How to get around in Copenhagen
Bikes, Metro, and your own two feet: everything you need to know about getting around Copenhagen
Sofia B.
Copenhagen, Denmark
First of all - many sights in Copenhagen are within a short distance of each other so walking or biking is an easy way to get aroundđś
Many bike-shops offer rentals. You can rent for a few hours or several days.Â
Recommended shops:
BeCopenhagen
Bike Tours Copenhagen
MS Cykelcenter
Swapfiets
Thereâs also the option of renting electric bikes and E-scooters on the go. Thereâs 3 big companies youâll find all over the streets:
Lime
Bolt
Donkey Republic
đŁPRO TIP: Make sure to download the apps when you have wifi, so you save data on your phone. Also add your credit card to your phone to have a smooth check-out.Â
Public Transportation
In Denmark thereâs 3 main forms of public transportation. Common for all three are that they run all the time. So no rush.
Hereâs a breakdown:
Busđ
Busses are yellow (or blue if itâs electric) and is just called a bus.Â
â Pros: You can get much closer to everything inside the city center.
âCons: You can get stuck in traffic (or worse: get stuck in a full bus)
Trainđ
Thereâs 2 forms of trains: regional- and S-trains (S-tog in danish).
You will mainly use the S-train. The S-trains are red and you can always spot a train station by the big red S-signs.Â
â Pros: You can travel far relatively quickly.Â
âCons: Longer distance between stops.Â
Metrođ
The Copenhagen Metro has four lines M1, M2, M3 and M4 (they all go every 1-2 min.) M3 is also called the âcity ringâ as it goes in a circle under Copenhagen and will mainly be the one youâll use.
Many train stations are directly connected to metro-stations, and you will most commonly change lines at Nørreport station and the Central Station. But sometimes you have to leave the S-station and walk a few meters to reach the metro. If you arrive in Copenhagen airport, thereâs a direct metro-line (M2) from the airport to the inner city (takes 13 min.)
â Pros: quick, easy and great accessibility to many sights.
 âCons: thereâs no system to getting on the metro, and often thereâs a lot of people - so you have to PUSH forward (and no the next train wonât have fewer people).
â´ď¸ Harbour busÂ
A bit misleading name as itâs actually a yellow ferry. This is the easiest way to get from the city centre to the Refshale island (Copenhill, refshale street food and the Opera house). They follow a schedule of going up and down the Copenhagen harbour and you just get on and off as you like.
đŁPRO TIP: If you plan on using public transportation DOWNLOAD âRejseplanenâ. Itâs a mobile-app where you can easily find the best route on how to get from A to B with public transportation. It tells you all the information you need, and lets you know if you need to change from train to bus or metro.Â
đď¸ How to buy tickets:
Thereâs no gates or other systems which prevent you from using trains, metros & busses without a ticket, but thereâs inspectors, who will randomly join a ride. You HAVE to have a ticket - always. The controllers donât care if youâre a tourist, and the fines are âŹ100...
Thereâs many ways you can buy a ticket. Here's a few:Â
Machines in the station (they are big red (or silver) boxes)
7/11 stores
In the App âRejsebilletâ
Copenhagen Card (my recommendation)
Info about the Copenhagen Card:
Itâs a city pass which allows you to have a smooth visit to Copenhagen. You donât have to worry about bookings from many different sites, public transportation or having to pay more than intended for attractions.
You can visit +80 attractions with the card - and thereâs no limit to how many places you can go to in one day!
The card is valid for 24, 48, 72, 96 or 120 hours, depending on which type of card you purchase. With the Copenhagen Card public transportation in the entire Copenhagen Region + trains to Roskilde, Hillerød and Helsingør are included!
Get it here
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