REVIEW · COPENHAGEN
Best of Copenhagen Biking Tour-3 Hours, Small Group max 10
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Amitylux www.amitylux.com · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Copenhagen looks best on two wheels. This small-group ride helps you learn the city fast, from backstreets to major sights, with personalized guidance along the way. I like that the route mixes famous Copenhagen icons with calmer, less obvious corners such as secret gardens and quiet courtyards, so you’re not just ticking boxes.
One thing to keep in mind: you’ll need to be comfortable riding in an urban setting. It’s run in all weather, helmets aren’t provided, and you’ll be biking in conditions that can shift from sunny to cold and windy without warning.
In This Review
- Key Highlights Worth Knowing Before You Roll
- Why This 3-Hour Copenhagen Bike Intro Works
- Meeting Point at Norreport Bikes: Practical and Easy to Find
- The Cycling Style: Calm Lanes, Helpful Stops, and Real City Flow
- The Undiscovered Copenhagen Moments You’ll Actually Remember
- Famous Sights You’ll See Without the Typical Rush
- Stop-and-Story Guides: Jose, Tom, Diana, and Andrean
- Bikes and Comfort: Easy to Ride, But Check Fit
- Weather Reality: Dress for Wind, Cold, and Quick Changes
- Price and Value: $102 for 3 Hours That Teach You the City
- Who This Tour Suits Best (And Who Should Skip It)
- Final Call: Should You Book This Copenhagen Biking Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Copenhagen biking tour?
- What is the group size limit?
- Where is the meeting point?
- Is a bike included, and is the tour in English?
- Do I need my own helmet?
- Do I need to be an experienced cyclist?
- Will the tour run in bad weather?
Key Highlights Worth Knowing Before You Roll

- Norreport Bikes at Nørreport Station keeps the start easy to reach and orient around
- Backstreets, bridges, and bicycle-lane routes help you feel safe while you explore
- Landmarks plus lesser-known pockets like hidden churches and courtyards
- Small group limit of 10 means you get real attention, not a rushing herd
- Guides adapt to your interests, including soccer-stadium type detours when possible
Why This 3-Hour Copenhagen Bike Intro Works

If you’re landing in Copenhagen with a short time window, a good intro has two jobs. First, it helps you get oriented so you can navigate on your own later. Second, it shows you what the city feels like day-to-day, not just what’s on postcards.
This tour is built for that. You ride through parts of town that don’t always make it into the first 10 minutes of a guidebook, then you layer in classic Copenhagen landmarks—so you leave with both context and memory hooks. The big win is the balance: the famous sights are there (think Little Mermaid, Amalienborg Palace, Round Tower), but you’re also catching the “how locals move” side of the city via cycling lanes and neighborhoods.
And because the group is capped at 10, it stays human-sized. You can ask questions without shouting. You can pause when something catches your eye. That matters in Copenhagen, where the streets are bike-first and the pace can feel “normal” to locals but intimidating if you’re new to it.
You can also read our reviews of more cycling tours in Copenhagen
Meeting Point at Norreport Bikes: Practical and Easy to Find

Your tour starts outside Norreport Bikes at Nørre Voldgade 11, right next to Nørreport Station. That location is a smart choice because Nørreport is a major transit hub, so you can arrive without complicated planning. It also makes the tour feel like part of your day instead of an extra mission.
A small but important detail: arrive about 5 minutes early. Not because you’ll be rushed, but because the “getting set” part (getting your bike, confirming the group, understanding how the guide wants to handle stops) runs smoother when everyone’s ready.
Also note the luggage rule: large bags aren’t allowed. Plan for a small daypack or camera bag you can manage comfortably while cycling.
The Cycling Style: Calm Lanes, Helpful Stops, and Real City Flow

