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DENMARK IN 2024

KEY POINTS: What changes about life in Denmark in 2024?

From property tax rules and rail fares to work permit case processing and an abolished public holiday, here's what changes in Denmark in the year ahead.

KEY POINTS: What changes about life in Denmark in 2024?
What changes can be expected in Denmark next year? File photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

As the calendar turns to 2024, Denmark is preparing for several changes that will impact various aspects of daily life for its residents.

From modifications in property tax rules to adjustments in cash payment limits, the 2024 budget, and more, these shifts promise to bring a mix of challenges and opportunities for residents and newcomers alike.

Changes to Danish property tax rules

From January 1st, 2024, Denmark will implement new property tax regulations that will have significant implications for homeowners in the country.

These changes are expected to result in lower property tax rates for four out of every five homeowners.

For those who may face higher tax rates, subsidies will be provided to ensure that the new rules do not lead to increased financial burdens.

READ MORE: What do homeowners need to know about new Danish property tax rules?

However, prospective homeowners may encounter a different property tax landscape compared to those who purchased their homes before 2024.

The objective of these new rules is to maintain property tax stability as they shift from older data to valuations based on property assessments made in 2022.

If you want to go into the specifics of these changes, The Local has a detailed guide on accessing the new assessments.

Copenhagen cycle

The expected outcome of the changes in property taxes is a reduction in property tax rates for around 80 percent of homeowners in Denmark, according to some estimates. Photo by Gemma Evans on Unsplash

A new limit for cash payments

In March 2024, Denmark may introduce new rules governing the use of cash. The current cash payment limit, set in 2021, stands at 20,000 kroner.

The Danish government plans to propose a bill to reduce this limit to 15,000 kroner.

Currently, cash is used in about 10 percent of in-store transactions in Denmark, with 90 percent of these payments amounting to 500 kroner or less.

The 2024 budget – and its implications

The 2024 state budget brings a mix of changes that will affect the daily lives of Denmark’s residents, including international citizens living in the country.

READ MORE: How will Denmark’s 2024 budget affect you?

A special fund will be established to make repairing household appliances such as washing machines and refrigerators more affordable, aiming to promote a circular economy and sustainability. This is likely to involve a pool to which business can apply for funding related to circular economy businesses like repair shops. Tax deductions, training in repairs and help accessing spare parts are also potential elements.

Furthermore, more homes will be connected to district heating, enhancing energy supply security. Electric car owners can expect the tax deduction for zero-emission cars to remain unchanged from 2023 to 2025, providing savings when paying car registration tax.

Additionally, there will be increased tax subsidies for commuters in rural areas and lower ferry ticket costs for smaller outlying islands through subsidies to operators.

Train station Denmark

Beginning in 2024, Denmark will witness a rise in rail ticket costs. Photo by Marek Lumi on Unsplash

Rail fares set to increase

Starting in 2024, rail ticket prices in Denmark will increase by up to 13 percent, with most regions experiencing higher fares.

The extent of these changes varies by region and ticket type, averaging around 10 percent.

These price adjustments apply to various aspects of rail travel, such as prepaid Rejsekort usage and Pendlerkort for commuters.

The “price regulation” which will take effect next year comes after a “backlog of costs from 2022 and 2023”, national rail operator DSB said when it announced the changes.

READ ALSO: Rail fares set to increase across Denmark in 2024

Slight change to work permit case processing

Work permit applications, including those under programs like the Pay Limit Scheme, the Fast Track Scheme, and the Positive List, are subject to new income statistics from the beginning of next year.

These statistics, provided by the Confederation of Danish Employers, will be updated quarterly, with the next update effective from January 1st, 2024.

This means that applications submitted from October 1st onwards will be assessed based on income statistics from the second quarter of 2023, while earlier applications will rely on statistics from the first quarter of 2023.

Remember to check your Danish preliminary tax return in January

Preliminary tax returns or forskudsopgørelser for the forthcoming year are released in November, meaning they can carry information over from the preceding tax year, using information from the most recent tax return. Tax years in Denmark follow calendar years.

If your circumstances have changed during 2023, it’s therefore a good idea to update your preliminary tax returns as early in the year as possible, because it ensures accurate tax payments from the beginning of the new year.

The Danish tax authority, Skat, advises updating your preliminary return — a projection of your expected income for the year along with the deductions you’re eligible for — if your circumstances have changed in one or more of the following ways:

  • Changed jobs 
  • Been promoted or received a salary increase 
  • Taken on a mortgage 
  • Refinanced your mortgage 
  • Changed your commute 

“It’s never too late to go in and check your preliminary tax return. You can do that every day, all year round. It’s just important to do it now in relation to the paycheck for January,” Danish Tax Authority junior director Jan Møller Mikkelsen told news wire Ritzau a year ago.

“We experience increasing numbers of calls from the public in January when people can’t understand why the first payment of the year is wrong,” Mikkelsen said.

“Now is the time to go in and check the preliminary tax return if you want to ensure the correct wages are paid in January,” he said.

READ ALSO: Why it pays to check your Danish preliminary tax return in January

The now-scrapped Great Prayer Day holiday

After heated parliamentary and public debate in 2023, the government pushed through with its decision to abolish the Great Prayer Day from 2024 onwards.

That means that this centuries-old holiday, observed in Denmark for over three hundred years, will no longer provide a public day off starting in 2024. The last Great Prayer Day holiday occurred on May 5th, 2023.

