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WHAT CHANGES IN DENMARK

KEY POINTS: What changes about life in Denmark in March 2022?

Covid-19 testing capacity will continue to be reduced and the release of preliminary tax information are among the changes which will affect life in Denmark in March.

covid-19 test centre
Denmark will reduce PCR testing capacity and close rapid testing centres for Covid-19 in March 2022. Photo: Henning Bagger/Ritzau Scanpix

Covid-19 testing capacity to be reduced

All of Denmark’s rapid antigen Covid-19 test centres are to close by March 6th. The test centres, which have been phased out throughout February with more emphasis placed on home testing, will be decommissioned completely in the first week of March.

READ ALSO: Denmark to close Covid-19 rapid test centres by March

The capacity for PCR tests is also to be scaled down, the Danish Critical Supply Agency (Styrelsen for Forsyningssikkerhed) said on February 28th.

The decision to reduce PCR testing capacity was made in response to a reduction in demand after Covid-19 restrictions were lifted at the beginning of February. Fewer tests are being conducted daily than they were one month ago.

PCR test capacity will be reduced from 200,000 tests to 140,000 tests per day nationally, the agency said.

All restrictions on travel from EU and Schengen zone lifted

Travel to Denmark from any part of the EU and Schengen aone will no longer be subject to any restrictions from March 1st. That means no restrictions on any travellers from the EU, regardless of Covid-19 vaccination status.

Under outgoing restrictions, unvaccinated travellers were required to take a Covid-19 test within 24 hours of arrival in Denmark.

That no longer applies to people from the EU or Schengen area as of March 1st, though it will still apply to people travelling from outside those regions (unless vaccinated with an approved vaccine).

Russian aircraft banned from Danish airspace

Denmark has closed its airspace off to Russian aircraft in response to the latter country’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, in a decision confirmed by Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod on February 27th.

For Danes and residents of Denmark, that could cause difficulties travelling to and from Russia, given that Russia on February 28th reciprocated European countries’ flight bans by blocking aircraft from 36 countries, including Denmark, from entering its airspace.

The bans make travelling between the two countries by air impossible without rerouting through a third country which is unaffected by the decisions.

Preliminary tax returns published

The release of the årsopgørelse (annual tax return, calculated and displayed on the SKAT website at the beginning of March) is possibly the most important event on the Danish tax calendar.

Accessing the annual tax return is possible from March. Within a set deadline which falls at the beginning of May, taxpayers can edit their tax information, such as by changing income or tax exemption information.

Around three out of four taxpayers in Denmark get refunds after the yearly annual return although others have to pay money back to the tax authority, however.

Prior to the publication of the annual return, you can check how much tax you’ve paid or are due to pay during the course of the year and edit your income and deductions details on the preliminary version of the return, the forskudsopgørelse. 

Switch to summertime means light evenings are back

The change to GMT+2 or summertime on Sunday, March 27th means an end to dark evenings for another season. Clocks go forward by one hour at 3am on the 27th, meaning one hour less of sleep that weekend to offset the change.

Politicians in Denmark and the EU have in recent years discussed scrapping the twice-yearly changing of the clocks for daylight saving, but it continues for the time being at least.

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For members

WHAT CHANGES IN DENMARK

Everything that changes in Denmark in June 2024

With EU elections and the 175th anniversary of the constitution, June this year is a bit busier than normal. Here's what you need to know about what's going on.

Everything that changes in Denmark in June 2024

EU elections on June 9th 

Danish citizens and EU citizens living in Denmark will vote in EU elections on Sunday, June 9th, although early voting has been possible at postal voting locations across the country since April 28th. 

To vote on election day, you must appear in person at the polling place listed on your election card. Polling stations will be open between 9am and 8pm. 

Bigger than usual celebrations as Denmark celebrates 175 years of its constitution 

This year, King Frederik X and Queen Mary will take part in the 175th anniversary celebrations of the Danish constitution. The constitution was signed by King Frederik VII back in 1849. 

The celebrations will start with a service at Holmens Kirke church, and continue with an event in the Landstingssalen room at the Christiansborg Palace, the seat of the Danish parliament.

Søren Gade, the chair of the parliament, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and the President of Denmark’s Supreme Court, Jens Peter Christensen, will all hold speeches.

For the general public, Denmark’s public broadcaster DR has teamed up with the parliament to host a Constitution Festival at DR Byen, its headquarters in Copenhagen, with music, group singing, speeches and panel discussions starting from 9am.  

Denmark’s Education Minister Mattias Tesfaye will be present, as will Emma Holten, the Danish-Swedish human rights activist and celebrity debater, and Knud Romer, the novelist and advertising executive. 

