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Landlord tenant rights denmark | Landager

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guide to landlord-tenant rights in Denmark. Explore the 2026 Rent Act, rent control, and mandatory lease rules.

Melvin Prince
6 min de lecture
Hitelesített Apr 2026Danska flag
landlord-tenant-rightsdenmarkNationallandlord tenant rights denmarkdenmark rent act 2026

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Ce contenu est fourni à titre d'information générale et éducative uniquement. Il ne constitue pas un avis juridique et ne doit pas être considéré comme tel. Les lois changent fréquemment – vérifiez toujours la réglementation en vigueur et consultez un avocat agréé dans votre juridiction pour obtenir des conseils spécifiques à votre situation. Landager est une plateforme de gestion immobilière, pas un cabinet d'avocats.Informations vérifiées pour la dernière fois le : April 2026.

The relationship between landlords and tenants in Danish residential properties is primarily governed by the Danish Rent Act (Lejeloven). This legal framework is traditionally highly protective of tenants and consists of mandatory (præceptive) rules that cannot be contracted away to the tenant's disadvantage, regardless of what a signed lease says. A newly consolidated Rent Act entered into force on July 1, 2022, simplifying the previous, highly complex system.

Key

Danish Rental Laws at a Glance | Topic | Key Rule | Statute | |---|---|---| | Security Deposit | Maximum 3 months' rent (excluding utilities) | Rent Act § 47 | | Prepaid Rent | Maximum 3 months' rent (security for the notice period) | Rent Act § 47 | | Rent Setting | Often controlled by "value of the rented premises" or cost-based | Rent Act Ch. 7-10 | | Eviction Notice | Very strong security of tenure. Valid reasons required. | Rent Act § 170 | | Move-in Inspection | Mandatory for landlords leasing out more than one unit | Rent Act § 14 |

Rent

Control and the Rent Tribunal Denmark does not have a fully free market for residential rent setting. The rules governing how much rent you can charge depend heavily on the building's construction year and its state of modernization:

  1. Cost-Based Rent (Omkostningsbestemt husleje): Applies primarily to older properties built before December 31, 1991, in regulated municipalities. Rent is calculated based on the building's operating costs plus a statutory return requirement.

  2. Value of the Rented Premises (Det lejedes værdi): Applies to unregulated municipalities or as a supplement for thoroughly modernized apartments. Rent is determined by comparing the unit to similar properties in the neighborhood.

  3. Free Rent (Fri leje): Generally applies to housing built after December 31, 1991, provided it is explicitly agreed upon in the lease contract. Here, the market dictates the rent.

Temporary Rent Increase Cap: In response to inflation, a temporary 4% cap on annual rent increases was introduced for residential leases adjusted by the Net Price Index (NPI). This cap is effective from January 1, 2023, and applies through 2024. Landlords can only exceed this cap if they can document that their actual operating expenses increased by more than 4% compared to the previous year. The government plans to introduce a new rent adjustment index in 2025 to replace the NPI as the sole basis for adjustments.

If a tenant believes the rent is unreasonably high or a rent increase exceeds the legal cap, they can file a complaint with the local Rent Control Board (Huslejenævn). The board can order a rent reduction with retroactive effect (if complained within one year), highlighting the importance of correct pricing.

For more detail, see our Rent Increases guide.

Security

Deposits and Prepaid Rent To secure against financial loss, landlords are legally permitted to collect up to 6 months of base rent upfront, distributed across two different pools:

  • Security Deposit: Up to 3 months' rent. Used exclusively to cover restoration, repairs, and damages beyond normal wear and tear when the tenant moves out.

  • Prepaid Rent: Up to 3 months' rent. Used exclusively as a buffer to cover the rent during the tenant's final months of their notice period.

For more detail, see our Security Deposits guide.

Eviction and

Security of Tenure Residential leases in Denmark are generally drafted for indefinite terms (Tidsubestemt), and tenants possess very strong security of tenure (Uopsigelighed).

A tenant can always terminate the lease with a standard notice (usually 3 months). For a landlord, unilaterally terminating a lease is extremely difficult.

A landlord can primarily terminate the lease if:

  • They intend to occupy the property themselves (requires a 1-year notice and must pass a test of reasonableness). - The property is scheduled for complete demolition or massive reconstruction. - The tenant commits a severe breach of contract (which leads to immediate cancellation/forfeiture, often for unpaid rent).

Fixed-term leases: Landlords can draft fixed-term contracts, but there must be an objective, valid reason (e.g., temporary work abroad or pending sale of the property). If the court later rejects the reason as insufficient, the contract is converted into an indefinite lease.

For more detail, see our Eviction Process guide.

Move-in and

Move-out Inspections The Danish Rent Act dictates strict, inflexible formal procedures regarding property inspections:

  • Move-in Inspection: If a landlord rents out more than one residential unit, they are legally required to hold a move-in inspection alongside the tenant and issue a signed inspection report. If this fails, the landlord loses all rights to claim refurbishment costs upon move-out.

  • Move-out Inspection: Also mandatory. The move-out report must be physically handed over during the inspection, or (if the tenant refuses to sign or doesn't show up) sent digitally within a strict 2-week deadline from key handover.

For more detail, see our Maintenance Obligations guide.

Keep

Your Portfolios Compliant with Landager Managing the boundaries of legal maximums for prepayments, notice periods, and maintaining an indisputable timeline of inspection reports can be overwhelming for foreign investors in Denmark. Landager provides templates formatted precisely according to Typeformular A, 10th edition (the official standard Danish lease). Our integrations ensure that move-out reports are undeniably dated and sent digitally across the platform before the two-week deadline expires.

Explore more Danish compliance topics:

Residential Overview Agency
Huslejenævn
Residential Overview Safety
Energy Cert
Residential Overview Move
14 Day Report

How

Landager Helps

Landager automates your Rent Act § 182 demand deadlines, tracks BBR registration status, and ensures your residential property meets all A11 standard requirements.

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