EuropeCopenhagen

Denmark

Last updated: April 2026

PREMIUM COSTVISA RESEARCHGOOD INTERNET

Overview

What remote workers notice first about Denmark.

Strong work-life balance and bike culture

English widely spoken professionally

Pay Limit Scheme for high earners

Excellent healthcare when registered

Visa Spotlight

The Primary Choice

Pay Limit Scheme

Thinking about working in Denmark or moving there? Our expat guide covers visas, jobs, salaries, cost of living, and everything you need to know before you go.

  • check

    Income proof

    Foreign remote income documentation

  • check

    Clean record

    Police certificate where required

  • check

    Local address

    Lease or accommodation agreement

  • check

    Insurance

    Health coverage per application rules

Duration: 4 years pathway·Fees: DKK fees

Requirements: Salary above high threshold with Danish employer

Your passport matters

Entry and stay rules depend on citizenship and purpose of visit. Always confirm the latest requirements for your nationality with official government sources before you travel.

Full visa details arrow_forward

Application process

Non-EU/EEA nationals usually need a concrete job offer from a Danish employer that fits a residence scheme—Pay Limit Scheme (high salary), Positive List (shortage occupations), Fast Track company routes, or other specialised categories. The employer often initiates SIRI (Danish Agency for International Recruitment and Integration) workflows; you submit biometrics, passport, contract, and education proofs.

EU citizens register under EU rules after arrival with proof of work or sufficient means.

After approval, obtain CPR number (central person register), MitID digital identity, health insurance card (yellow card), and bank account—order matters; employers often help.

Renew or extend before expiry; job loss can affect permit—check grace rules.

Remote work for non-Danish employers without local sponsorship is not the norm for these permits—verify legal basis.

Study-to-work transitions exist for graduates—separate rules apply.

Cost of Living

Average Rent
$850–$2,600/month
1BR Apartment (range)
Food & Dining
$400–$620/month
Groceries & dining out
Getting Around
$70–$90/month (Rejsekort)
Local transport
Coworking
$230–$420/month
Desk / membership

Copenhagen lifestyle index

Estimated monthly budget for a high-quality nomadic lifestyle including a modern apartment, co-working, and weekend trips—based on the guide's worked example where available.

$3,352
Per Month Total

Example month in Copenhagen (single, non-luxury):

Rent (one-bed): $1,850 Utilities + internet: $145 Rejsekort transport: $85 Groceries: $450 Eating out / smørrebrød: $300 Coworking: $250 Phone + software: $52 Gym / swimming: $80 Miscellaneous: $140

Indicative total: about $3,352.

Aarhus and Odense often 20–30% lower rent; DKK rate affects USD totals.

Top Nomad Hubs

Copenhagen

Copenhagen

Canals, Michelin dining, cycling

Avg rent$1,500–$2,600/month
CoworkingRepublikken, Spaces, SOHO
Explore neighbourhoods
Aarhus

Aarhus

Second city, younger crowd

Avg rent$1,000–$1,800/month
CoworkingINCUBA, The Kitchen
Explore neighbourhoods
Odense

Odense

Smaller, robotics hub

Avg rent$850–$1,400/month
CoworkingStorm P
Explore neighbourhoods

Neighbourhood picks

Copenhagen

Nørrebro

Diverse, food scene, creative—$1,400–$2,200 one-bed.

Copenhagen

Østerbro

Families, waterfront, calmer—$1,600–$2,500.

Aarhus

Latinerkvarteret

Cafés, students, compact—$1,000–$1,700.

account_balance

Banking & cash

Danske Bank, Nordea, Jyske Bank, and Lunar serve retail. MitID unlocks banking and tax—obtain after CPR.

MobilePay dominates P2P—Danish phone number helps.

DKK not euro—budget FX. Wise for receiving USD/GBP—declare if tax resident.

Cash rare; cards and MobilePay universal.

Housing deposits often three months—liquidity plan early.

Cross-border workers from Sweden/Germany have special tax rules—adviser needed.

Expert tip: Compare ATM fees and prefer bank-owned machines in city centres.
medical_services

Health & safety

Tax-funded healthcare with GP (almen praktiserende læge) gatekeeping once registered—yellow card is key.

Emergency: 112. Private insurance uncommon—public quality high; waits for elective procedures exist.

Dental: expensive for adults—supplemental insurance or budget.

Mental health: improving—GP referral for psychologist.

Pharmacies (apotek) strong; prescriptions digital.

Bike injuries common—helmets and lights mandatory by culture if not always law everywhere—ride defensively in Copenhagen rain.

Note: Private clinics in Copenhagen are often a practical choice for expats where available.

Culture & lifestyle

Hygge (coziness) is not a joke—candles, friends, cake. Punctuality matters; meetings end on time for daycare pickup.

Bikes rule—learn hand signals and don't block cargo bike lanes. Janteloven similar to Sweden—modesty valued.

Danish humour is dry—embrace irony. Friday beer (fredagsbar) in workplaces builds bonds.

Learn Danish for integration points and deeper belonging—free kommune courses exist.

Tipping not expected—service included. Christmas markets and Tivoli anchor winter joy.

The real talk

The advantages

check

World-class work-life balance

check

Bike infrastructure and flat cities

check

English in professional life

The challenges

close

Very high taxes and living costs

close

Housing shortage in Copenhagen

close

Weather grey and windy

Join the conversation

Connect with nomads and locals—search these hubs to get started.

Frequently asked questions

Often similar or higher for rent—salaries and taxes differ; model net disposable income carefully.

Tax snapshot

High taxes fund services; 8% labour market contribution then progressive rates — get SKAT guidance.

Community tips

Join sports clubs (forening) for friends, learn Danish for integration points, start housing search early.

This destination is perfect for…

Work-life balanceDesignCycling citiesFamily benefits

Ready to work remotely in Denmark?

Browse roles you can do from anywhere.

Browse jobs arrow_forward

Where to next?

👋 Hey there!

Ask us anything — we usually reply in minutes.

Start a chat