REVIEW · COPENHAGEN
Copenhagen Private 3h biking tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Amitylux www.amitylux.com · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Copenhagen looks different from a bike—quicker, calmer, more you. This private 3-hour ride is a smart first move because you get local context as you pedal through residential backstreets, cross bridges, and roll into parts of town most people never see. I especially liked how the route blends famous landmarks with low-key places like secret gardens, courtyards, and hidden churches, and how the guide tailors the pace to what you actually care about. One consideration: this is not a casual “stand and look” stroll—you’ll need to be a confident cyclist in traffic and weather.
I also like that you’re not doing Copenhagen solo with a map and wishful thinking. With a small max group size of 10 and an English-speaking local guide, you get frequent stop-and-say-it-right moments—so you catch the stories without spending your whole day researching. The tradeoff is simple: three hours flies by, so it’s ideal for getting oriented, not for a slow, deep dive into every neighborhood.
In This Review
- Key things that make this Copenhagen bike tour worth it
- Entering Copenhagen by bike lanes, not by guesswork
- Norreport Bikes meeting point: easy to find, easy to start
- The “active intro” pace: cycling with frequent, useful stops
- Quiet Copenhagen moments: secret gardens, courtyards, and hidden churches
- Landmark hits that you’ll actually understand: Little Mermaid, Amalienborg, Round Tower
- Copenhagen weather reality: dress for wind and sudden changes
- Price and value: why $269 can make sense for a private intro
- What it’s like with different guides (and why that matters)
- Who should book this Copenhagen private bike tour
- Should you book this Copenhagen Private 3h Biking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Copenhagen Private 3h biking tour?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Is it private or group-based?
- What group size should I expect?
- Where do we meet?
- Do I need to be an experienced cyclist?
- Are helmets provided?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Is food or drinks included?
- FAQ
- What if it rains or the weather is bad?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
- Can I reserve now and pay later?
- What languages are available for the guide?
- What famous sights are included?
Key things that make this Copenhagen bike tour worth it

- Small-group private attention with a guide who can adjust to your interests
- Undiscovered backstreets plus crossings over bridges, not just the postcard route
- Iconic landmarks included like the Little Mermaid, Amalienborg Palace, and the Round Tower
- Secret gardens and courtyards that you’d probably miss on your own
- Frequent breaks so you can listen to stories without arriving exhausted
Entering Copenhagen by bike lanes, not by guesswork

Copenhagen’s bike culture isn’t just marketing—it’s how the city works. On this tour, you ride using the city’s extensive bicycle lanes, which makes the experience feel safe and efficient even when you’re moving through busier areas. The result is you spend less time in transit and more time seeing what makes Copenhagen feel livable.
This is also one of the easiest ways to get your bearings fast. In a few hours, you’ll understand where the waterfront icons sit in relation to palaces, churches, and the older urban fabric. It’s the kind of orientation that makes your next day planning feel obvious, not stressful.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Copenhagen
Norreport Bikes meeting point: easy to find, easy to start

You meet in front of Norreport Bikes at Nørre Voldgade 11, 1358 København, right by Nørreport Station. I like this location because it’s central and straightforward, so you’re not relying on a complicated rendezvous point or a bus that might confuse you.
Plan to arrive about 5 minutes early. That small buffer matters because you’ll want a smooth start: get your bike sorted, get comfortable, and listen to the guide’s basics before you head out into lanes and side streets.
The “active intro” pace: cycling with frequent, useful stops

Even though the tour is bike-based, it’s paced like an introduction, not a workout challenge. The guide plans regular stops so you can breathe, catch details, and ask questions. This is where the tour earns its value: instead of simply moving from sight to sight, you learn the why behind what you see.
You’ll also feel how Copenhagen handles movement. Riding through backstreets and crossing bridges gives you a sense of scale—how neighborhoods connect and how the city’s design shapes daily life. And because you’re not walking every street, the tour stays fun instead of turning into a footsore marathon.
Quiet Copenhagen moments: secret gardens, courtyards, and hidden churches

Here’s the part I’d call the Copenhagen cheat code. The tour includes lesser-seen spaces—secret gardens, courtyards, and hidden churches—that add texture. These are the places that make a city feel specific, not generic.
What makes them special on a bike tour is timing and access. If you tried to hunt for these spots alone, you’d waste time piecing together routes and guessing where the entrances are. With a guide, you move through the city efficiently and arrive with the context you need—what you’re looking at and why it matters to Copenhagen’s story.
Also, these stops usually make great photo moments, but the real win is what you learn while you’re there. Denmark has a distinct blend of everyday function and thoughtful design, and these calmer corners show it better than the headline attractions.
Landmark hits that you’ll actually understand: Little Mermaid, Amalienborg, Round Tower

