Copenhagen in Denmark is one of the world’s happiest cities. The way of life here is traditional, low on crime, cosy and friendly. The quality of life you will experience if you decide to move to Copenhagen in Denmark will increase a great deal once you make that move to this quaint and charming city.
The cost of moving to Copenhagen will depend on many factors, including the area you decide to move into and the time of the year you come here. There are over 1.2 million living in the urban central area of Copenhagen and if you include the outskirts and the metro region there are as many as 2 million here.
Many people that come to Copenhagen will discover that finding accommodation is not cheap but if you do have some reasonable budget levels you should be able to go straight into rented accommodation for around 150 Euros per night. This can prove a high cost but if you are sharing with other adults it can reduce the cost to more affordable levels. Many of the residents in Copenhagen are actually subletting their properties to a letting agency. This is where you contact a letting agency and it becomes the property manager; in other words, you will pay your weekly rent to the letting agency and deal with any problems in your apartment, such as a broken boiler or faulty light switch, directly to them and not the property owner.
Subletting usually comes for a limited amount of time such as six months, 12 months, 18 months or two years. The duration can come under constant review every few months from the letting agency and the property owner. You can sign up for an apartment with some of the many housing associations in Copenhagen. This way is far more affordable, particularly if you plan to stay for a period of more than two years.
You could also consider applying for a mortgage and buying a house in Copenhagen, or it may be cheaper to get an apartment in Copenhagen if you plan to live out here on your own. There are certain rules that will apply to foreign nationals and these will change depending on which country or part of the world you come from. You can find the rules and restrictions on the Foreign Ministry website, which is based at www.um.dk/en.
The capital city of Denmark is a place where the quality of life is said to be among the highest anywhere in the world. But the costs of living in Copenhagen can also be high. Like Britain, Demark did not decide to adopt the Euro as its currency, so the local Danish Kroner is still the main currency in the country.
So what are the likely costs that you can expect to pay for staying at a house in Copenhagen or an apartment in Copenhagen. At the current exchange rate the Danish Krone is worth around 18 cents, and the most economic way to stay in Copenhagen is to find a furnished room for a single person, either in a shared home or apartment block. A furnished room or apartment in Copenhagen will still give you access to the kitchen and bathroom facilities (although you may have to share with others) and you should expect to pay around 3,200 to 3,600 DK per month.
Therefore you will roughly be expected to find around $650 per month for the most affordable rates of accommodation. Small furnished apartments in Copenhagen are the most difficult to obtain as these are much sought after. It is possible to get one with one or two bedrooms in the urban or metropolitan area of Copenhagen by coming to the city as a single person, rather than a family. These properties are often available in the suburban part of Copenhagen and can be as cheap as 6,000 DKK (which is around $1,100 per month). These properties are also ideal for childless couples.
If you are looking for something bigger than a one or two-bed apartment in Copenhagen you will have to look for a property being let such as a three-bedroom apartment or house in Copenhagen. This will cost around 9,000 DKK, which is roughly about $1,650 per month. If you come to Copenhagen with a group of people (perhaps a business team or large family) it will cost around 12,000 DKK per month and you must expect to pay consumption charges on top of this. Consumption counts as gas, electricity, water, heat, phone, television and radio fees.
Deposits are the norm when you decide to stay in an apartment or house in Copenhagen and apartments often requires at least three months’ worth of rent paid up front as your deposit. A house in Copenhagen would normally only command one month’s rent up front which is returned to you as you leave the property.
Those living in cooperative housing in Denmark will be pleased to learn that there is a body that is set up to support and encourage this way of living in Denmark. ABF is the Danish Association of Private and Cooperative Housing and the body are not connected to the Danish government but are there to support the needs and services of those living in cooperative housing in Denmark.
How someone living in a cooperative function most effectively does and who can they turn to when there are problems? Essentially the ABF can offer a lot of help and advice and also motivate any political agenda for you, despite its NGO status. So, what is it like when you buy into and live in a cooperative in Denmark?
Anyone buying a house or an apartment that is within a cooperative housing scheme, it means you will be paying for the right to use that specific house or flat with your payment actually covering a share of the wealth of the cooperative itself. The payment is actually in the form of a deposit and is determined by the current economic status of the cooperative at the time.
Each cooperative has a list of different rules and regulations which members will need to follow and also determine the way the cooperative is run itself. As a member, living in the cooperative, you get a say on your living conditions, your surroundings, the way the cooperative is run and generally you will be part of the team, as it were. If you do not like the way the maintenance of the communal gardens are being kept up or you want the cooperative to hire more economical service men when fixing the boiler or servicing it annually, you can say so and your comments are taken on board by the cooperative at its regular meetings or via a forum online.
When you pay your rent (which is called andelsbolig in Denmark) you will be helping to pay for the interest the cooperative pays on the loans it took out, and your rent will also include expenditures, what some would call service charges or ground rent. There is an audit held every year that determines the current economic plight of the cooperative, which will set the levels of rent or andelsbolig you will eventually pay for that next financial year.
Use these links to find cooperative housing in Copehagen (Andelsboliger):
Bolig.com Andelsbolig i København – Cooperative housing in Copenhagen
Bolig.com Andelsbolig – Cooperative housing in General
Andelsboligannoncer.dk – For sale by owner site
Andelsbutikken – Cooperativ housing in Copenhagen
It is you – the resident that decides and determines how your cooperative is run. When you live in a cooperative you will be expected to get up close and personal with the other residents in your cooperative. There will be a sense of sharing, a feeling of family and a lifestyle where you will always feel as though you are part of a team. Often small communities of cooperative residents will sit down together and join in on a meal or a bite to eat with a buffet or nibbles. In the summer the cooperative members may get together on a communal patio and enjoy a barbecue together, chat and maybe talk about some of the issues of their cooperative that are causing concern or need addressing.
But it’s not all essential that you absolutely have to join in on everything. Some residents like their own space every now and again and it is up to them as to how much they wish to engage in the level of activity that takes place within the cooperative. Some prefer to be active and vocal members, others may want to just join in quietly on the odd meal or barbecue with other cooperative members. No one will force you to participate more, or less than the level that you have to decide to engage with.
In Denmark there are close to a quarter of a million privately-owned homes or apartments that form part of a cooperative. It is not clear as to how many cooperative associations exist in Denmark, because not all of them actually affiliate with the ABF. Currently there are almost 100,000 homes and apartments that are affiliated under the wing of the ABF, which represents just under half but the number is growing year on year.
Most member cooperatives can be found in and around the capital Copenhagen, where you will find a wide variety of ages and lifestyles within the given communities. Some cooperation associations are located in the town, others way out in the countryside.
It was throughout the 1970s when living in cooperative housing in Denmark really took off, and it was in Copenhagen where apartment blocks began the trend by turning into cooperative communities. It became possible in Danish law from 1976 for tenants to buy their apartments in Copenhagen and when this spread to the rest of the country over the next few decades, it became an extremely popular method of living in Denmark.