Things to do

A short list of what is worth your time

Walks, markets, art openings, summer theatre, swimming fens, six thousand terrace seats — Oisterwijk has more to do per square kilometre than its size suggests.

The non-negotiables

If you only do four things in Oisterwijk, do these:

  1. Walk in the reserve. Even a short circuit from Groot Speijck will tell you why people come here. The full 14-Fens loop is the headline.
  2. Sit on a terrace on De Lind. Pick a sunny one. Order something local. Don't rush.
  3. Walk through KVL. The repurposed leather factory is the most interesting recent thing in Oisterwijk; the courtyards and ground-floor spaces are accessible.
  4. Cross into Kampina. The wider sky, open heath and Highland cattle next to the forest are a different reserve experience.

Anything beyond that — galleries, the theatre, swimming, the Saturday market, day trips — depends on the season and how long you have.

By interest

For nature lovers

The forest and the fens are the main event. Add wildlife watching at dawn, the Kampina heath, and the lesser-known shorter walks if you have multiple days. Cyclists should also tick the cycling routes.

For families

See the dedicated with-kids page. Highlights: the swim at Staalbergven, the family loops from Boshuis Venkraai, the playground Piet Plezier, the easy day trip to Efteling or Beekse Bergen.

For art and design

Start at EKWC if it has an open day; otherwise the wider galleries are a strong afternoon. Add Tilburg's De Pont or Eindhoven's Van Abbemuseum for a culture-focused weekend.

For history and architecture

The 37-monument walk covers most of the centre; pair with the KVL and leather heritage trail. Allow a full day.

For food and drink

The terraces on De Lind, the forest cafés, the KVL patisserie. See the food & drink hub. Long lunches are encouraged.

For markets and events

See the events calendar. Weekly markets on De Lind, seasonal Christmas market, a busy summer programme at the Natuurtheater.

For shopping

The boutiques and delicatessens of the centre are unusually good for a village this size. See shopping.

"The genuine pleasure of Oisterwijk is fitting these things together over a long weekend: a walk in the morning, lunch on a terrace, a gallery in the afternoon, theatre at dusk."

By season

The village changes more across the year than first-time visitors expect:

  • Spring (March–May): cuckoos, fresh greens, theatre season opening, gallery vernissages picking up.
  • Summer (June–August): swim at Staalbergven, full theatre programme, longest terrace nights, August heather at Kampina.
  • Autumn (September–November): the best photography light, deer rut, mushroom season, Saturday markets at their busiest.
  • Winter (December–February): empty paths, Christmas market on De Lind, hot chocolate at the forest cafés, quieter galleries.

By time available

If you have a half day, walk the half-fens loop and eat on De Lind. A full day, add KVL and one gallery. A weekend, add Kampina, the theatre, and one neighbouring village. A long weekend, add a day trip to Den Bosch or Tilburg.

Sunday note. Many shops close on Sunday; museums and galleries open. The reserves are open every day.

What it adds up to

Most visitors who give Oisterwijk a real two or three days come back. The village is not built for a single big attraction. It is built for the way the small ones fit together: trail, terrace, gallery, theatre, bookshop, bakery. Plan loosely and follow what looks good in the moment.

Plan loosely, follow what looks good in the moment

That is the local approach. We recommend it.