Danish Business Deductions: What You Can Deduct from Your Tax

June 16, 2026
🏷️ denmark 🏷️ business-deductions 🏷️ skat 🏷️ enkeltmandsvirksomhed 🏷️ aps 🏷️ as 🏷️ tax-deductions 🏷️ business-expenses 🏷️ home-office 🏷️ depreciation 🏷️ bookkeeping

Reducing your taxable income through legitimate deductions is one of the most effective ways to keep more of what you earn as a business owner in Denmark. Whether you operate as a sole trader (enkeltmandsvirksomhed) or run a limited company (ApS/A/S), SKAT allows you to deduct expenses that are directly related to running your business. This guide explains exactly what you can deduct, how the rules differ by business structure, and how to stay compliant.

Sole Trader (Enkeltmandsvirksomhed) Deductions

As a sole trader, you report business income on your personal tax return (personlig indkomst). You can deduct all “necessary” business expenses — anything that is directly connected to earning your business income. The key requirement is documentation: every deduction must be supported by a receipt, invoice, or bank statement.

Sole traders pay personal income tax at rates up to 52.5% (including the 8% labour market contribution, AM-bidrag). Every krone you deduct reduces your taxable income at your marginal rate, so the tax savings from deductions are significant.

Office Costs

Home office rules: If you work from home, you have two options:

  1. Standard deduction: Claim a fixed deduction of DKK 28,000 per year without needing to calculate actual costs. This is simple and requires no proportional calculations.
  2. Actual costs: Calculate the actual proportion of your home used for business. This applies when more than 20% of your home is used for business purposes. You deduct the proportional share of rent or mortgage interest, utilities, insurance, and maintenance based on floor area.

If your actual home office costs exceed DKK 28,000 per year, the actual costs method gives you a larger deduction. Keep records of your floor area calculations if you go this route.

Travel and Transport

Keep a travel log documenting the date, destination, purpose, and distance of each business trip.

Equipment and Assets

Examples include laptops, monitors, desks, chairs, and printers used for business.

Subscriptions and Software

Education and Training

This is a broad category — even courses on new technologies or management skills can qualify if they relate to your business activities.

Insurance

Marketing and Advertising

Accounting and Administration

Phone and Internet

Company (ApS/A/S) Deductions

A limited company (ApS or A/S) pays 22% corporate tax on its taxable profit. All legitimate business expenses are deductible against corporate tax. The deduction categories are broader than for sole traders, and the rules on depreciation and interest are more generous.

Salaries and Employment Costs

Interest on Business Loans

Interest paid on business loans and overdrafts is deductible against corporate profit. This includes:

Depreciation of Assets

Companies can depreciate tangible assets over their useful life:

Asset TypeAnnual Rate
Buildings and permanent structures4%
Machinery and equipment25%
Vehicles25%
IT equipment33%

Depreciation reduces the book value of the asset and provides a tax deduction each year. When the asset is sold, any profit above the depreciated value is taxable.

Bad Debts

If a customer fails to pay an invoice and you can demonstrate that the debt is genuinely uncollectible, you can write it off as a bad debt expense. You must show that you have made reasonable efforts to collect the payment.

Other Deductible Expenses

All the same categories as sole traders also apply to companies:

What You Cannot Deduct

Certain expenses are explicitly not deductible for either sole traders or companies:

Documentation Requirements

SKAT requires you to keep documentation for all business expenses. The rules are straightforward:

Poor documentation is one of the most common reasons SKAT disallows deductions during an audit. Digital receipts and cloud-based bookkeeping systems make compliance much simpler.

Worked Example: Consultant with DKK 700k Revenue

Let’s walk through a practical example to show how deductions reduce your tax bill.

Scenario: A sole trader consultant earning DKK 700,000 in annual revenue.

DeductionAmount (DKK)
Office rent60,000
Computer15,000
Software subscriptions12,000
Travel expenses20,000
Phone (business portion)6,000
Business insurance8,000
Marketing10,000
Accounting fees15,000
Total deductions146,000

Tax calculation:

Without the deductions, the consultant would pay DKK 367,500 in tax on the full DKK 700,000. The DKK 146,000 in deductions saves DKK 76,650 in tax — a powerful demonstration of why keeping proper records matters.

Tips for Maximising Your Deductions

  1. Track expenses from day one. Set up a bookkeeping system as soon as you start your business
  2. Separate personal and business finances. Open a dedicated business bank account to make tracking easier
  3. Keep digital records. Scan receipts or use a receipt-scanning app to avoid losing documentation
  4. Review deductions annually. Before filing your tax return, check that you have claimed all eligible expenses
  5. Consider the home office standard deduction. If your actual costs are below DKK 28,000, the standard deduction is simpler and often more generous
  6. Consult an accountant. A Danish accountant who knows your industry can identify deductions you might miss

Reference

This guide is based on the business deduction rules published by SKAT.dk. Tax rules change annually — always verify current thresholds and rates before filing.

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