Hotels in Copenhagen
Book hotel in Denmark at the best price
- Copenhagen hotels
Denmark is a small and densely populated country, travelers are offered several accommodation options to choose from, but in comparison with other Scandinavian countries there is still a little expensive. The options to accommodate a few cheaper than the usual few: to come to Denmark in the "off-season", or prefer to settle in hotels on weekends. The fact is that many hotels here are oriented to business tourists, they are empty by the end of the week and these days are ready to give discounts to few guests.
Expert comments about hotels in Denmark
Four-and five-star hotels are traditionally more chic. So in the hotel 4 * around the clock you can order food in the room, use the laundry service, and at the bottom of the hotel there are own bar and restaurant. Five-star hotels are characterized by magnificent decoration, service on demand, as well as their own indoor swimming pools and excellent fitness centers. However, such hotels are rare outside of Copenhagen and other large cities.
Farms and B & B
For example, in Denmark, low-cost networks of hotels operating on the principle of Bed & Breakfast.Another great option of accommodation in Denmark, the famous cheeses, butter and bacon - to settle on a real farm .The chain of hotels Farm Holliday, numbering more than a hundred units, not only accepts guests, but also introduces them to the traditional rural way .Everyone can learn how to do simple Danish agricultural work here: take care of pets, try themselves in processing agricultural products or learn field skills..On their table, there are necessarily produced here environmentally friendly products .The cost of accommodation on such farms is approximately 210 DKK per person (less than € 30) .
Historical hotels
An alternative to traditionally rural life is the historical hotels - Old inn`s (or Kros in Danish) .Located in any more or less large settlements, they all enter the network Danske Kroer og Hoteller and offer guests to get acquainted with the traditional way of life of the townspeople with their way and habitual interiors .These are really old houses that keep the spirit of the time, despite the modern renovation and decent accommodation conditions for $ ±$ 1..Typically, the price includes meals (dishes of Danish or French cuisines) .Some of them work by the type of hotels, others offer to rent a room with a boarding house for any length of time .
Among the Kros offers there are real castles, summer palaces and aristocrats' houses, although there are a lot of rural cottages. Some Kros are former royal motels located on the Path of the Daisy. They were built specifically for kings, beginning in 1396, and differ in a truly royal decor. The best of these offers are marked by a royal license. The only requirement for modern guests is a decent solvency.
Designer hotels
An interesting option for a decent accommodation in Denmark in more modern interiors is design hotels, mainly located in the largest cities of the country (Copenhagen, Aarhus and t .n .) .Living in a similar hotel is already an adventure: the rooms and halls of such hotels are literally strewn with interesting and witty little things, most of which can be bought for memory .And, perhaps, the most witty of the design hotels - Hotel Fox, populated by giant black cats and "friendly monsters," who are unaccustomed to wondering and are scared - $ .
Cheap accommodation options in Denmark - $
Perhaps the most economical option for a settlement in Denmark is camping .For nature lovers and relevant tourism around the country there are about five hundred camping sites .Most of them are well equipped and offer to enjoy a bit harsh, but amazingly beautiful nature of Denmark: to settle in the woods, in picturesque valleys, near the famous alpine meadows .Detailed information about the campsites can be obtained directly from travel companies, or by purchasing a special printed guide worth 98 DKK (€ 13) .
Inexpensive, but whiter "civilized" accommodation is offered by Danhostel hostels Danhostel. They are accredited by the Hostelling International network and include 95 mini-hotels throughout the country. There is another designation for hostels more similar to youth hostels - Vandrerhjem.
And finally, the trend of tourism, which is very fashionable in Denmark in recent years, is couchsurfing, the so-called "tourism for exchange". Its essence is that the inhabitants of the country declare their readiness to accommodate travelers at home, meaning that they themselves can then go to another country and be accommodated in such a family by exchange. The popularity of this area is already evidenced by the fact that the number of participants in coaching in the Hospitality Exchange network doubles annually.