The grey stone walls and central keep of the Gravensteen, the medieval Castle of the Counts, rising from its moat in the centre of Ghent, Belgium, under a soft sky.

Storm a medieval castle — with a comedian whispering in your ear

Gravensteen timed-entry ticket — the moated 1180 stone castle in the heart of Ghent, with a free audioguide voiced by Flemish comedian Wouter Deprez: knights, beheadings and battles, told to make you laugh.

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  • 1180 Moated stone castle built by the Counts of Flanders
  • Free audioguide Voiced by comedian Wouter Deprez — knights, battles, beheadings, with humour
  • City centre On the Sint-Veerleplein, in the heart of medieval Ghent
  • Daily 10–18 Open every day, last admission 16:40

Choose your ticket

Adult ticket

Live availability

Full castle admission incl. the comedian's audioguide, timed entry

€27

  • Timed-entry admission to the whole castle — choose your day and slot
  • The free audioguide voiced by comedian Wouter Deprez — knights, battles and beheadings, told with humour
  • The ramparts, the keep, the count's residence and the historic gravensteen rooms
  • Mobile e-ticket with QR code — show your phone at the gate
  • A short audio history sent before your visit
Reserve adult ticket

Young adult (19–25)

Live availability

Reduced rate, timed entry, photo ID required

€16

  • Timed-entry admission to the whole castle — choose your day and slot
  • The free audioguide voiced by comedian Wouter Deprez — knights, battles and beheadings, told with humour
  • The ramparts, the keep, the count's residence and the historic gravensteen rooms
  • Mobile e-ticket with QR code — show your phone at the gate
  • Reduced rate for visitors aged 19 to 25 — please bring photo ID showing your age
Reserve young-adult ticket
  • Book in your languageYour currency, final price.
  • Pro tips includedQuietest slots, the funny audioguide, the view most people miss.
  • Ready before you flyMobile e-ticket, ready in your inbox.
  • 24/7 human supportReal people, instant answers — any hour, any time zone.
4.8 from 63 verified travellers
Lotte D.
Utrecht, Netherlands
“The comedian audioguide is the best thing — we laughed the whole way round, and even the kids listened. The view of Ghent from the ramparts is gorgeous.”
April 2026
Niall F.
Cork, Ireland
“A proper medieval castle right in the middle of the city — the dungeon, the armoury, then up to the wall-walk for the rooftops and canals. Booked ahead and walked straight in.”
March 2026
Hannah W.
Leeds, United Kingdom
“About an hour and a half with the full audio tour. Wear decent shoes, the spiral stairs are steep — but that rooftop panorama over the old town is worth it.”
February 2026

5-minute audio guide

Your Gravensteen 5-minute primer

Hand-written, narrated by a heritage host, sent to every customer the day before their visit — a short primer that sets up the castle before you arrive. On the day, the castle's own free comedic audioguide by Wouter Deprez takes over and turns the history into the funniest hour in Ghent.

Included with your booking — your full guide arrives with your ticket.Get your guide
  • Why Philip of Alsace built Ghent a moated stone castle in 1180
  • What to look for on the ramparts, in the keep and the count's residence
  • How to read the view over Ghent — the rooftops, the canals and the squares
  • What to expect from the free comedic audioguide voiced by Wouter Deprez

Our primer is sent before your visit; the castle's full comedic audioguide is included free with every ticket. No app, no download.

About Gravensteen

The Gravensteen — the Castle of the Counts — is a moated stone fortress in the very centre of Ghent, built in 1180 by Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders, on the site of older fortifications. With its grey curtain walls, battlements and central keep rising straight out of the water, it is the most complete medieval castle in Flanders, and one of the few in Europe still standing in the middle of a working city. You climb the ramparts, walk the count's residence, and look out over the rooftops of the old town from the top of the keep.

What sets a visit apart is the audioguide, and it is unlike any other castle's. It is voiced by the Flemish comedian Wouter Deprez, who walks you through the castle's blood-soaked past — knights, sieges, beheadings, the count who built it and the people who suffered in it — and tells the whole grim history to make you laugh. It is included free with every ticket, never a paid extra, and it is the reason so many visitors say Gravensteen is the most fun they had in Ghent. Children and adults alike come down the ramparts grinning.

A visit takes roughly an hour to ninety minutes and sits naturally in any day in Ghent — the castle is a few minutes' walk from the Korenmarkt, the canals and St Bavo's Cathedral, in the heart of the medieval centre. We are a concierge service that books your timed-entry ticket for you, in English and in your own currency, so you choose your day and slot and simply show your phone at the gate. To be clear, the Gravensteen itself is not a UNESCO World Heritage Site — that distinction belongs to Ghent's separate belfry — but it is the city's defining medieval landmark.

