Real estate is one of the most popular asset classes in Denmark, but buying physical property requires large capital, ongoing maintenance, tenant management, and mortgage debt. REITs and property funds offer a way to earn returns from real estate without any of that hassle. This guide covers what is available to Denmark-based investors, how the returns work, and how to get started.
What Are REITs?
A Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) is a company that owns and operates income-producing real estate. REITs trade on stock exchanges just like regular shares, which means you can buy and sell them through your normal brokerage account.
REITs are legally required to distribute most of their rental income as dividends. This makes them attractive for income-focused investors. The key characteristics:
- Portfolio of properties — offices, shopping centres, logistics warehouses, residential buildings, hotels
- Regular dividends — typically paid quarterly or semi-annually
- Liquidity — listed REITs can be traded daily on the stock exchange
- Professional management — the REIT’s team handles acquisitions, leasing, and maintenance
Danish REITs and Listed Property Companies
Denmark does not have a large number of pure REITs compared to the US or UK. The market is smaller, and many property investments are channelled through pension company funds or unlisted property funds instead. Here are the main options:
Pension Company Property Funds
- PFA Ejendomme — PFA’s property fund invests in Danish and Nordic commercial real estate. Available to PFA pension customers. Focuses on offices, logistics, and retail properties.
- PenSam Ejendomme — PenSam’s property fund invests primarily in Danish properties. Available through PenSam pension accounts. Conservative approach with stable rental income.
Listed Property Companies
- Nordic Real Estate Partners (NREP) — Nordic-focused real estate investment company. Invests in logistics, residential, and office properties across Scandinavia.
- Castellum — Swedish-listed property company with significant Danish operations. One of the largest listed property companies in the Nordics. Owns offices, warehouses, and retail properties in Denmark.
- DC Soliris — Danish-listed real estate company focused on logistics and warehouse properties.
Nordic Property Companies with Danish Exposure
Several Swedish and Norwegian listed property companies operate in Denmark:
| Company | Focus | Danish Presence |
|---|---|---|
| Castellum | Offices, logistics | Major Danish portfolio |
| Klovern | Residential, logistics | Danish properties |
| Balder | Residential | Some Danish exposure |
| Catena | Logistics | Growing Danish footprint |
Property Funds (Ejendomsfonde)
Property funds are collective investment vehicles that pool money from multiple investors to buy a portfolio of real estate. They are the most common way Danish investors access real estate indirectly.
How They Work
- You invest money into the fund
- The fund manager buys and manages a portfolio of properties
- You receive dividends from rental income
- The fund’s value changes with property market movements
Key Danish Property Funds
- Danske Invest Ejendomme — Danske Bank’s property fund. Invests in Danish commercial real estate. Available through Danske Bank and some other platforms.
- Nordea Ejendomsinvestering — Nordea’s property fund. Focuses on Danish and Nordic properties. Available to Nordea customers.
- SEB Ejendomsfonde — SEB’s property fund offering. Invests in Scandinavian real estate.
- PFA Ejendomme — Also available as a standalone fund for PFA pension customers.
- BankInvest Ejendomsaktier — Invests in listed property companies globally, including Danish firms.
Fund Types
| Type | Liquidity | Minimum Investment | Typical Lock-up |
|---|---|---|---|
| Listed REITs | Daily | Price of one share | None |
| Open-ended funds | Monthly or quarterly | DKK 10,000–50,000 | 0–3 months |
| Closed-ended funds | At maturity | DKK 50,000–500,000 | 3–7 years |
How Returns Work
REITs and property funds generate returns from two sources:
Rental Income (Dividends)
Properties generate rent from tenants. After paying expenses (maintenance, management, insurance, property tax), the remaining income is distributed to investors as dividends. Typical dividend yields:
- Danish REITs: 3–5% annually
- Nordic property funds: 3–5% annually
- Mixed property funds: 2–4% annually
Capital Appreciation
Property values tend to increase over time, though this is not guaranteed. Capital appreciation comes from:
- Rising property values in the local market
- Renovations and improvements to properties
- Rent increases from existing tenants
- Acquisition of new, higher-value properties
Total Expected Returns
| Asset Class | Dividend Yield | Capital Growth | Total Return |
|---|---|---|---|
| Danish REITs | 3–5% | 2–4% | 5–9% |
| Nordic property funds | 3–5% | 1–3% | 4–8% |
| Global property funds | 2–4% | 2–3% | 4–7% |
These returns are lower than buying physical property directly, which is the trade-off for convenience and lower risk. Direct property owners benefit from leverage (mortgages) and avoid management fees, which is why they typically earn higher net returns.
