Press photos know this kiosk better than passengers do
The Takeaway.com Kiosk in Brussels Airport T keeps showing up in innovation and tech write‑ups, not in food blogs or trip reports. It sits airside in the main departures area of Terminal T, as part of BRU’s push for app‑based and kiosk‑based ordering. Think of it less as a traditional counter with a cooktop and more as a digital ordering node that links you to partner kitchens and delivery runners inside the airport.
Here you order through branded screens or your own phone using the Takeaway.com platform, then collect your food at the kiosk once it’s prepared elsewhere in the terminal. Because there are almost no first‑hand traveller reviews yet, expect a test‑lab feel rather than a dialed‑in operation. Pricing tracks standard airport fast‑casual levels in Brussels: a basic burger or sandwich from connected vendors tends to land around €10–€14, soft drinks around €3–€4, depending on which partner you pick in the app.
Hours tie to peak departures in Terminal T, generally early morning through late evening, matching the bulk of Schengen flights out of Brussels Airport. Since the kiosk aggregates options from several food outlets inside BRU, choice depends on who is live on the Takeaway.com system at that specific time of day. Hot items like burgers, pizza slices, and Asian bowls often show as available before big 07:00–09:00 and 17:00–20:00 waves; off‑peak, you may see only a couple of sandwich and snack choices.
No clear patterns yet on what regulars order; frequent‑flier forums barely mention the kiosk, which says a lot for an airport that moves over 26 million passengers a year. With no standout signature dish flagged in reviews, treat it as a backup when traditional queues near your gate look brutal. Practical tip: check the Takeaway.com app as soon as you clear security in T; if wait times push past 20 minutes, you’re usually faster grabbing something directly from a nearby counter service spot.