Starting a Business in Denmark: Complete Tax and Registration Guide

June 16, 2026
🏷️ starting-a-business 🏷️ denmark 🏷️ enkeltmandsvirksomhed 🏷️ aps 🏷️ cvr-number 🏷️ virk-dk 🏷️ vat 🏷️ moms 🏷️ business-tax 🏷️ sole-trader 🏷️ bookkeeping 🏷️ mitid

Starting a business in Denmark is straightforward on paper — the digital registration system is fast, the bureaucracy is minimal by European standards, and the rules are clear. But the tax implications of your choice of business structure can cost or save you tens of thousands of kroner every year. This guide walks you through every decision, from picking the right entity type to filing your first tax return.

Business Types in Denmark

Denmark offers four main business structures. The right one depends on your revenue, liability tolerance, and long-term plans.

Enkeltmandsvirksomhed (Sole Trader)

A one-person business with no legal separation between you and the company. You are the business.

I/S (I/S — Interessentskab — Partnership)

A partnership between two or more people. Similar to a sole trader but shared.

ApS (Anpartsselskab — Limited Company)

Denmark’s most popular business structure. A private limited company with a separate legal identity.

A/S (Aktieselskab — Public Limited Company)

A larger corporate entity, typically for established businesses or those seeking external investors.

StructureMin. CapitalLiabilityTax RateBest For
EnkeltmandsvirksomhedNoneUnlimitedUp to 52.5% personalTesting an idea
I/SNoneUnlimited (joint)Personal ratesSmall partnerships
ApSDKK 40,000Limited22% corporateMost businesses
A/SDKK 400,000Limited22% corporateLarger companies

Registering Your Business

Step 1: Get MitID

MitID (formerly NemID) is required for all digital interactions with Danish authorities. If you don’t already have it, apply through your bank or at MitID.dk. You need this before you can register a business.

Step 2: Register on Virk.dk

Virk.dk is the Danish Business Authority’s one-stop shop for business registration. The process takes about 15 minutes.

What you need:

For ApS/A/S registration:

Step 3: Receive Your CVR Number

The CVR number (Centrale Virksomhedsregister) is your company’s unique identification number. It is assigned automatically when you complete registration on Virk.dk. You will use it for everything — invoicing, tax filings, bank accounts, contracts.

Step 4: Set Up NemKonto

Your NemKonto is the bank account registered with the government for receiving tax refunds and paying taxes. Every business must have a NemKonto.

Step 5: Register for VAT (Moms)

You must register for VAT (moms) if your annual turnover exceeds DKK 50,000. Registration is voluntary below that threshold.

Tax on Sole Traders (Enkeltmandsvirksomhed)

As a sole trader, your business profit is taxed as personal income. There is no separation between you and the business for tax purposes.

Tax rates on business profit:

Preliminary tax (kildeskud):

Sole traders must pay preliminary tax quarterly. SKAT estimates your annual income based on your self-assessment, and you make four equal payments during the year. If you underestimate, you face a supplementary bill in May. If you overestimate, you get a refund.

Tip: Use SKAT’s preliminary income estimate tool to set realistic quarterly payments. Underpaying results in interest charges; overpaying means you are giving the government an interest-free loan.

Tax on ApS and A/S

Companies pay corporate tax on profits, and shareholders pay dividend tax on distributions.

Corporate tax rate: 22% on all net profits.

Dividend tax when profits are distributed to shareholders:

Key advantage: You can retain profits inside the company at 22% tax. You only trigger the higher dividend tax when you actually take money out. This is the main reason many entrepreneurs switch from sole trader to ApS once profits grow.

Example: A company earns DKK 800,000 in profit. After 22% corporate tax (DKK 176,000), DKK 624,000 remains. If the shareholder takes it all as a dividend, they pay 27% on the first DKK 61,000 (DKK 16,470) and 42% on the remaining DKK 563,000 (DKK 236,460). Total dividend tax: DKK 252,930. But if they leave the profit in the company, they only paid DKK 176,000 in corporate tax — saving DKK 76,930 in tax that year.

Bookkeeping Requirements

All businesses in Denmark must keep accounts. This is not optional.

Cash Basis vs. Accrual Accounting

Standard Chart of Accounts

SKAT provides a standard chart of accounts (standardkontoplan) that most small businesses use. It simplifies tax reporting because your accounts align directly with the tax return fields.