Tax Treatment
Property fund and REIT dividends are taxed as aktieindkomst (share income) in Denmark:
- 27% on the first DKK 79,400 of share income per year (2026 threshold)
- 42% on amounts above DKK 79,400
- Capital gains when you sell are taxed at the same rates
Tax-Advantaged Investing
You can hold REITs and property funds in an aktiesparekonto (share savings account), where all returns are taxed at a flat 17% rate. This is the most tax-efficient way to hold these investments:
| Account Type | Tax Rate | Annual Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Aktiesparekonto | 17% on all gains | DKK 135,900 (2026) |
| Regular account | 27%/42% on gains | No limit |
| Pension (ratepension) | Taxed at withdrawal | DKK 63,100/year |
If you hold REITs or property funds in a ratepension or aldersopsparing (pension savings), you get a tax deduction on contributions, but withdrawals are taxed as income. This can be advantageous for long-term holdings if you expect to be in a lower tax bracket in retirement.
Fees
Fees are a significant consideration with property funds. They directly reduce your returns.
Typical Fee Structures
| Fee Type | Range | When Charged |
|---|---|---|
| Management fee | 0.5–2.0% annually | Ongoing |
| Entry fee | 0–3% | When you invest |
| Exit fee | 0–2% | When you withdraw |
| Performance fee | 0–20% of profits | If fund outperforms |
Fee Impact Example
If you invest DKK 100,000 in a property fund with a 1.5% annual management fee:
- After 10 years at 7% gross return: DKK 196,715
- After fees (1.5%): DKK 169,024
- Fee cost over 10 years: DKK 27,691
Always check the total expense ratio (TER) before investing. Lower-fee options exist, especially for listed REITs and ETFs that track property indices.
Liquidity
One of the biggest differences between REITs, property funds, and direct property is liquidity:
- Listed REITs — Trade daily on the stock exchange. You can buy or sell within seconds during market hours.
- Open-ended property funds — Typically allow monthly or quarterly redemptions. Some funds have notice periods of 30–90 days.
- Closed-ended property funds — Money is locked up for the fund’s duration (3–7 years). Early withdrawal may not be possible or may incur penalties.
- Direct property — Can take months to sell. Highly illiquid.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Diversification — Spread risk across many properties and tenants
- Professional management — Expert team handles all operations
- No landlord hassle — No tenant disputes, repairs, or void periods to manage personally
- Lower entry cost — Start investing with as little as DKK 500–5,000
- Liquidity — Listed REITs trade daily; open-ended funds have regular redemption windows
- Transparency — Listed REITs publish financial statements; regulated funds report regularly
Cons
- Fees — Management fees reduce returns over time
- Less control — You cannot choose which properties the fund buys
- Market volatility — Listed REITs can be as volatile as stocks in the short term
- May underperform direct property — Leverage and fee drag mean lower net returns
- Limited Danish options — Fewer REITs compared to larger markets like the US or UK
- Dividend taxation — Annual dividend tax reduces compound growth in non-tax-advantaged accounts
How to Buy
Through Danish Brokers
REITs and listed property companies are purchased through standard brokerage accounts:
- Nordnet — Search for the REIT or property fund by name or ticker. Buy like any other share. Supports aktiesparekonto.
- Saxo Bank — Wide range of listed REITs and property ETFs available. Good research tools.
- Danske Bank — Access to Danske Invest Ejendomme and other Danish property funds.
