Study abroad in Denmark
Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Denmark.
Capital
Copenhagen
Languages
Danish
Academic Year
Most universities run autumn semester from late August or September to January and spring semester from February to June.
Population
About 5.9 million
Typical Budget
EUR 1,200 - 1,900/month
Overview
A premium Nordic exchange choice with strong English, excellent public services, and housing that rewards early planning.
Country Overview
What student life feels like in Denmark.
Denmark works best for students who want a calm, highly organised exchange with excellent English and strong design, sustainability, business, engineering, and life-sciences universities. Copenhagen is the obvious magnet, while Aarhus and Aalborg can feel more manageable for rent and community. The tradeoff is cost: daily life is efficient but expensive, so housing and budget planning should start immediately after nomination.
Country Framework
What shapes student life in Denmark.
Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.
Safety Snapshot
Denmark is very safe by European standards. Student risks are more practical: housing scams, bike theft, winter darkness, and high everyday costs.
Before You Land
A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival
Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.
Arrival Connectivity
Sort an eSIM before you land
Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.
Coverage Check
Confirm your travel insurance
Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.
Public WiFi
Have a backup for shared networks
Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.
Safety & Cost Indices
Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Crime Index
Low
World avg: 44.7
Safety Index
Very safe
World avg: 55.3
Cost of Living
Expensive
EUR 1,200 - 1,900/month
Crime factors measured
Big Cities vs Small Towns
Big Cities
- Copenhagen is consistently ranked among the world's best cities for quality of life — clean, safe, bike-friendly, and with exceptional public services, even if expensive.
- University of Copenhagen and DTU attract large international communities; English instruction is standard.
- High cost of living, but Danish student loan/grant system (SU) may be accessible for EU students.
- World-class food scene, design culture, and architecture — Copenhagen is a genuinely inspiring place to study.
Small Towns
- Aarhus is Denmark's second city and has a vibrant student scene centred on Aarhus University — often rated the most student-friendly city in the country.
- Odense (University of Southern Denmark) and Aalborg (Aalborg University) have lower costs and tighter-knit communities.
- Smaller cities have higher car dependency and limited nightlife, but stronger local Danish integration.
- Aarhus in particular punches above its weight — excellent museums, food, and a compact walkable centre.
Culture
Social Norms
- Punctuality is taken seriously.
- People may seem private at first; dorm kitchens, sports, and student associations are the easiest way in.
Daily Rhythm
Local pace07:00–08:30
Morning
Danes cycle to work and university rain or shine. Breakfast at home: rye bread (rugbrød) with cheese or liver pâté. Coffee is essential — refills are free in most cafés.
11:30–13:00
Midday
Short lunch breaks — Danes eat at desks or quickly in the canteen. Smørrebrød (open sandwiches) are the classic lunch. Work culture prioritises afternoon productivity.
13:00–16:00
Afternoon
Compressed but focused work block. Many Danes finish by 16:00 to pick up children or do sport. Flex-time is standard; late-evening work is frowned upon.
17:30–20:00
Evening
Dinner early — around 18:00. Hygge (cosy home time) is real; Danes entertain at home more than eating out. Candles lit, board games common.
21:00–02:00
Night
Copenhagen nightlife opens late; bars fill after 22:00. Meatpacking District (Kødbyen) is the student favourite. Clubs close at 05:00 on weekends.
Food Culture
Student canteen lunch
DKK 35-65University canteens are cheaper than eating out.
Plan groceries; cafes and casual meals add up quickly.
Smørrebrød (open-faced sandwiches)
DKK 30–90 / EUR 4–12Dark rye bread topped with herring, roast beef, liver pâté, egg, or shrimp — Denmark's iconic lunch. Each topping combination is a specific variety with its own name.
Supermarket smørrebrød kits let you make your own for a fraction of the café price — buy rye bread and toppings separately.

Danish pastry (Wienerbrød)
DKK 20–45 / EUR 2.70–6Buttery layered pastry in various shapes — spandauer, snegl (cinnamon roll), and hindbærsnitter (raspberry slice). What the world calls 'Danish pastry' originated here.