Danish PM to attend inaugural Global Peace Summit 

Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen is set to attend the first Global Peace Summit in Bürgenstock, Switzerland, on June 15th and 16th, working for peace in Ukraine alongside US President Joe Biden. 

Denmark’s Nationalbanken ends citizen input into new notes 

Until June 2nd, you can leave your mark on Denmark’s future banknotes by taking part in the Nationalbanken’s survey and giving your opinion on the new notes. Here’s the press release and here’s the survey

New strech of M4 Metro line opens in Copenhagen

On June 22nd, King Frederik X, Transport Minister Thomas Danielsen and Copenhagen’s Lord Mayor, Sophie Hæstorp Andersen, will open the extension to the M4 Metro line to København Syd station in Valby, at an all-day celebration in Mozarts Plads featuring popular stars Peter AG, Peter Sommer, Katinka, Carl Emil Petersen, and JJ Paulo. 

The day will see five new stations open on the Copenhagen Metro — Havneholmen, Enghave Brygge, Sluseholmen, Mozarts Plads and København Syd — linking Copenhagen Central Station to Valby in southern Copenhagen.

The new line will allow people to travel from Copenhagen South in Valby to the Rådhuspladsen in central Copenhagen in anout 10 minutes and to get from Copenhagen South to Frederiksberg at the other end of the M4 line in about 17 minutes

READ ALSO: Copenhagen plans street party to celebrate finish of new M4 Metro line

You can buy your DSB travel pass from June 4th

The popular summer ticket scheme from the Danish train company DSB is back for the fifth year in a row. The rejsepas (travel pass), gives the holder free access to all public transport in Denmark for eight consecutive days between June 29th and August 11th.

It will be released for sale on June 4th and available to buy until August 3rd.

The pass can be used on all DSB trains, as well as on Arriva buses and trains, on the Copenhagen Metro and S-train, on the Letbane in Aarhus and Odense, and on local rail services.

It will cost 399 kroner for adults, meaning one rail journey between Jutland and Copenhagen is likely to see its costs covered. 

Adult travellers can bring two children under 12 with them for free. The pass costs 199 kroner for children aged 12-15 or otherwise not travelling under an adult ticket.

Get ready for Denmark’s music festival season

The NorthSide festival in Aarhus kickstarts Denmark’s summer festival season on 6th-8th June, followed shortly afterwards by the Heartland festival at Egeskov on the island of Funen, both from June 13th to June 14th.

For lovers of hard rock and metal the Copenhell festival from June 19th to June 22nd is not to be missed.

Then, for the weekend of June 27th-29th, the festivities move back across the Great Belt Bridge for the Tinderbox Festival in Odense on Funen.

The month of music then culminates with Denmark’s oldest and largest music festival, Roskilde, between June 29th and July 6th, although arguably all the biggest days are in July. 

Politicians to meet on Bornholm for giant political festival

Music festivals aren’t the only type of festival happening in Denmark.

Between June 13th and June 15th, the leaders of Denmark’s political parties will take to the stage at the Folkemøde political festival on the island of Bornholm, which every year draws 50,000 attendees, many of them just ordinary citizens interested in politics.

The festival is held in the picturesque town of Allinge on the island’s north coast and anyone can attend the events without requiring a ticket.

The best way to get to Bornholm from Copenhagen is to take the train from Copenhagen to Ystad in Sweden, and then get the Bornholm ferry.

School’s out for summer

Denmark’s primary and lower secondary schools break up for the summer on Friday, June 28th for a full seven weeks.

The semesters for Copenhagen University, Aarhus University, and the University of Southern Denmark all officially end on June 30th, but as the 29th and 30th fall on the weekend, their last day is effectively the same as for schools. 

For Danish youths graduating from upper secondary school, the last two weeks of term, starting from about June 14th, will be a blur of alcohol consumption and raucous outdoor partying, as they participate in the traditional studenterkørsel, which involves groups of students hiring trucks which they brightly decorate before using them to tour around town partying.  

Get ready for this year’s Sankt Hans Aften bonfires

Sankt Hans Aften, when people sing in chorus before lighting a giant bonfire and eating and drinking late into the light summer night, is one of the absolute highlights of the Danish calendar.

The celebration always takes place on the evening of June 23rd, with Sankt Hans day being the following day, June 24th. It is therefore slightly after actual midsummer, which is the solstice on June 21st. This year it falls on a Sunday so celebrations may start earlier and perhaps go on later than in a normal year. 

You can find our article on the best places to celebrate here, and we’ll update it in the weeks leading up to the big event.

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