Starting to invest as a student in Denmark is one of the smartest financial decisions you can make. With decades of compound interest ahead of you, even small monthly contributions can grow into substantial wealth. This guide covers everything you need to know — from budgeting with SU to choosing your first investments.
Student Budget Breakdown
As a Danish student, your income typically comes from two sources:
- SU (Statens Uddannelsesstøtte): DKK 6,397 per month (2026 rate for students living away from home)
- Part-time job: DKK 5,000–8,000 per month (typical student employment)
Total monthly income: DKK 11,000–14,000
Here’s a realistic monthly budget:
| Category | Amount (DKK) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent | 4,000 | Student housing or shared apartment |
| Food | 2,000 | Cooking at home, budget groceries |
| Transport | 1,000 | Bicycle + occasional public transport |
| Fun/Entertainment | 1,000 | Social activities, hobbies |
| Savings/Investing | 3,000 | The most important category |
The key is to pay yourself first. Transfer your savings/investment amount on the first of each month, before you spend on anything else.
SU-lån (Student Loan)
The Danish student loan offers DKK 3,367 per month with a current interest rate of approximately 4%. While this is relatively low compared to other loans, it’s still debt.
Should you invest your SU-lån?
Some students consider investing the loan if they expect investment returns higher than the 4% interest. This is possible historically (global stocks have returned ~7-8% annually), but it’s risky because:
- Returns are not guaranteed
- You’ll owe the full amount plus interest after graduation
- Market downturns can leave you underwater
Recommendation: Only invest SU-lån if you have a high risk tolerance and a long time horizon (10+ years). For most students, it’s safer to invest only from earned income and keep SU-lån for living expenses.
Emergency Fund First
Before investing a single krone, build an emergency fund of DKK 10,000–20,000. Keep this in a regular savings account — not invested.
Why? If your bike breaks, you need dental work, or you face unexpected expenses, you don’t want to be forced to sell investments at a loss.
Aktiesparekonto: Your Best Friend
The aktiesparekonto is Denmark’s tax-advantaged investment account and is perfect for students:
- Tax limit: DKK 136,400 (2026)
- Tax rate: 17% flat tax on gains (instead of the usual 27%/42% rates)
- Eligible investments: Listed stocks and ETFs
Why it’s great for students:
- Lower tax rate means more of your returns stay invested
- You can start with small amounts (DKK 500–1,000 per month)
- The tax benefit compounds over time
Open an aktiesparekonto at Nordnet or Saxo Bank — both offer student-friendly platforms.
Investment Strategy for Students
With 40+ years until retirement, you have the ultimate advantage: time. This means you can afford to take maximum risk for maximum growth.
Recommended allocation:
- 80–90% stocks (global equity ETFs)
- 10–20% bonds (for stability)
You don’t need bonds as a student, but including a small allocation helps you learn about portfolio balance without sacrificing too much growth.
Best ETFs for Danish Students
Two ETFs stand out for beginners:
VWCE (Vanguard FTSE All-World UCITS ETF)
- Tracks: ~3,700 stocks from developed and emerging markets
- Expense ratio: 0.22% per year
- Currency: EUR (traded on Xetra)
IWDA (iShares Core MSCI World UCITS ETF)
- Tracks: ~1,400 stocks from 23 developed countries
- Expense ratio: 0.20% per year
- Currency: EUR (traded on Amsterdam)
Both offer global diversification at low cost. VWCE includes emerging markets; IWDA is developed markets only. Either is excellent for beginners.
The Power of Compound Interest
Starting early creates dramatic differences:
| Starting Age | Monthly Investment | Value at Age 50 (7% annual return) |
|---|---|---|
| 20 | DKK 500 | DKK 1,100,000 |
| 25 | DKK 500 | DKK 760,000 |
| 30 | DKK 500 | DKK 510,000 |
Delay cost: Waiting 5 years (from 20 to 25) costs you DKK 340,000 in retirement. That’s the price of procrastination.
Student Discounts and Perks
Many brokers offer benefits for students:
- Nordnet: Free custody fees for students under 27
- Saxo Bank: Reduced trading fees for student accounts
Check each broker’s current student offers when opening your account.
Tax Optimization
Use aktiesparekonto first — the 17% flat tax beats the standard capital gains rates.
Low-income advantage: If your total income is below DKK 61,000 (2026 threshold), you pay only 27% municipal tax on capital gains — no 42% state tax. This makes investing even more attractive during university years when your income is lower.
Cryptocurrency: High Risk, High Reward
Cryptocurrency is extremely volatile. If you want exposure:
- Only invest what you can afford to lose entirely
- Maximum 5–10% of your portfolio
- Bitcoin and Ethereum are the most established options
- Never use leverage or futures
For most student investors, a small Bitcoin position (DKK 100–500 per month) is sufficient exposure without risking your financial future.
Side Hustle Income
Any extra income from part-time work, freelance projects, birthday gifts, or summer jobs should go directly into investments. This is “bonus” money that can accelerate your wealth building.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Waiting too long to start — Every month you delay costs you thousands in future wealth
- Investing your emergency fund — Keep it in cash
- Chasing hot tips — Stick to diversified ETFs
- Checking your portfolio daily — This causes emotional decisions
- Trying to time the market — Time in the market beats timing the market
Worked Example: Lars, 22-Year-Old Student
Income:
- SU: DKK 6,400/month
- Part-time job: DKK 6,000/month
- Total: DKK 12,400/month
Budget:
- Rent: DKK 3,500
- Food: DKK 2,000
- Transport: DKK 1,000
- Fun: DKK 1,500
- Investing: DKK 4,000/month
Investment plan: DKK 4,000/month into aktiesparekonto (VWCE ETF)
Projected growth (7% annual return):
- By age 27 (graduation): DKK 240,000 invested
- By age 35: DKK 700,000
- By age 50: DKK 3,000,000
Lars started at 22 and became a millionaire by his late 40s — all from DKK 4,000 per month.
Tips for Success
- Start now — Even DKK 500/month matters
- Use aktiesparekonto — The 17% tax rate is unbeatable
- Invest globally — Don’t try to pick Danish stocks
- Keep costs low — Choose low-expense-ratio ETFs
- Don’t panic during downturns — Markets recover; your time horizon is decades
- Automate investments — Set up a monthly automatic transfer
Reference
Danish student finance statistics and SU rates from SU Styrelsen. Tax thresholds from SKAT. Aktiesparekonto rules from Erhvervsstyrelsen.