🇩🇰 Denmark visa for Indians

India passport holders must apply for a visa at a Denmark consulate or embassy before travelling. Expect documents, an appointment, and lead time measured in weeks.

The verdict

Consulate

Denmark is in the Schengen Area. Any visa-free time counts toward the 90 days in any 180 shared across all Schengen countries, not per country.

Track it with the Schengen calculator

For India passport holders specifically

India passport holders must apply for a Danish Schengen visa at the Danish Consulate in India. You cannot get an e-Visa or apply on arrival. Expect the application fee to be around €80†, with processing times typically taking 15 working days† but can extend up to 90 days. The most common reason for rejection for Indian applicants is insufficient documentation regarding the purpose of visit or lack of a confirmed hotel booking covering the entire stay. You'll also need to show proof of onward or return travel, and sufficient funds for your trip, usually around €45 per day†.

†= figure we couldn’t independently verify. Confirm with the official source before you book.

Denmark visa, the full picture

Most of Europe lets you in on arrival. Denmark, not so much. You'll need to know your passport bloc before you even think about booking a flight.

Who can skip the visa queue for Denmark?

If you're from the EU/EEA/Switzerland, you're golden. No visa needed, ever. Just show up. Same goes for citizens of the UK, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and Israel. You get 90 days visa-free within any 180-day period as part of the Schengen Area. Just make sure your passport is valid for at least three months beyond your intended stay. For everyone else, you're looking at needing a Schengen visa. This means applying well in advance, usually at least 15 days before you travel, but ideally 45 days to be safe. The application involves proving your financial means, travel insurance, and flight itinerary.

How long can you actually hang out in Denmark?

The Schengen Area rule is 90 days within 180 days. This is not a rolling 90 days, but a look-back period. So, if you've spent 80 days in the Schengen zone in the last 180 days, you can only spend 10 more days in Denmark. Overstaying is where things get sticky. While specific fines aren't always published, a typical Schengen overstay can result in a ban from re-entering the entire Schengen zone for anywhere from 1 to 5 years. Some countries might issue a formal warning or a small fine for a very short, unintentional overstay, but don't count on it. Denmark is pretty strict. Always get an exit stamp when you leave a non-Schengen country, and an entry stamp when you enter the Schengen area. These are your proof of travel dates.

Working remotely on a tourist stamp: what gives?

Technically, working on a standard tourist visa or visa-free entry is a grey area. The rules generally state you're visiting for tourism or business meetings, not taking up employment. However, enforcement varies wildly. In Denmark, while you won't likely see immigration officials checking your laptop in a café, if you're staying for an extended period and appear to be working (e.g., receiving local mail at your Airbnb, engaging in prolonged local business activities), it could flag you. Most digital nomads get away with it for shorter stays, but the risk is there. If you plan to work long-term, you need to look into specific digital nomad visas or freelance permits, which Denmark doesn't currently offer as a standalone category. You might need to explore options through self-employment or business visas, which have their own set of requirements.

What's new with Danish entry rules?

Denmark, like other Schengen countries, has been moving towards a more digitalised entry system. The European Travel Information and Authorisation System (ETIAS) is expected to launch in mid-2025†. This will require citizens from visa-exempt countries (like the US, UK, Canada) to obtain online authorisation before travelling to the Schengen Area. It's not a visa, but a pre-screening travel authorisation. Fees are expected to be around €7 for those aged 18-70. Beyond that, there haven't been major shake-ups to the core Schengen rules in the last 12-18 months. Visa application fees for the standard Schengen visa remain at €80 for adults, though processing times can fluctuate based on demand. Always check the official Danish Immigration Service website for the most up-to-date information before your trip.

†= figure we couldn’t independently verify. Confirm with the official source before you book.

How other passports enter Denmark

The rule changes entirely with the document. Open the row that matches yours.

PassportRuleDays
United StatesVisa-free90View
United KingdomVisa-free90View
EU citizenFree movement—View
CanadaVisa-free90View
AustraliaVisa-free90View
JapanVisa-free90View
BrazilVisa-free90View