Steps
- Open an account with a Danish broker (Nordnet, Saxo Bank, or Danske Bank)
- Fund your account with DKK
- Search for the REIT or property fund by name or ticker
- Place a buy order (market order or limit order)
- Consider holding in an aktiesparekonto for 17% tax rate
Popular Property ETFs
If you prefer a single investment that provides broad property exposure:
| ETF | Focus | TER |
|---|---|---|
| Vanguard Real Estate ETF (VNQ) | US REITs | 0.12% |
| iShares Global Property ETF | Global REITs | 0.59% |
| SPDR Dow Jones Global Real Estate | Global REITs | 0.40% |
| Xtrackers FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Global REIT | Global REITs | 0.33% |
Note: Some of these ETFs are not UCITS-compliant and may not be available through Danish brokers due to EU regulations. Check availability before investing.
Comparison: Direct Property vs REITs vs Property Funds
| Factor | Direct Property | Listed REITs | Property Funds |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum investment | DKK 500k+ (with mortgage) | Price of one share | DKK 5,000–50,000 |
| Liquidity | Months to sell | Daily | Monthly/Quarterly |
| Control | Full | None | None |
| Management | You handle it | Professional | Professional |
| Leverage | Yes (mortgage) | No (typically) | No (typically) |
| Fees | Running costs | Low (spread + custody) | 1–2% annually |
| Diversification | Single property | Many properties | Many properties |
| Tax efficiency | Mortgage interest deduction | 17% in aktiesparekonto | 17% in aktiesparekonto |
| Expected net return | 6–10% | 5–8% | 4–7% |
Tips for Denmark-Based Investors
-
Check the property mix — Understand whether the fund invests in offices, retail, logistics, or residential. Each has different risk and return profiles. Logistics and residential tend to be more resilient.
-
Understand fees before investing — A 1% fee difference can cost you tens of thousands over 20 years. Compare the total expense ratio (TER) across similar funds.
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Use an aktiesparekonto — The 17% flat tax rate is significantly better than 27%/42% for property fund dividends. Fill your aktiesparekonto first.
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Consider Nordic diversification — Danish property funds are heavily concentrated in Danish commercial real estate. Nordic funds offer geographic diversification without currency risk.
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Watch for lock-up periods — If you might need your money within 5 years, stick to listed REITs or open-ended funds. Closed-ended funds can trap your capital.
-
Don’t over-allocate — Most financial advisors recommend 10–20% of your portfolio in real estate. You likely already have exposure through your pension.
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Check UCITS compliance — Some international property ETFs are not available to EU investors. Stick to UCITS-compliant funds available through your Danish broker.
-
Reinvest dividends — Compound growth from reinvested dividends is significant over long periods. Most brokers offer automatic dividend reinvestment.
When to Consider Property Funds
- You want real estate exposure without buying physical property
- You want diversification across many properties
- You have a long-term investment horizon (5+ years)
- You want professional management of your real estate investments
- You have already maxed out your pension contributions
When to Consider Direct Property
- You have a large down payment (20%+ of property value)
- You want to use leverage (mortgage) to boost returns
- You want full control over your investment
- You are willing to handle tenant management and maintenance
- You want the mortgage interest tax deduction
When to Avoid Property Funds
- You need your money back within 1–2 years
- You are uncomfortable with 10–20% short-term value fluctuations
- You do not understand the fund’s investment strategy
- The fees are higher than 2% annually
- The fund is not regulated by the Danish FSA (Finanstilsynet)
Summary
REITs and property funds are a practical way for Denmark-based investors to add real estate to their portfolios without the complexity of buying, managing, and selling physical property. The Danish market offers several options through pension company funds, listed property companies, and international property ETFs.
The key trade-offs are fees, control, and liquidity. Listed REITs offer daily liquidity but can be volatile. Property funds offer professional management but charge higher fees and may have lock-up periods. All options are more liquid than physical property and provide instant diversification.
Start by deciding how much real estate exposure you want, check what is available through your Danish broker, and use an aktiesparekonto for the most tax-efficient treatment. Over the long term, property funds and REITs can provide steady income and capital appreciation as part of a well-diversified portfolio.
Reference: Danish real estate investment rules, Finanstilsynet regulations, aktiesparekonto tax rules.