Brussels is one of the world's most international cities — not just because of EU institutions, but because of the layers of global talent that have settled here over decades: diplomats, artists, researchers, startup founders, NGO workers, interns. That mix is what makes the city unlike anywhere else in Europe.
Who lives at Rezidentz
Our current tenants represent more than 19 nationalities: Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, India, Italy, Norway, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerland, USA, Finland — and more, depending on the month. Most are young professionals between 25 and 40, in Brussels for work, a traineeship, a research contract, or an assignment of uncertain duration.
What makes this work
Living among people from very different backgrounds takes a certain kind of openness — and it tends to attract that kind of person. Our tenants are generally curious, multilingual, and comfortable navigating ambiguity. They've often lived in multiple countries already.
We make it easy for them to connect: digital move-in, a responsive team, community events, and apartments that feel like genuine homes rather than temporary holding spaces. The rest happens organically.
All-inclusive, all nationalities
Electronic contracts, keyless entry, virtual tours, and English-speaking support — we design the entire experience to work seamlessly for international tenants from day one.



