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TRANSPORT

How Copenhagen visitors can buy transport tickets on smart phones without an app

Transport operators in the Copenhagen region have launch a new way to buy travel passes for buses, trains and the Metro on smart phones, without the need for an app.

How Copenhagen visitors can buy transport tickets on smart phones without an app
Visitors to Copenhagen can download transport passed using QR codes placed around the city. Photo: Rune Øe/Ritzau Scanpix

Visitors and tourists in Copenhagen (and residents if they prefer) no longer need to concern themselves with downloading the correct app if they want to buy a ticket for public transport on their phones.

Scan & Travel, a new system launched by Din Offentlige Transport (DOT), the collaboration of public transport operators in Copenhagen and the island of Zealand, lets passengers buy travel passes using QR codes strategically placed around the city.

DOT describes the QR code system as a “mini-version” of its DOT Tickets app, allowing you to buy a City Pass without having to register or download an app.

The QR codes are placed on ticket machines and posters at major stations and at Copenhagen Airport, allowing you to find and download the pass – which can then be saved on your phone – from the point at which you need it.

The Scan & Travel QR code. Image: DOT

To use the scheme, passengers must provide an email address and be able to pay with Apple Pay or Google Pay. More information can be found in English on DOT’s website.

A City Pass provides unlimited transport for between 24 and 120 hours, depending on the pass you select. It is valid on buses, trains and Metros and allows two accompanying children under 12 to travel with you for free.

You can also choose between a “small” and “large” pass, which cover central Copenhagen (including the airport) and the greater Copenhagen area, respectively. The cost of the pass starts from 90 kroner.

“With the launch of ‘Scan & Travel’, we are take a step in the direction of making public transport in Greater Copenhagen and large parts of Zealand as accessible and user-friendly as possible for the many tourists who visit each year,” Hanne Tærsbøl Schmidt, chairperson of DOT and director of the Copenhagen Metro, said in a press statement.

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COPENHAGEN

Copenhagen gets interim mayor following government reshuffle

The leader of the Social Democratic group at Copenhagen city council Lars Weiss, will become the city’s acting Lord Mayor following the appointment of Sophie Hæstorp Andersen as a government minister.

Copenhagen gets interim mayor following government reshuffle

Weiss has been selected as interim mayor by the Social Democratic group at the Copenhagen Municipality city council, political spokesperson Laura Rosenvinge confirmed to newspaper Berlingske.

“Our first deputy lord mayor, Lars Weiss, will be lord mayor again as he has been before,” she said.

Weiss stood in as mayor in 2022 after previous incumbent Frank Jensen was forced to step down over a sexual harassment scandal.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINER: Why is Denmark creating three new government minister roles?

Outgoing Lord Mayor Hæstorp Andersen is leaving the position to become Minister for Social Affairs and Housing, replacing Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil, the government announced on Thursday. 

Rosenkrantz-Theil has said she will attempt to become the next mayor of Copenhagen by standing for election.

“I would love to become the candidate for Lord Mayor of Copenhagen. And I’ve now been encouraged to take the jump,” she said in a Facebook post.

To become the new mayor, Rosenkrantz-Theil must be selected by the Copenhagen Social Democrats as their lead candidate or spidskandidat in next year’s local elections.

Hæstorp Andersen was previously an elected member of parliament before leaving in 2014 to become chairperson of the Greater Copenhagen health authority. She has been Lord Mayor of Copenhagen since 2021.

“I am proud and happy. In all the years I have been in politics I have worked for those who are most vulnerable,” the new social affairs minister told newswire Ritzau.

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