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Data updated 2026-06-22 · Sources: World Bank, Numbeo, WhereNext, EF EPI

Moving to Denmark from the US: Cost, Visa, and Healthcare Guide

Real cost of living data, visa requirements, healthcare, and tax information for Americans relocating to Denmark. All figures from public economic data.

Quality of Life Score
0/100
Excellent destination
Visa (US Passport)
Visa-free · 90 days
English Level
Very High (611)
Tax System
Worldwide

WHAT DENMARK IS ACTUALLY LIKE

D enmark is one of the few places in the world where you can earn less money than you do in America and genuinely feel richer. That sounds like a contradiction until you understand what Danes call the social contract: somewhere between 40 and 56 percent of your income goes to the government, and in return you get healthcare that doesn't bankrupt you, university education that doesn't either, and a social floor that means almost nobody you pass on the street is in genuine financial freefall. Americans moving to Denmark often spend their first months waiting to discover the catch. The catch is mostly the tax bill.

Living in Denmark costs roughly 7% more than the US on average, which surprises people who expect Scandinavian prices to be exotic. A single person can realistically get by on around $3,200 a month in Copenhagen, but if you're flexible about location, Aalborg runs closer to $2,850 and has a genuinely good quality of life without the capital's rent pressure. Healthcare is public and free at point of use for legal residents, but getting legal residency as an American requires either an EU family tie, a qualifying job offer, or enrollment in a Danish institution. The bureaucracy is digitized and relatively efficient by European standards, though almost everything runs through a system called MitID, a national digital identity tool that you cannot function without and that takes time to obtain as a foreigner. Until you have it, basic tasks like opening a bank account or signing a lease feel genuinely obstructed.

What Americans particularly notice is the quiet. Not silence, but a social register that's several decibels lower than anything they're used to. Danes are not unfriendly, but they don't perform friendliness for strangers, and the small-talk culture that Americans rely on to fill space simply doesn't exist here in the same way. English proficiency is exceptionally high across the country, so language is almost never a practical barrier, but learning even basic Danish signals respect and opens real doors socially. The deeper adjustment is pace. Shops close early. Sundays are genuinely quiet. Work ends at a reasonable hour and people mean it. Americans who burned out before leaving often find this restorative. Americans who got their identity from being busy find it disorienting. What makes most of them stay is the cycling infrastructure, which sounds trivial until you've spent six months commuting by bike in a city built for it, and realized your cortisol levels are measurably different.

In your first weeks, get your CPR number (the national registration number) as fast as possible, because everything else is gated behind it. Register your address with the local municipality immediately upon arrival. Open a local bank account once you have your CPR, and look at Lunar or Danske Bank as starting points. Before you leave the US, set up a Wise account, because the Danish banking system is slow to onboard foreigners and you'll need a way to pay bills, move money, and access cash at local ATMs without hemorrhaging fees in the gap. Find a local grocery co-op or a market like Torvehallerne in Copenhagen if you're there, less for the tourist experience and more because it's the fastest way to understand what Danes actually eat and how they shop. And book a mandatory Danish language course early, not because you'll need it to get by, but because the integration requirement for long-term residency means you'll need documented hours eventually, and the waitlists are real.

COST OF LIVING SNAPSHOT

Living in Denmark is approximately 7% more expensive than the United States. A single person spends around $3200/month on average, excluding rent.

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Why Americans Move to Denmark

Based on real, publicly sourced economic and quality-of-life data

Healthcare rated 8/10 with quality care at a fraction of US costs
Ranked 8/10 for safety, well above the global average
Consistently ranks among the happiest countries in the world
Very high English proficiency (611 EF EPI) makes daily life easy
Fast, reliable internet that works well for remote work

Why Denmark Might Not Be Right for You

Honest considerations before you commit

! Worldwide taxation means you may owe local tax in addition to US filing obligations
! No dedicated digital nomad visa; remote workers need to look into standard residency or work visa options
! Living costs are approximately 7% more expensive than the United States

Typical Monthly Budget in Denmark

Excluding rent · Based on World Bank ICP and Eurostat data via WhereNext

Single Person
$3200
per month
Couple
$4950
per month
Cost Index
88
US = 82

Getting Around Denmark

Practical logistics for everyday life

LAND BORDERS
1 country
DRIVING SIDE
Right (same as US)
TIME ZONE
5 zones
CURRENCY
Danish krone

Quality of Life in Denmark

8 metrics from independent public data sources

Safety 8/10
1.504 GPI score (lower = safer)
Among the safer countries globally
Healthcare 8/10
85 UHC coverage index
Top-tier healthcare infrastructure
Happiness 8/10
7.539 /10 WHR score
Among the happiest populations globally
Pollution 9/10
35.4 Numbeo pollution index
Among the cleaner environments globally
Internet 10/10
291.6 Mbps avg speed
Among the fastest connections worldwide
Traffic 10/10
1822.8 min/year in traffic
Minimal time lost to congestion
Unemployment 8/10
5.53 % unemployment
Strong, stable job market
Human Development 10/10
0.962 HDI score (UNDP)
Very high human development

Healthcare for Americans in Denmark

Denmark rates 8/10 for healthcare quality on the UHC Service Coverage Index. US health insurance typically does not cover care abroad. Most expats and digital nomads get international health insurance instead.

Global health coverage from $45/month, no US address required Get a SafetyWing quote →

Visa & Residency in Denmark

US passport holders can enter Denmark visa-free · 90 days. There is no dedicated digital nomad visa. For longer stays, you would need to look into standard residency or work visa options.

Taxes for Americans in Denmark

Denmark uses a worldwide tax system. US citizens are required to file US federal taxes regardless of where they live. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) may reduce or eliminate US tax liability on foreign-earned income up to a certain threshold.

Confused about FEIE and double taxation? Get expert help from expat tax specialists. Get tax help →

Day to Day Life

Internet speeds average 291.6 Mbps. Commuters spend around 1,823 minutes per year in traffic. The Numbeo Pollution Index sits at 35.4, among the cleaner readings globally.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Denmark safe for Americans?
Denmark ranks 8/10 for safety on the Global Peace Index, well above the global average. Like anywhere, safety varies by neighborhood, so research specific areas before committing.
Do Americans need a visa for Denmark?
US passport holders can typically enter Denmark visa-free for up to 90 days. Long-term residency requires a separate visa or residence permit application.
How much tax do Americans pay in Denmark?
Denmark uses worldwide taxation, meaning local tax may apply to your global income in addition to US filing obligations. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) may reduce US tax liability. Consult a tax professional specializing in expat taxes.
Does Denmark have a digital nomad visa?
Denmark does not currently have a dedicated digital nomad visa program. Remote workers typically rely on tourist visas, standard work visas, or other residency pathways.
What is the cost of living in Denmark compared to the US?
Living in Denmark is approximately 7% more expensive than the United States. A single person can expect to spend around $3200/month on average, excluding rent.
Is English widely spoken in Denmark?
Denmark has very high English proficiency (EF EPI score of 611), making daily life and business easy to navigate without learning the local language.

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