Copenhagen travel guide

Bike everywhere, eat better than you should, swim in the harbor, and learn the actual meaning of hygge.

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Country
🇩🇰 Denmark
Currency
Danish Krone (DKK)
Language
Danish
Climate
Oceanic
Best months
May–Sep
Airport
CPH (Kastrup)

Why visit Copenhagen

Copenhagen is the cleanest, most quietly progressive capital in Europe. It's also the easiest big city to ride a bike in — 49% of Copenhageners commute by bicycle, and the infrastructure (raised bike lanes, dedicated traffic lights, bridges just for bikes) makes it feel safe even if you haven't ridden in years. Rent one on arrival; you've immediately upgraded your trip.

Food has been Copenhagen's defining cultural export since Noma reset world fine dining. The city is now studded with restaurants opened by ex-Noma chefs (108, Geist, Barr) plus more affordable smørrebrød lunches and a thriving casual scene at Reffen street food market. Pastries — particularly cardamom buns and the proper Danish 'wienerbrød' — are religion here.

The catch: Denmark is expensive. A €15 cocktail, a €12 plate of meatballs, a €4 coffee. The trade-off is that most of the great things to do (harbor swimming, biking, Frederiksberg gardens, Christiania) are free, and once you commit to walking + biking + cooking some meals at the Airbnb, a Copenhagen trip is more affordable than people fear.

Hidden gems in Copenhagen

Beyond the obvious highlights, here are six spots locals actually use and most guidebooks miss:

Reffen street food market
Refshaleøen · Outdoor food market
On a former industrial island reachable by bike (or harbor bus 991/992). Huge open-air market with 40+ food stalls, beer gardens, sunset over the water. Open Apr-Oct. Less touristed than Torvehallerne.
Christianshavn canal kayak
Christianshavn · Self-paddled canal tour
Rent a kayak at GreenKayak (free if you collect harbor trash) or Kayak Republic. Paddle the canals and harbor at your own pace. Best on a warm June evening with light until 10pm.
Frederiksberg Have
Frederiksberg · Locals' picnic park
A massive English-landscape park west of the city. Locals bring blankets, kids, and bottles of wine on warm afternoons. Far quieter than the touristy King's Garden. Enter from Pile Allé for the prettiest paths.
Assistens Kirkegård
Nørrebro · Cemetery park
A cemetery that's also one of Copenhagen's favorite parks. Hans Christian Andersen and Søren Kierkegaard are buried here. Locals jog, picnic, and sunbathe between the headstones. Peculiar by US standards, completely normal here.
Sandcastle harbor swim at Islands Brygge
Islands Brygge · Harbor pool
Copenhagen's harbor water is clean enough to swim in. Islands Brygge has a free public swim deck with ladders into the water. Locals jump in year-round. Summer evenings are perfect.
Vesterbro meatpacking district at night
Vesterbro / Kødbyen · Nightlife quarter
Old industrial meatpacking buildings now hold the city's best wine bars, natural-wine restaurants, and bottle shops. Mother (pizza), Kødbyens Fiskebar (seafood), and Warpigs (BBQ + beer) are gateways. Vibrant on Friday-Saturday nights.

Want more? Our AI Hidden Gems tool generates fresh picks for any neighborhood in Copenhagen →

Best time to visit Copenhagen

Copenhagen has a oceanic climate. Here's the month-by-month breakdown:

Jan1°C · dark + cold
Feb1°C · dark + cold
Mar3°C · thawing
Apr8°C · spring
May13°C · light returns
Jun16°C · long days
Jul18°C · peak summer
Aug17°C · peak summer
Sep13°C · mild fall
Oct9°C · cooling
Nov5°C · grey
Dec2°C · cold + Tivoli

Our pick: May through September — May for spring quiet, June-August for the white-nights energy (sunset at 10pm, light at 4am), September for shoulder season calm. December is the only winter month worth visiting just for the Tivoli Christmas market.

Getting to Copenhagen

Copenhagen Airport (CPH) is 15 minutes from downtown by train (the cheapest airport access in Europe — DKK 38 / €5). From London: 1.5-hour direct flight, £80-200 RT. From New York: 7-hour direct, $400-800 RT. From other European capitals: 1-2 hours direct, €80-250 RT. The Øresund Bridge connects Copenhagen to Malmö, Sweden (35 min by train).

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Where to stay

Indre By (central) for first-trip walkability. Vesterbro for nightlife and food. Nørrebro for indie/hipster cafés (and the famous Superkilen park). Christianshavn for canal views and quiet. Frederiksberg for upscale residential calm. All are bike-distance from each other.

🏨 Compare Copenhagen hotels

Things to do

Headline acts: Tivoli Gardens (the second-oldest amusement park in the world), Nyhavn at sunset (touristy but iconic), a Copenhagen Card harbor canal tour, a meal at Reffen, a bike ride through Frederiksberg into the city. For day trips: Louisiana Museum of Modern Art (45min by train, world-class), Helsingør and Kronborg Castle (Hamlet's castle, 50min), Malmö, Sweden (35min by train).

🎫 Browse Copenhagen tours & activities

Plan your Copenhagen trip with our tools

Free, no signup required. Each tool below is pre-configured for Copenhagen — just click and it opens with your destination already loaded.

💎
Hidden Gems for Copenhagen
AI-generated non-touristy spots by neighborhood and vibe.
🗺️
4-Day Copenhagen Itinerary
AI itinerary with day-by-day plans and routing.
🎒
Copenhagen Packing List
Auto-tuned for oceanic climate.
💶
DKK Currency Tracker
Live rates, spending tracker, common-purchase quick reference.
💬
Danish Phrasebook
25 must-know phrases with audio pronunciation.
🛂
Denmark Visa Check
Visa rules by nationality, instant.

Frequently asked questions

When is the best time to visit Copenhagen?

May through September. June-August has white nights (light until 11pm), warmest weather, and outdoor markets in full swing. May and September are cheaper and almost as good. November-February is dark (sunset 3:30pm) and cold — visit only for Tivoli's Christmas market.

How many days do you need in Copenhagen?

Three to four days for the city — Nyhavn, Tivoli, Christianshavn, Vesterbro food, a harbor swim. Add a day for Louisiana Museum (45min away) and a day for Malmö, Sweden. A perfect Scandinavian trip pairs Copenhagen + Stockholm or Copenhagen + Oslo.

Is Copenhagen expensive?

Yes — one of the most expensive capitals in Europe. Hotels €150-350/night downtown. Restaurant mains €25-45. Beer €8-10. Mitigation: rent a bike (cheap, the best way to see the city), eat smørrebrød lunches (€10-15), shop at Netto/Lidl for breakfast, drink at Reffen instead of Nyhavn.

Can you swim in the Copenhagen harbor?

Yes — the harbor water is famously clean (cleaner than many beaches). Public swim decks at Islands Brygge, Havnebadet Fisketorvet, and Sandkaj. Summer water is 17-20°C; locals swim year-round.

Do you need cash in Copenhagen?

Almost never — Denmark is one of the most cashless countries on Earth. Cards work everywhere, including buses, public toilets, and street food stalls. Apple Pay and Google Pay are universal. Bring zero kroner cash; you won't use it.

Do you need to speak Danish?

No — Danes have among the highest English proficiency in the world. Every menu, sign, and conversation defaults to English the moment you make eye contact. Learning 'tak' (thanks) is sufficient.