Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour

REVIEW · COPENHAGEN

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour

  • 5.011 reviews
  • 3 hours
  • From $58
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Operated by Guydeez Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide

You’ll see Copenhagen like a local street storyteller. In just 3 hours, this walk strings together Nyhavn’s colorful 17th- and 18th-century townhouses with the drama of Frederiks Kirke—the Marble Church with its rococo look—so the sights feel connected instead of random checkmarks. I especially like how the route balances iconic royal stops with street-level Copenhagen.

The main drawback is simple: it’s a concentrated walk with photo stops, so if you hate moving from place to place, wear comfy shoes and plan to keep your expectations focused on seeing the outside of key landmarks rather than lingering in buildings.

Key Points You’ll Actually Care About

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Key Points You’ll Actually Care About

  • Nyhavn’s 17th- and 18th-century waterfront townhouses for big visual payoff without planning extra transport
  • Frederiks Kirke (Marble Church) explained with its rococo architecture in plain terms
  • Amalienborg Palace and Christiansborg Palace seen in one smooth route with a guide handling the context
  • Strøget, Magasin du Nord, and the Royal Danish Theatre Play House mixed together so you get shopping, culture, and royal Denmark vibes
  • Lur Blowers monument by City Hall adds a Danish heritage moment that isn’t just another photo backdrop
  • Guides like Simona, Mood, and Frédéric are praised for preparedness, empathy, answering questions, and tailoring the tour to what you care about

A 3-Hour Route That Keeps Copenhagen Compact

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - A 3-Hour Route That Keeps Copenhagen Compact
This is the kind of tour that helps you get your bearings fast. Copenhagen can feel like a lot—pretty streets, big palaces, and nonstop planning—so I like that this walk keeps the focus on a tight loop of central highlights.

At $58 per person for 3 hours, you’re paying for more than just walking. You’re paying for a live guide to point out what you’re looking at, connect landmarks to Danish heritage, and then share recommendations for what to do next.

The pacing is a “see a lot, understand more” style. You’ll have short stops for photos and guidance, plus real walking time between key areas, which works well if you have limited time but still want more meaning than a self-guided stroll.

You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Copenhagen

Meeting at Studiestræde 52: Where the Walk Begins

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Meeting at Studiestræde 52: Where the Walk Begins
You meet your guide at Studiestræde 52. That matters more than people think, because the first minutes set the tone: you want to start in the right spot, with the route already organized.

This tour is available as a private option or a group option, and it runs with a live guide in multiple languages: English, French, Italian, and Spanish. That flexibility is a big deal in Copenhagen, where not every tour is as language-friendly as you’d hope.

Also, the tour is wheelchair accessible, which means the plan is built with mobility in mind. If you’re using a wheelchair or mobility aid, this is one of those details worth confirming early in your trip planning.

Strøget to Christiansborg Palace: Shopping Streets and Power

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Strøget to Christiansborg Palace: Shopping Streets and Power
The walk starts feeding you Copenhagen’s street identity right away. Strøget is the first big stop, and it’s there for a reason: it’s an easy place to understand how Copenhagen life moves through the city. Expect time for photos, a guided explanation, and a solid stretch of walking that helps you feel the layout of central Copenhagen.

Then you move toward Christiansborg Palace. This is where your guide’s job becomes more than pointing: they’ll help you interpret why this palace matters and what to notice as you pass. You’ll get another photo stop plus guided sightseeing time.

Why I like this part of the route: it avoids the problem of only seeing “pretty buildings.” You’re mixing everyday city movement with places tied to national symbolism. That combination helps you understand the city as both a lived-in place and a power center.

Possible drawback here: Strøget is a shopping street, so you may deal with normal pedestrian noise and crowding. It’s not a reason to skip the tour—just wear your patience and keep your camera ready for gaps in foot traffic.

Magasin du Nord and the Royal Danish Theatre Play House

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Magasin du Nord and the Royal Danish Theatre Play House
Next up: Magasin du Nord, a recognizable department store stop that’s more useful on a guided walk than it is as a random destination. Your guide helps frame what you’re seeing so it doesn’t feel like you’re just walking past big-name Copenhagen.

From there, you shift to the Royal Danish Theatre Play House area. You’ll have another photo stop and guided sightseeing time, with your guide explaining what you’re looking at as you go.

This section works well because it gives you variety. Shopping plus performing arts plus landmark explanations means you’re not stuck with only royal architecture or only waterfront photos. It also helps when your group has mixed interests: someone who loves buildings gets palaces and churches, while someone who likes culture gets the theatre stop.

Amalienborg Palace and Frederiks Kirke’s Marble Church

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Amalienborg Palace and Frederiks Kirke’s Marble Church
Then comes the “wow” zone. You’ll stroll past Amalienborg Palace, with a guided photo stop and sightseeing time built in. Your guide also helps you connect what you’re seeing to the broader Danish story, which is exactly the difference between seeing a palace and understanding why it’s a big deal.

From there, you’ll pass Frederiks Kirke, also known as the Marble Church, known for its rococo architecture. This is one of the tour’s headline moments, and it’s the kind of stop where a guide can really save you time. Without explanation, you might just think: big church, pretty façade. With the guide’s framing, it clicks into place.

The practical benefit: these landmark stops are timed so you get clear sightlines for photos without spending half your day trying to find them. And since the tour is designed as a walk, you’re not bouncing around the city on transit.