Great Prayer Day traditions like confirmations and baking hveder, cardemom-infused buns, are likely to still be practiced as part of this springtime tradition, but most people will now have to fit them around work.

Plastic Rejsekort to be gradually phased out and replaced by app

In an exciting development for commuters and travellers navigating Denmark’s extensive public transportation system, the era of the plastic Rejsekort is drawing to a close.

Instead, a new mobile app is set to change how passengers pay for their journeys.

READ MORE: Denmark’s Rejsekort to be replaced by app

Starting in 2024, passengers utilizing Danish buses, trains, and metros will have the option to bid farewell to their physical Rejsekort and welcome a digital counterpart.

The 2024 rollout of the mobile app will initially provide passengers with the choice between the digital version and the traditional physical card, but the gradual phasing out of the physical Rejsekort is also on the horizon.

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WHAT CHANGES IN DENMARK

KEY POINTS: What changes about life in Denmark in May 2024?

Sirens (including on smart phones) to be tested, deadline for tax returns, national holidays and a Copenhagen Marathon enjoying record popularity are among events and changes coming this month in Denmark.

KEY POINTS: What changes about life in Denmark in May 2024?

Sirens and mobile alert to be tested on May 1st

Each May, Denmark tests the sirens that authorities can use to warn the population if there is an emergency situation.

The 2024 test is scheduled to take place as usual at noon on the first Wednesday of the month – which this year also means the first day of the month, Wednesday May 1st.

A test of a digital warning system, first introduced last year, will also be tested in 2024. The digital system allows authorities to send siren sounds and warning messages to smartphones.

Last year’s version of the digital test did not reach everyone due to it only being compatible with certain phone updates. So you may find you receive this year even if you did not in 2023.

Anyone with a smart phone connected to the Danish network can expect to receive the test siren and message on their devices on May 3rd at 12pm.

The physical and digital test sirens are sent out by the Danish Emergency Management Agency (Beredskabsstyrelen or DEMA) and the Danish National Police. More information can be found in English (and 10 other languages) on the DEMA website.

Deadline for finalising tax returns

Denmark’s tax authority SKAT opened access to annual tax returns on March 11th.

Annual tax returns (årsopgørelser) in Denmark cover calendar years. They are released in March and finalised in late spring, meaning taxpayers have this period to correct the information on their tax returns from the previous calendar year.

The tax returns encompass income over the preceding tax year as well as deductions and subsidies.

Normally, around three in four people receive money back from the tax authorities once their return is finalised. The amount paid back varies and depends on individual circumstances, and others may owe money to the tax system.

Rebates from the tax system are sent from mid-April onwards but the final deadline for updating information on the returns is May 1st. This means that, at the time of writing, you still (just about) have time to check whether your return is correct and update any information.

READ ALSO: 

Public holidays and other days off in May

Great Prayer Day or Store Bededag is no longer a national holiday (and fell in April this year anyway) but there are still a few dates to highlight in the diary for time off work.

Ascension Day, Kristi Himmelfartsdag in Danish, is less than two weeks after Great Prayer Day on Thursday May 9th.

Many Danes take the Friday after Ascension Day as annual leave, giving them a four-day weekend at the cost of only one day of leave.

Then there’s Whitsunday and Whitmonday, known in Danish as Pinsedag and 2. Pinsedag. These fall on May 19th and 20th respectively, so that’s another three-day weekend in the middle of the month.

Meanwhile, Labour Day on May 1st is not a public holiday in Denmark – unlike in the other Nordic countries – but many of Denmark’s workers do have the day off (sometimes half a day), provided by their collective bargaining agreements.

READ ALSO: Why isn’t May 1st a public holiday in Denmark but is in Sweden and Norway?

Switch to summer tyres (if you haven’t already)

Alternating between winter and summer tyres is not a legal requirement in Denmark, but is broadly recommended, including by FDM, the Danish membership organisation for motorists.

Neighbouring SwedenNorway and Germany – where many Danish residents head on skiing and other holidays during the colder months – all have rules requiring winter tyres, meanwhile, meaning the practice is common in Denmark, not least for those who may need to take their cars over the border.

Most people switch back to summer tyres at Easter, which this year fell on April 9th. But the weather was still quite wintry during the early part of April, so some car owners may have held out a little longer.

More about the practice of using winter and summer tyres in Denmark can be found in this article.

Copenhagen Marathon ready to go amid massive spike in interest

The Copenhagen Marathon takes place on Sunday May 7th, so if you’re planning to drive or take a bus through parts of the capital that day you should plan ahead to avoid disruption.

The 42.2-kilometre route through the city includes a start and finish area at Øster Allé near Fælledparken. It will take marathoners past Tivoli, Christiansborg and Kongens Nytorv, as well as the charred remains of the old stock exchange, Børsen.

The marathon takes in each of Copenhagen’s central districts: Vesterbro, the Inner City, Østerbro, Frederiksberg and Nørrebro.

There’s usually a great energy along the route, with Nørrebrogade near Dronning Louises Bro (Bridge) and much of Østerbro, particularly around the Trianglen junction, among good places to lend your support.

This year could be a classic edition of the event: there’s been a surge in interest in the sport in recent years, and this year’s Copenhagen Marathon has been sold out for months – something that has not previously happened in the event’s history.

READ ALSO: Why has the Copenhagen Marathon seen a jump in popularity?

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