This tour brings you to the big names, but the payoff is how they fit into the broader city picture.
The Little Mermaid is the obvious anchor, and even if you’ve seen photos, being there in context helps. When you arrive by bike through surrounding streets, it stops feeling like a standalone monument and starts feeling like part of the waterfront story.
Amalienborg Palace gives you the royal centerpiece. You’ll see it alongside the city’s real neighborhoods instead of viewing it as a fenced-off destination. That shift matters: you learn how prominent sites sit within a working urban environment.
Then there’s the Round Tower. This landmark helps you connect older Copenhagen identity with what the city became afterward. On a tour like this, it’s not only about the structure—it’s about the cultural thread the guide ties between sites you might otherwise treat as separate bullet points.
One practical consideration: because the tour is only 3 hours, you won’t get long, museum-level time at each landmark. Think of it as seeing the right places with the right context, so you know where to return later if something truly grabs you.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Copenhagen
Copenhagen weather reality: dress for wind and sudden changes

Copenhagen loves to surprise you. The tour operates in all weather conditions, and it can be sunny one moment and windy and cold the next.
You’ll want:
- Footwear suitable for biking (more than just comfy walking shoes)
- A rain jacket in case rain shows up
- Clothes that handle wind
Helmets are another point worth knowing: helmet use isn’t compulsory in Denmark, and the tour does not provide helmets. Helmets can be rented on the day for a small fee, if you want that extra comfort.
If you’re someone who runs cold or gets chilled easily when biking, plan accordingly. You’ll have a better time if you’re comfortable from minute one.
Price and value: why $269 can make sense for a private intro

At $269 per person for a 3-hour private tour, the price isn’t “cheap.” But it’s also not trying to be. You’re paying for three things that matter in a city like Copenhagen:
First, you’re paying for time-saving route planning. The tour blends backstreets, bridges, and tucked-away spots, which is hard to stitch together efficiently on your own.
Second, you’re paying for live interpretation. The guide shares stories while you’re riding and during regular stops, so you get meaning instead of just scenery.
Third, you’re paying for small-group attention (max 10). You’re not stuck in a huge crowd, and the guide can adjust to your interests. From the guide variety reflected in recent tour feedback—people have mentioned guides like Diane and Sine—you can expect a personal, responsive approach rather than a robotic script.
If you already know you want to revisit Copenhagen highlights later, this tour is a smart investment. You’ll leave understanding what’s worth your next hour of wandering.
What it’s like with different guides (and why that matters)

A private tour lives or dies on the guide, and this one benefits from real attention to your interests.
In past experiences tied to this tour, Diane stood out for actively asking what people wanted and adjusting the tour accordingly. Sine was also noted for providing an authentic, genuinely enjoyable Velostadt (bike-city) experience.
Even without naming specific stops in every case, the bigger pattern is clear: good guides don’t just point. They connect. They answer questions. They explain culture and history in plain language so it sticks.
Who should book this Copenhagen private bike tour

This is best for you if:
- You’re an experienced cyclist comfortable biking in an urban environment
- You want an intro that helps you get oriented quickly
- You like a mix of major landmarks and quieter “how do locals live here?” streets
- You prefer a small-group private feel over a crowded group
It’s not the right fit if you:
- Can’t ride a bike confidently
- Prefer slow, car-free walking only
- Want museum-style time at each major landmark
Also, if your Copenhagen trip is short, this tour helps you spend your limited hours on the most useful route and stops.
Should you book this Copenhagen Private 3h Biking Tour?
I’d book it if you want a first-day or early-trip foundation. The blend of bicycle-lane practicality plus classic icons (Little Mermaid, Amalienborg Palace, Round Tower) plus calmer stops (secret gardens, courtyards, hidden churches) gives you a Copenhagen feel that’s hard to replicate alone in just a few days.
Skip it if you’re not fully comfortable cycling in a foreign city or if you’re hoping for lots of long landmark time. This is an active orientation tour, not a leisurely sit-down sightseeing marathon.
FAQ
How long is the Copenhagen Private 3h biking tour?
The tour lasts 3 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
The price is $269 per person.
Is it private or group-based?
It’s a private group tour.
What group size should I expect?
The tour has a maximum of 10 travellers.
Where do we meet?
Meet in front of Norreport Bikes, Nørre Voldgade 11, 1358 København, next to Nørreport Station. Arrive 5 minutes early.
Do I need to be an experienced cyclist?
Yes. All participants must be experienced cyclists capable of biking safely in an urban environment.
Are helmets provided?
Helmets are not compulsory in Denmark and aren’t provided. You can rent a helmet on the day for a small fee.
What’s included in the tour price?
Included are an English-speaking local guide and the bike (along with the guided tour experience).
Is food or drinks included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.
FAQ
What if it rains or the weather is bad?
The tour operates in all weather conditions, so bring a rain jacket and dress for cold wind if needed.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Can I reserve now and pay later?
Yes. It’s available as reserve now & pay later.
What languages are available for the guide?
The tour guide is English.
What famous sights are included?
The tour includes The Little Mermaid, Amalienborg Palace, and the Round Tower.

































