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Part-time Job Opportunities for Students in Copenhagen: A Budget Student's Survival Guide

@Olivia Dawn2/12/2026blog
Part-time Job Opportunities for Students in Copenhagen: A Budget Student's Survival Guide

so you're a student in copenhagen, huh? and by 'student', i mean someone perpetually broke, living on instant noodles and dreams. and Copenhagen? that place where the sun forgets to show up for half the year, but the cost of living is always there, like an unwanted guest. let's talk survival jobs because textbooks won't pay themselves.

two gray and black boats near dock


first thing: this city’s safe to the point of being suspicious. you can wander around at 3am without fearing muggings, but your wallet will absolutely fear the rent. expect to fork over 5000 DKK/month for a closet-sized room in a shared flat - that’s like paying a king’s ransom for a shoebox. outside the center? maybe 3500, but then you’re commuting past Ørestad, which feels like a concrete wasteland.

red and white concrete building


currently, the weather’s doing that thing where it’s not raining but not sunny either. we call it ‘gray drizzle’ - the kind that seeps into your bones and makes you question life. but hey, a quick ferry to Sweden (Malmö) or a Ryanair flight to Berlin can get you out of the existential dread. speaking of dread...

*so where’s the work?

copenhagen’s job market’s a weird mix: service industry everywhere, some tech, and tourism that never sleeps. here’s the chaos:

-
Barista/Hospitality:
Every corner bar needs someone to pour beer and pretend to understand Danish slang.
Job board for hospitality gigs

> “dude, at this place in Nørrebro, they pay under the table. cash. no taxes. just show up and pour beer. but don’t tell anyone I said that.” - some guy at a bar

-
Retail:
Stores like Søstrene Grene and Monki are always hiring, but prepare to fold sweaters for eternity.
Retail openings in Copenhagen

> “they ask for ‘Danish fluency’ for folding clothes. Like, can you argue about hygge while folding? That’s the real test.” - overheard in a flea market

-
Tutoring/Teaching English:
Rich Danes will pay you to explain why ‘th’ sounds don’t exist in their language.
Private tutoring gigs

> “charged a family 500 DKK/hour to watch Netflix with their kid and say ‘wow, complex!’ every 10 minutes. Best scam ever.” - drunk advice

-
Odd Jobs via Platforms:
TaskRabbit-style stuff: assembling IKEA furniture, walking dogs, or pretending to be a plant at corporate events.
TaskRabbit Copenhagen

> “got paid 800 DKK to stand in a friend’s apartment for 2 hours while the landlord visited. Just breathed a lot. Worth it.” - something a local warned me about


quick data dump*:
- Rent: Avg. 4500 DKK/month for a room (student housing lotteries are brutal)
- Hourly Wage: Min. 110 DKK before taxes (but gigs often pay less)
- Safety: Seriously safe, but bike theft’s epidemic - lock your wheels like they’re gold


and hey, if all fails? r/Copenhagen has desperate students selling textbooks for 50 DKK. also, TripAdvisor’s top bars - servers make decent tips. just don’t spill on someone’s designer coat.

survival tip: learn to say ‘nej’ politely. people will try to scam you with ‘volunteer opportunities’ that are just free labor. copenhagen’s expensive, but not hopeless. just bring extra socks for the gray drizzle.


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About the author: Olivia Dawn

Writing with intent and a dash of humor.

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