 8,363,119 | 3,692,283 | 226.50 |
Brussels-Capital’s gifting density runs at 2.34 times that of the Walloon Region and 1.42 times that of the Flemish Region. The capital’s compact footprint, paired with its concentration of international visitors, drives the per-capita gap.
The Flemish Region accounts for nearly two-thirds of Belgium’s tourist gift volume
| Rank | Region | Estimated Gifts | Share of National Total |
| 1 | Flemish Region | 25,412,570 | 62.9% |
| 2 | Walloon Region | 8,363,119 | 20.7% |
| 3 | Brussels-Capital Region | 6,625,853 | 16.4% |
At about 25.4 million gifts, the Flemish Region alone exceeded the combined output of the Walloon and Brussels-Capital regions, which together accounted for roughly 15 million. Even so, the Flemish Region’s per-capita density places it second nationally, behind Brussels-Capital.
The region sending home the most gifts per resident
| Region | Estimated Gifts | Population | Gifts per 100 Residents | Rank |
| Brussels-Capital Region | 6,625,853 | 1,249,597 | 530.24 | 1 |
The region sending home the fewest gifts per resident
| Region | Estimated Gifts | Population | Gifts per 100 Residents | Rank |
| Walloon Region | 8,363,119 | 3,692,283 | 226.50 | 3 |
The Brussels-Capital Region sends home an estimated 2.34 times the per-capita gift volume of the Walloon Region, despite Wallonia’s population being nearly three times larger. The contrast underscores how visitor volume, more than residential population, drives gifting density.