Late-afternoon bakery discounts (around 4–5pm) cut prices on same-day pastries by up to 50%.
Flæskesteg (pork roast)
DKK 60–130 / EUR 8–17Roasted pork with crispy cracklings, served with pickled red cabbage and potatoes. The Danish national dish, especially common around Christmas.
Supermarkets sell pre-made portions at substantial discounts after peak hours — a good weekday dinner option.
Hotdog from a Pølsevogn
DKK 30–60 / EUR 4–8Danish red sausages (rød pølse) from a street hot-dog cart — one of Copenhagen's most recognisable quick meals, served with mustard, ketchup, and fried onions.
Pølsevogne carts near transit hubs are one of the cheapest cooked meals you can get in expensive Copenhagen.
Rugbrød (rye bread)
DKK 15–35 / EUR 2–4.70Dense, dark sourdough rye bread — the backbone of Danish food culture. Eaten at virtually every breakfast and lunch, it keeps you full for hours.
Buy a loaf from the supermarket and pair it with cream cheese or hummus — one of the cheapest and most filling student breakfasts in Denmark.
Dos and Don'ts
Do
Use a bike and learn cycling rules early — always use the red bike lanes, signal with your arm, and never ride on the pavement.
Register admin steps quickly once you have an address — CPR number unlocks healthcare, banking, and library access.
Join buddy and intro-week activities — Danish social culture takes time to warm up, so structured events help.
Open a Mobilepay account as soon as you have a Danish phone number — used for everything from splitting bills to street food.
Buy a second-hand bike from Den Blå Avis or Facebook Marketplace within the first week — DKK 500-1,500 for a working commuter.
Apply for a CPR number through your commune (borgerservice) immediately after arriving — required for healthcare and most admin.
Dress for rain regardless of forecast — pack a good waterproof jacket as a daily essential.
Check DSB student fare conditions and youth tickets before buying intercity train tickets.
Don't
Do not leave housing until the last month — Copenhagen rooms are booked 3-6 months in advance.
Do not assume Denmark is cheap because tuition exchange is covered — daily life costs are among the highest in Europe.
Do not ignore winter light and rain when packing — vitamin D supplements and a good lamp matter from October.
Do not cycle without lights after dark — police issue DKK 700+ fines for cycling without lights.
Do not jaywalk at red lights — Danes wait even on empty streets and traffic enforcement is real.
Do not eat out frequently — restaurant meals in Copenhagen average EUR 20-30; groceries from Netto or Lidl are the student strategy.
Do not use the wrong recycling bin — Danes sort waste meticulously and building managers may issue warnings.
Do not assume the first week social warmth means close friendships — Danish friendships typically develop over months.
Lifestyle & Travel
Copenhagen cycling
Copenhagen is the world cycling capital. 400km of dedicated bike lanes in the city. Second-hand bike DKK 500-1,500 from Den Bla Avis. Cycling is the default student transport.
Learn moreLouisiana Museum of Modern Art
One of Scandinavia best museums — art, architecture, and sculpture garden on the Oresund coast. Student entry DKK 100. 45min train from Copenhagen.
Learn moreNyhavn waterfront and harbour kayak
Kayak rental in Copenhagen harbour from DKK 150/h. Free access to the entire harbour. Nyhavn coloured facades are iconic. Kayaking is how locals see the city.
Learn moreChristiania neighbourhood visit
Unique self-governed community with art galleries, music venues, vegetarian restaurants, and an alternative lifestyle. Free entry. Do not photograph Pusher Street.
Learn moreRoskilde Viking Ship Museum
Five original Viking ships raised from Roskilde Fjord. Student entry DKK 135. You can row replica Viking boats in summer. UNESCO city and cathedral also nearby.
Learn moreSkagen beach and dunes
Northernmost tip of Denmark where two seas meet. Huge sand dunes (Rabjerg Mile), Denmark most unusual landscape. Train from Copenhagen ~3.5h.