Basic structure:

Record-Keeping Rules

Tax Return Deadlines

Business TypeStandard DeadlineExtended Deadline
Sole trader1 May1 July (apply for extension on SKAT.dk)
ApS / A/S30 JuneN/A

Late filing results in a fine of DKK 300 per missed entity, plus potential penalties for repeated non-compliance.

VAT (Moms) in Detail

When to Register

Mandatory registration: Turnover exceeds DKK 50,000 in a 12-month period. Voluntary registration is available below this threshold — useful if you sell to VAT-registered businesses and want to deduct input VAT.

How to Charge and Report

Input VAT Deduction

You can deduct the moms you pay on business purchases against the moms you collect on sales. This means VAT largely passes through to the end consumer, and you only remit the net difference.

Hiring Employees

If you hire staff, you become an employer with additional obligations:

Non-compliance with payroll reporting carries significant fines and penalties.

The Establishment Saving Account (Etableringskonto)

Denmark offers a tax-advantaged savings account for aspiring entrepreneurs. The etableringskonto lets you save up to DKK 100,000 per year tax-free, for up to 5 years, as long as the money is used for a future business investment.

Rules:

Strategy: If you are planning to start a business in 2–3 years, begin contributing to an etableringskonto now. You save tax on the interest, and you build a capital buffer for your startup costs.

Worked Example: Sole Trader vs. ApS at DKK 500,000 Profit

Let’s compare the after-tax income for a sole trader and an ApS owner earning DKK 500,000 in annual profit, assuming the owner lives in Copenhagen (25.6% municipal tax rate) and takes all profit as personal income.

Sole Trader

ItemAmount
Gross profitDKK 500,000
AM-bidrag (8%)-DKK 40,000
Taxable incomeDKK 460,000
Municipal tax (25.6%)-DKK 117,760
State tax (12.69%)-DKK 58,374
Total income tax-DKK 176,134
Net personal incomeDKK 323,866

Effective tax rate on profit: 35.2%

ApS (Taking All Profit as Dividend)

ItemAmount
Gross profitDKK 500,000
Corporate tax (22%)-DKK 110,000
Distributable profitDKK 390,000
Dividend tax — 27% on DKK 61,000-DKK 16,470
Dividend tax — 42% on DKK 329,000-DKK 138,180
Total dividend tax-DKK 154,650
Total tax paid-DKK 264,650
Net personal incomeDKK 235,350

ApS (Retaining Profits)

ItemAmount
Gross profitDKK 500,000
Corporate tax (22%)-DKK 110,000
Retained in companyDKK 390,000

If you leave the DKK 390,000 in the company and pay yourself a salary of DKK 0, you pay zero dividend tax this year. You can reinvest in the business, hire employees, or distribute dividends later when your personal tax situation changes.

The Takeaway

At DKK 500,000 profit, the sole trader keeps more money personally in the current year — DKK 323,866 vs. DKK 235,350 if taking all profit as dividend. But the ApS offers flexibility: you can retain profits at 22% and distribute them strategically over time, potentially saving tens of thousands of kroner in total tax. As profits grow beyond DKK 500,000, the ApS structure almost always wins because the 22% corporate rate is far lower than the 52.5% personal marginal rate.

Practical Tips for Denmark-Based Entrepreneurs

  1. Start as a sole trader if you are testing an idea. No setup cost, minimal paperwork, easy to close if it doesn’t work out.

  2. Convert to ApS when profits consistently exceed DKK 300,000–400,000. The corporate tax savings become significant at that level.

  3. Get an accountant for your first year. Danish tax rules are specific and the penalties for mistakes are real. A good accountant costs DKK 10,000–20,000 per year and can save you far more.

  4. Use Dinero or e-conomic for bookkeeping. Both are popular in Denmark, integrate with SKAT, and are affordable for small businesses.

  5. Set aside 30–40% of sole trader profits for tax. Don’t spend money you will owe to SKAT.

  6. Open a business bank account early. Even as a sole trader, keeping business and personal finances separate makes bookkeeping and tax filing much easier. Danske Bank, Lunar, and Nordea all offer business accounts.

  7. Register for eIndkomst immediately if hiring. Payroll reporting deadlines are strict.

  8. Don’t forget the etableringskonto. If you are 1–3 years from starting a business, it is free tax-efficient savings.

Key Resources

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