The ideal place to start your visit of the battlefields is the Memorial Museum Passchendaele 1917. Zonnebeke counts five important British and Commonwealth War Cemeteries. Tyne Cot Cemetery in Passendale with 11,956 graves is the largest British military cemetery on the continent. It attracts nearly 200,000 visitors every year, making it the most famous of all war sites on the Western Front. The Missing Memorial at the back of Tyne Cot lists 34,957 names and takes up where the missing list of Menin Gate leaves off. The Buttes New British Cemetery in Polygoon Wood is located in front of a butte in a former milirary domain. The smaller Polygoon Wood Cemetery is just across the road. There is also Passchendaele New British Cemetery in 's Graventafelstraat and Zantvoorde British Cemetery, which is undoubtedly one of the more remarkable cemeteries of the Salient.
Thirteen monuments are dotted around the region, reminding the visitor of the bloody battles which were fought. In Passendale, one may find monuments to the 3rd Australian Division (Tyne Cot), the Canadian 85th Battalion (Passendalestraat), the New Zealand Forces ('s Graventafelstraat) and the Canadians (Crest Farm). In Zonnebeke there are monuments to the French 1914-1915 (Broodseinde), the British 7th Division (Broodseinde), the 5th Australian Division (Polygon Wood), the Princess Patricia's light Infantry (Frezenberg) and a private stone honouring James Ewen Brodie (Nonnebossen). In Geluveld there are monuments to the 4th South Wales Borderers (windmill), the 2nd Worcestershire Regiment (windmill) and the Gloucestershire Regiment (Zandberg) and in Zandvoorde a monument for the Household Cavalry (village).
There are also numerous remembrance plaques on the old town hall of Passendale (Belgian Grenadiers and Carabineers), for the Canadian Field Artillery on the Church of Zonnebeke and for Lieutenant Littleboy in the church of Geluveld, as well as a special stained glass window honouring the British 66th Division in the church of Passendale.
In the community cemetery of Zonnebeke there is a crypt containing fourteen coffins holding the remains of Zonnebeke casualties. It is known as a unicum in Belgium. Concrete bunkers still stand on the hillock as authentic relics and reminders of the German defensive lines. Many are situated on private ground. Just outside the village of Zandvoorde there is a permanently accessible and protected German command bunker constructed in 1916, which contains six rooms. Groups may also visit an important subterranean hospital bunker at Clapham Junction after making reservations with the Tourist Information Centre.