Learn moreAarhus food market
Aarhus has one of Denmark best food scenes. Street food market has 30+ vendors, smorrebroj (open sandwiches) for DKK 60-80, craft beer from DKK 50.
Learn moreOresund bridge walk and Malmo day trip
Copenhagen rail pass covers the Oresund crossing. Malmo has a great food scene and is significantly cheaper than Copenhagen for cafes and restaurants.
Learn moreFestival Calendar
Travel Tips
- Rejsekort (travel card) gives ~20% discount on all Danish public transport. Buy at Copenhagen Airport or any station.
- DSB student fare: with a valid student ID and CPR number, buy Ungdomskort for heavily discounted monthly rail travel.
- Supermarkets: Netto and Lidl cheapest. Fakta and Fotex mid-range. Irma is premium. Weekly shopping budget: DKK 250-400.
- Many Copenhagen museums are free including Statens Museum for Kunst (National Gallery) and the National Museum.
- Danes tip very little (0-5%) — rounding up is sufficient. Unlike most of Europe, tipping is genuinely optional.
Benefits & Scholarships
Personalize this layer
Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.
Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.
Useful either way
Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.
Arrival support
Universities often provide housing guidance, buddy schemes, and arrival support.
Host universities
Official sourceTransport planning
Transport discounts depend on city, age, and status; check local providers before buying passes.
DSB and local transit
Official sourceStudent culture
Student bars, design events, museums, and university sports are the realistic low-cost layer.
Local student unions
Official sourceVisa Requirements
Difficulty: ModeratePassport or national ID, then EU residence registration after arrival
EU/EEA/Swiss students do not need a student visa, but longer stays normally require registration and a CPR process.
Residence permit for higher education
Non-EU students generally need a residence permit before arrival; the host university normally guides the process after admission.
Application Checklist
4 steps-
1
Confirm visa or EU registration route.
-
2
Start housing before arrival, especially for Copenhagen.
-
3
Prepare CPR/registration documents.
-
4
Bring admission, insurance, funds proof, ID, and housing address.
Health & Healthcare
How It Works
Denmark operates a universal tax-funded healthcare system administered by regions (regioner). All registered residents — including exchange students who obtain a CPR number — receive a yellow health card (sundhedskort) that grants free access to a personal GP and public hospital care. EU students with a valid EHIC can access medically necessary treatment at Danish public rates before obtaining a CPR. Non-EU students staying under 12 months typically need private health insurance; students staying over 12 months on a residence permit become entitled to full public coverage. Healthcare quality is very high and widely English-friendly.
Student Needs
EU students: bring EHIC for immediate coverage; apply for CPR number through borgerservice (civil registration) once you have a permanent address — CPR registration triggers automatic health card issuance within 2-3 weeks. Non-EU students: arrange compliant private insurance before departure and follow host university insurance instructions for your specific visa type. Register with a GP (alment praktiserende læge) using your health card via sundhed.dk as soon as the card arrives.
Emergency vs Clinic
Call 112 for any life-threatening emergency. For urgent non-emergency advice outside GP hours, call 1813 (Copenhagen area) or the regional on-call medical service — triage is by phone before you visit. GP visits are free for registered patients. Hospital emergency departments (akutmodtagelse) treat all patients regardless of insurance — billing for uninsured patients is handled separately.
Public Coverage Notes
CPR registration grants full public healthcare access including GP (free), specialist (free with GP referral), and hospitalisation (free).
EHIC covers medically necessary care at Danish public rates for EU students who have not yet obtained CPR.
Non-EU students on shorter stays: budget EUR 300-600/year for a compliant private health insurance policy.
Emergency
112Cities to Explore
Copenhagen
Denmark's polished capital: world-class universities, bike-first daily life, strong English, serious design culture, and high costs that reward early housing planning.
Open City Guide
Aarhus
Denmark's strongest student-city alternative to Copenhagen: big university energy, a compact centre, beaches and forests nearby, and a calmer social scale.
Open City Guide