REVIEW · COPENHAGEN
Copenhagen Christianshavn Walking Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Guydeez Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Copenhagen has a knack for surprises. This private Christianshavn walk packs big contrasts fast, from canal-side scenes to Christiania street art, all explained by a real local guide.
I especially like how the tour pairs showpiece sights with neighborhood-level walking. The Church of Our Saviour gets your attention with its detailed design and famous spiral staircase, and Christiania gets put into context so you know what you’re looking at instead of just snapping photos.
One possible drawback: at just 2 hours, you’ll be moving at a steady pace. It’s great for coverage, but it’s not built for lingering long in every spot.
In This Review
- Key highlights worth planning for
- Højbro Plads Start: Easy Access and a Clean Beginning
- Christianshavns Kanal Photo Stop: Canal Views With a Guided Script
- Nyboder Area Walk: Neighborhood-Scale Copenhagen
- Back to Højbro Plads: A Smart Reset Between Big Stops
- Freetown Christiania: Street Art and an Alternative Lifestyle, Explained
- Church of Our Saviour: The Spiral Staircase Moment You’ll Remember
- The 2-Hour Private Format: Fast Coverage, Better Questions
- Getting Advice Beyond the Route
- Price and Value: What $82 Covers in Copenhagen Time
- Walking + Public Transport: Built for Movement
- Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who It Might Not)
- Should You Book This Copenhagen Christianshavn Walking Tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- What is the meeting point for the Copenhagen Christianshavn walking tour?
- How long is the tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Is the tour private?
- Which languages are available for the guide?
- Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
- What locations does the itinerary include?
- What is included in the tour price?
- Are food and drinks included?
- Do I get a guide’s recommendations for other things to do in Copenhagen?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key highlights worth planning for
- Private guide, private pace. No sharing the group dynamic.
- Christiania with context. You’re not just seeing street art; you’re getting the story.
- Church of Our Saviour’s spiral staircase moment. Architecture lovers get their payoff.
- Photo stops built into the route. You’ll know when to pause without hunting around.
- Practical city advice at the end. You’ll leave with ideas for what to do next.
Højbro Plads Start: Easy Access and a Clean Beginning

You start at Højbro Plads, and that matters more than it sounds. It’s a central meeting point, so you’re not burning time figuring out where to begin or how to connect from your hotel.
The vibe here is also useful for a first stop: you get oriented right away, with plenty around you for a quick coffee or a last look before you head into the route. A good start makes a short tour feel longer, and this one is designed to stay tight and efficient.
Because it’s a private tour, you can also set the tone early. If you want more photo time, fewer stops, or more focus on one area like Christiania or the church, that can shape the walk.
You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Copenhagen
Christianshavns Kanal Photo Stop: Canal Views With a Guided Script

Your route kicks off with Christianshavns Kanal, including a photo stop plus a guided walk through the area. Canals in Copenhagen aren’t just pretty water. They help explain how the city works and why certain neighborhoods feel the way they do.
Since this is a guided experience, you’re not left guessing what you’re seeing. Your guide can point out details worth noticing and help you frame what the canal area represents in the broader story of Christianshavn.
Practical tip: treat this as your warm-up stop. If you’re the type who loves composing photos, use the photo pause to get your angles early. It’s easier to keep your pace later once you’ve already captured the “must-get” images.
Nyboder Area Walk: Neighborhood-Scale Copenhagen

Next comes Nyboder, again with a photo stop and guided sightseeing on foot. Even if you’re not aiming to memorize every detail, this part is valuable because it slows your perspective down from “tourist city” to “everyday city.”
This is where a guide really helps. You’ll be walking like someone who lives nearby, with commentary that turns random streets into something you can actually understand. The walking time is short, so the goal isn’t depth. The goal is direction.
A small consideration: if your main interest is only big-ticket landmarks, Nyboder might feel like a “between moments” stop. But that’s exactly why it’s here. It keeps the tour from becoming only a checklist of famous sites.
Back to Højbro Plads: A Smart Reset Between Big Stops

The itinerary brings you back toward Højbro Plads after Nyboder. This isn’t just repetition. It functions like a reset point in a short tour, helping you regroup before the most distinctive segment.
That’s especially useful because the next stop is Freetown Christiania, which has a very different feel than the classic Copenhagen look. You’ll want your brain in the right gear for it: curious, open, and ready for context rather than judgment.
If you’re a “ask lots of questions” type, this is also a good moment to do it. A private guide makes that easier. You can steer the story toward what you care about most.
Freetown Christiania: Street Art and an Alternative Lifestyle, Explained

You’ll then head to Freetown Christiania, with a photo stop plus a guided visit focused on sightseeing. Christiania is one of those places where first impressions can be loud, but understanding makes the experience click.
The tour description highlights two things: the alternative lifestyle and the street art. What makes this stop work on a guided walk is that you’re not just looking at visuals. You’re learning how people see the place and what makes it distinct.
This is also where knowing your guide’s communication style matters. Some guides, like Henri, have been praised for making Christiania enjoyable and easier to appreciate. Others, such as Simona, have been praised for telling the city’s story clearly. Either way, the goal is the same: you should leave feeling like you understood what you saw.
Practical tip: keep your expectations flexible. Christiania isn’t trying to look like a museum. It’s a living community. So aim for curiosity over certainty. That mindset fits the tour format perfectly.
Church of Our Saviour: The Spiral Staircase Moment You’ll Remember

