
Copenhagen
Each district has its own personality
Find the right area for your travel style

The city centre and its famous canal: coloured townhouses on the water, the pedestrian shopping spine, the round tower, the royal palace, and the square where everything converges.

The neighbourhood that went from red-light district to Copenhagen's most interesting area in 20 years: Meatpacking District restaurants and bars, Mikkeller craft beer, and the most diverse food street in the city.

The multicultural neighbourhood north of the centre where Copenhageners actually live: the cemetery-as-park, ceramics and coffee on Jagersborggade, the colourful Superkilen park, and food prices that make sense.

The canal district and the freetown: houseboat living along the canals, the Church of Our Saviour's terrifying external staircase, and the 1971 self-proclaimed autonomous community that is still operating.

The green residential district where Copenhageners go on Sunday mornings: free royal gardens with canal boats, the zoo with an elephant house by Norman Foster, and bakeries that justify the walk.