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Nyhavn Waterfront Finish and the Lur Blowers Monument by City Hall

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Nyhavn Waterfront Finish and the Lur Blowers Monument by City Hall
Finally, you head toward Nyhavn, the famous waterfront with the colorful 17th- and 18th-century townhouses. This is the part you’ll want your phone out for. Your guide will take you through the area with time for a photo stop and guided sightseeing before you move on.

Nyhavn is also where the tone changes from “important buildings” to “Copenhagen life by the water.” Even if you’re not planning to sit down for a long meal here, the guided walk helps you notice the details that make the area memorable.

One more stop adds depth beyond the obvious postcard photos: the Lur Blowers monument next to City Hall. The tour description frames it as part of Danish heritage, and that’s exactly why it’s worth including. It’s a reminder that not every meaningful Copenhagen moment is a palace or a church—you can learn a lot from a monument placed in a civic setting.

By the time you finish around Nyhavn, you’ll have a balanced set of images: royal symbols, architectural drama, everyday street identity, and heritage expressed in public art.

What You Learn From Your Guide (Simona, Mood, Frédéric)

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - What You Learn From Your Guide (Simona, Mood, Frédéric)
The biggest reason this tour earns such high praise is the guides. People consistently highlight that the guides are prepared, empathetic, and enthusiastic—and that they answer questions instead of racing through a script.

For example, guides named Simona and Mood are praised for being genuinely attentive and for giving clear historical guidance so you get real context instead of vague pointing. Another guide, Frédéric, is mentioned as making Copenhagen feel understandable, including the day-to-day side of Danish life and customs.

I also like that the tour isn’t described as one-size-fits-all. There’s evidence that the guide adjusts information to your interests, which is rare in short, fixed walking tours. If you’re the type who asks questions—about architecture, what you’re seeing, or how locals experience the city—you’ll likely get more value than if you prefer silence and just photos.

You’ll also get recommendations for other things to do in Copenhagen. In practice, that can mean: which neighborhoods to prioritize next, what to schedule around your time, and how to make your remaining hours feel smarter.

Price and Value for a $58 Walking Tour

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Price and Value for a $58 Walking Tour
Let’s talk value in a way that helps you decide. $58 per person for a 3-hour guided walk is fair when you consider three things:

1) You’re getting multiple landmark areas in one loop (Strøget, Christiansborg Palace, Magasin du Nord, Royal Danish Theatre Play House, Amalienborg Palace, Nyhavn).

2) You’re not just touring sights—you’re getting guided explanation tied to significance and heritage, including the Marble Church and the Lur Blowers monument.

3) You’re buying a guide’s time for questions and smart recommendations, not only a route.

If you were to do this alone, you could copy the path using maps. But you’d likely miss the “why this matters” part—especially for stops like Frederiks Kirke and the Lur Blowers monument, where the meaning is the point.

If you’re visiting Copenhagen for a short break, this tour is especially good value. It gives you a strong overview fast, which can make the rest of your planning easier.

Small Practical Tips Before You Go

Copenhagen: Highlights and Hidden Gems Walking Tour - Small Practical Tips Before You Go
To make the most of the experience, I’d plan like this:

  • Wear shoes you can walk in. The tour is built around walking time and repeated photo stops.
  • Bring a charged phone/camera. Nyhavn and the major landmark façades are photo-friendly.
  • Have one or two interests ready. If you care about architecture, civic symbols, or culture, say so early so your guide can focus the explanations.

Also, since the tour is offered in English, French, Italian, and Spanish, pick the language that lets you ask questions comfortably. The best moments on this kind of walk happen when you can actually talk.

Who This Tour Fits Best

This tour is a strong match if you want:

  • A short, guided overview of central Copenhagen that doesn’t require planning multiple transit segments
  • Iconic sights plus one heritage-oriented stop (the Lur Blowers monument by City Hall)
  • A guide who answers questions and shares recommendations for what to do next

It’s likely less ideal if you want a slow pace, long interior visits, or a museum-heavy itinerary. This is designed for seeing a lot of Copenhagen landmarks close together, not for spending hours inside buildings.

Should You Book This Copenhagen Walking Tour?

Yes, if your time is tight and you want a guided route that connects the dots between street life and famous landmarks. I’d book it especially if you enjoy asking questions and want your guide’s practical recommendations for the rest of your trip.

Skip it if you dislike walking, or if your ideal day is mostly about long, quiet time inside museums and churches. For many visitors, though, this is a solid way to turn Copenhagen’s biggest names—Nyhavn, Frederiks Kirke, Amalienborg, Christiansborg, Strøget—into something you actually understand.

FAQ

How long is the Copenhagen highlights and hidden gems walking tour?

The tour lasts 3 hours.

What is the price per person?

The price is $58 per person.

Where do we meet the guide?

You meet your guide at Studiestræde 52.

Is this tour private or shared?

It’s offered as either a private or group walking tour depending on the option you choose, and private group availability is listed.

What languages are available for the live guide?

The tour guide is available in English, French, Italian, and Spanish.

Which sights are included on the route?

You’ll see Strøget, Christiansborg Palace, Magasin du Nord, the Royal Danish Theatre Play House, Amalienborg Palace, Nyhavn, Frederiks Kirke, and the Lur Blowers monument next to City Hall.

Is the tour wheelchair accessible?

Yes, the tour is listed as wheelchair accessible.

Is there a live guide during the walking tour?

Yes, it includes a live tour guide.

Can I cancel for a full refund?

Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Do I have to pay right away?

You can reserve now and pay later, meaning you pay nothing today.

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