There are 27 municipalities with language facilities (Dutch: faciliteitengemeenten; French: communes à facilités; German: Fazilitäten-Gemeinden) in Belgium which must offer linguistic services to residents in Dutch, French, or German in addition to their single official languages. All other municipalities – with the exception of those in the bilingual Brussels region – are monolingual and only offer services in their official languages, either Dutch or French.Belgian law stipulates that:
12 municipalities in Flanders must offer services in French; of these 12, six (located around Brussels) are now believed to have become majority French-speaking.
Wallonia contains two language areas:
In the French-speaking part of Wallonia, four municipalities offer services in Dutch and another two offer services in German.
All municipalities in the German-speaking part of Wallonia (annexed after WWI) offer services in French.
In Brussels, Dutch and French are co-official.
At the federal level, Dutch, French and German are all official languages.
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