Practical information

Opening hours
Open daily 10:00 to 18:00, with last admission at 16:40. The castle is closed on 24, 25 and 31 December and on 1 January.
Address
Gravensteen, Sint-Veerleplein 11, 9000 Ghent, Belgium
Getting there from the Korenmarkt
About a 5-minute walk from the Korenmarkt and the historic centre, following the canal to the Sint-Veerleplein where the castle stands.
By tram
Trams run through the centre of Ghent; the Gravensteen stop and the Korenmarkt stop are both a short walk away, and the castle is signed from the main squares.
From Gent-Sint-Pieters station
About 20 to 25 minutes by tram from Ghent's main railway station into the historic centre, then a short walk to the castle.
Time needed
Allow about 60 to 90 minutes for the castle and the full audioguide. Add time on the ramparts and the keep for the views over the old town.
The audioguide
Included free with every ticket and voiced by the comedian Wouter Deprez. It plays on a handset you collect at the castle; there is nothing to download. It is in several languages — the comedic English version is the one most international visitors choose.
Stairs and ramparts
The castle is a medieval building with steep, uneven stone staircases up to the ramparts and the keep, and no lift. The climbs are part of the visit and are not suitable for visitors who cannot manage stairs.
Best time to visit
The first slots after opening, around 10:00, are the quietest. Weekends and midday in summer are busiest. The light on the stone walls and the views from the keep are best in the late afternoon.

About our service

Gravensteen Tickets acts as a facilitator to help international visitors book timed-entry tickets for the Gravensteen, the Castle of the Counts, in Ghent. We are not the castle's operator — we provide a personalised booking and English-language support service, and our concierge service fee is included in the displayed price. Visitors who prefer to buy directly can do so at the monument's own ticket channel.

Frequently asked

What is the Gravensteen?

The Gravensteen, or Castle of the Counts, is a moated medieval stone castle in the centre of Ghent, built in 1180 by Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders. It is the most complete castle of its kind in Flanders, with curtain walls, a central keep and ramparts you can walk, all rising straight out of the water in the heart of the old city.

Is the audioguide really included free?

Yes — the audioguide is included with every ticket and is never a paid add-on. It is voiced by the Flemish comedian Wouter Deprez, who tells the castle's history of knights, sieges and beheadings with humour, and it is the highlight of the visit for most people.

Who is Wouter Deprez?

Wouter Deprez is a well-known Flemish comedian. He narrates the Gravensteen audioguide, turning the castle's grim medieval history into something genuinely funny — visitors of all ages tend to come down the ramparts laughing. The comedic tour is included free with your ticket.

Where is the Gravensteen?

On the Sint-Veerleplein, in the very heart of Ghent's medieval centre. It is about a 5-minute walk from the Korenmarkt and the canals, and an easy walk from St Bavo's Cathedral and the main squares, so it is simple to reach on foot from anywhere in the old town.

What are the opening hours?

The castle is open daily from 10:00 to 18:00, with last admission at 16:40. It is closed on 24, 25 and 31 December and on 1 January. Because the slot you choose must fall within these hours, we confirm your timed entry against the current schedule when we book.

Is the ticket for a specific time slot?

Yes. Entry is timed — you choose a day and a time slot, and your ticket reserves that window. We book your preferred slot for you so you can arrive and walk straight in rather than queue for whatever's left, which matters most on busy summer weekends.

How long does a visit take?

Allow about 60 to 90 minutes for the castle and the full audioguide. You can spend longer on the ramparts and at the top of the keep, where the views over Ghent's rooftops and canals are worth lingering over.

Is the castle suitable for everyone?

It is a genuine medieval building, with steep, uneven stone staircases up to the ramparts and the keep and no lift. Reasonably mobile visitors of most ages manage it comfortably, but it isn't suitable for those who can't manage stairs, and good footing helps on the worn steps.

Do I need to print my ticket?

No. You receive a mobile e-ticket with a QR code that you simply show on your phone at the gate — nothing to print and nothing to collect in advance. You pick up the audioguide handset inside the castle.

Is there a reduced rate for young adults?

Yes. There is a reduced young-adult ticket for visitors aged 19 to 25, which includes the same full access and the comedian's audioguide. Please bring photo ID showing your age, as it may be checked at the gate. Children under 12 and certain other groups have their own arrangements at the castle.

Is the Gravensteen a UNESCO World Heritage Site?

No. The Gravensteen is not a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Ghent's medieval belfry is separately inscribed by UNESCO as part of the Belfries of Belgium and France, but that is a different monument. The castle is Ghent's defining medieval landmark in its own right.

Can I combine it with a walking day in Ghent?

Easily — it's one of the best stops on a day on foot. From the castle you're minutes from the Korenmarkt, the Graslei and Korenlei canals, St Bavo's Cathedral with the Ghent Altarpiece, and the belfry. Booking a morning slot lets you do the castle first and wander the old town afterwards.

What languages is the audioguide in?

The audioguide is offered in several languages. The comedic version voiced by Wouter Deprez is the one most international visitors choose in English, and it is what makes the visit so memorable. You collect the handset inside the castle; there is nothing to download.