The tour ends with the Church of Our Saviour, including a photo stop and guided sightseeing. This stop is singled out for a reason. The church is known for its intricate design and its iconic spiral staircase, and those are the kinds of features that make you stop walking and really look.
Even if you’re not a hardcore architecture fan, a guided visit helps because you know what to notice. Instead of admiring the building vaguely, you can focus on the specific details that make the church famous.
One consideration: because the whole tour is two hours, this church moment comes with time limits compared to a stand-alone visit. The tradeoff is that you get the contrast—church landmark energy plus Christiania’s alternative atmosphere—within one compact outing.
If you love “one big stop that seals the deal,” this is it. The church is the payoff at the end, and it’s a satisfying way to close a walking tour.
The 2-Hour Private Format: Fast Coverage, Better Questions

This is a private and exclusive tour, meaning you won’t be stuck sharing the guide’s attention with a larger group. That changes everything in a short itinerary. You can ask real questions and get answers that fit your interests.
Timing is also part of the experience design. Each listed segment includes time for walking and sightseeing, with photo stops placed where they’re useful. It’s not a slow wander. It’s a guided route that keeps momentum while still letting you pause.
To get the most value, come with at least two things you want: one photo priority and one “tell me more” topic. For many people, the photo priority is the spiral staircase. The tell-me-more topic often becomes Christiania—what it is, why it exists, and how to approach it respectfully.
Getting Advice Beyond the Route

A big plus of this tour is the emphasis on guide recommendations for the rest of your time in Copenhagen. The description is clear that you’ll get valuable advice on other things to do in the city, and in practice that can be the most useful souvenir of all.
Here’s the trick: ask for recommendations with constraints. For example, ask what fits if you only have a few hours, what’s best for a particular mood, or what’s worth doing on a day when weather is iffy. Your guide will have the local context to tailor suggestions.
In short: the tour isn’t only about walking. It’s about leaving with a plan you can actually use.
Price and Value: What $82 Covers in Copenhagen Time

The price is $82 per person for a 2-hour private walking tour with a live guide. That sounds straightforward, but value depends on what you compare it to.
If you’re traveling in a way that makes sharing less fun—like you want more conversation or more flexibility—private tours often pay off because you’re buying time and attention, not just a route. The tour is customizable, which matters when you want to shift the balance toward Christiania, the church, or extra photo moments.
Also, it includes help from the team to book tickets for desired visits. That’s a quiet cost-saver. Ticket booking support can reduce stress when you want specific entry times or timed options.
Food and drinks aren’t included, so you’ll still want to plan a stop before or after. But you’re also not locked into a meal schedule, which is often what you want on a short city experience.
Walking + Public Transport: Built for Movement

This tour is described as a walking experience, with public transport included except when you select one of the options. That tells you the route is designed to be efficient, not just “walk everything no matter what.”
In Copenhagen, mixing walking with transport can be the difference between seeing a lot and arriving exhausted. You’ll get enough foot time to feel the neighborhoods, but not so much that the last stop loses its impact.
A useful mindset: wear comfortable shoes, bring your camera, and expect short segments with a few intentional pauses. This format rewards people who like structure, not people who want hours of free roaming.
Who This Tour Suits Best (and Who It Might Not)
This tour fits best if you want a guided shortcut into Christianshavn without missing the headline contrasts. If you’re curious about Christiania, you’ll likely feel more confident after a guide explains what you’re seeing and how to interpret it.
It also suits travelers who care about architecture but don’t want to spend half a day on one building. The Church of Our Saviour is treated as a key stop, and the guide’s focus helps you notice what matters.
Who might not love it: if you already know you want long, slow visits at museums or you want time to wander without any structure, the two-hour pace may feel limiting.
Should You Book This Copenhagen Christianshavn Walking Tour?
I’d book it if you want a private, customizable introduction to Christianshavn that hits both classic sights and the kind of alternative culture Copenhagen is known for. The route is tight, which is a plus in a short trip, and the guided format means you’ll come away with meaning, not just photos.
Don’t book it if your priority is maximum time inside major sites. This is a coverage-focused walk with guided context, ending at the Church of Our Saviour for a satisfying close.
If you like tours where you get to ask questions and leave with a plan for the rest of the city, this one makes sense. And if you want Christiania explained instead of guessed at, that’s the selling point.
FAQ
FAQ
What is the meeting point for the Copenhagen Christianshavn walking tour?
The meeting point is Højbro Plads.
How long is the tour?
The tour duration is 2 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $82 per person.
Is the tour private?
Yes. It’s a private and exclusive tour, with no one else in your group.
Which languages are available for the guide?
The live guide offers English, Spanish, Italian, and French.
Is the tour wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the activity is listed as wheelchair accessible.
What locations does the itinerary include?
The stops include Christianshavns Kanal, Nyboder, Højbro Plads (again), Freetown Christiania, and the Church of Our Saviour.
What is included in the tour price?
Included items are a walking tour and public transport (except if you select one of the options), plus help from the team to book tickets for desired visits.
Are food and drinks included?
No. Drink or food is not included.
Do I get a guide’s recommendations for other things to do in Copenhagen?
Yes. The guide provides valuable advice and recommendations for other activities in the city.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.





