Copenhagen’s bike lanes are one of the reasons biking is so appealing here. This tour leans into that. You’ll cross bridges and take backstreets, but the guide’s focus stays on routes that take advantage of the city’s bicycle-lane network, so it’s not a stop-and-go scramble through mixed traffic.
What makes it feel “relaxing” isn’t that you never work (you will bike), it’s that you get regular breaks. The guide stops often enough to share stories and facts while you catch your breath. This is key for first-time visitors: you don’t just move past places—you learn what you’re seeing while you’re already there.
One more detail that matters: the tour runs in all weather. Copenhagen can throw wind, cold, and rain at you even when the morning looks promising. If you’re the type who hates getting uncomfortable, dress with weather flexibility in mind.
The Undiscovered Copenhagen Moments You’ll Actually Remember

This isn’t only a “look at the landmark” experience. A big part of the tour is where Copenhagen gets quieter and more layered—places you might miss if you’re wandering without local guidance.
You’ll cycle through cooler neighborhoods and look for small-scale city magic: secret gardens, courtyards, and hidden churches. Even without specific names given, you can still expect the experience style to be distinct. These are the spots that feel tucked away behind everyday streets, where the city suddenly turns inward. They also tend to be photogenic, but more importantly, they help you understand Copenhagen as a lived-in place—not just a list of monuments.
There’s also a built-in advantage for planning your next day. When you see where these pockets of calm sit in the city, you’re better equipped to return later on your own, or at least to pick the right neighborhood for dinner and a slow evening walk.
Famous Sights You’ll See Without the Typical Rush

You do hit the big icons, and that’s good. If it’s your first visit, you want to know where the “everyone shows up here” landmarks are, and you want to understand how they fit into the city’s layout.
This tour includes:
- The Little Mermaid: the classic Copenhagen anchor point
- Amalienborg Palace: a royal presence you’ll recognize instantly once you’re near it
- The Round Tower: a recognizable tower landmark that helps you understand Copenhagen’s skyline and sight lines
The advantage here is movement. Instead of grinding through these spots as isolated photo stops, you see how they connect by bike across different kinds of streets. You get the geography. You get the spacing. And you get a smoother sense of direction than you would if you only walked.
Is it possible to spend more time at one single landmark on your own later? Yes, and you’ll likely want to. That’s not a flaw. Think of this tour as setting the stage.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Copenhagen
Stop-and-Story Guides: Jose, Tom, Diana, and Andrean

One of the strongest signals from the available feedback is that the guides don’t feel robotic. People highlight strong storytelling and real knowledge, plus the ability to tailor the route slightly.
For example:
- Jose is singled out for making the tour a great introduction, with interesting storytelling as you glide through districts.
- Tom is praised for being very knowledgeable and for navigating well.
- Diana is noted for adjusting the tour to match specific interests, including a detour related to the main soccer stadium.
- Andrean is also mentioned for being knowledgeable.
Why does that matter for you? Because Copenhagen can feel confusing when you’re new—especially if you’re trying to piece together what matters and what’s just busy. A guide who can explain what you’re seeing in plain language helps you build mental maps fast. And tailoring matters if you’re not the average first-timer and you have a particular curiosity—history, modern Denmark, sports, or just the feel of different districts.
Bikes and Comfort: Easy to Ride, But Check Fit

The tour includes the bike. Many people specifically say the bikes are easy to ride, and that the guide helps you navigate the city perfectly. That’s a good sign if you’re worried about bike handling or about keeping up.
At the same time, one note points out that the quality of the bikes could be improved. That doesn’t mean the tour is unsafe or unusable—just that you should treat your first minutes as a quick fit check. Make sure the seat feels right, that the handlebars don’t cause wrist strain, and that your shoes feel stable in the pedals.
Also, Denmark isn’t strict about helmets. Helmets aren’t provided on this tour, though they can be rented on the day for a small fee. If you’re helmet-the-use type, plan to rent one rather than assuming you’ll have one in your bag.
Weather Reality: Dress for Wind, Cold, and Quick Changes

Copenhagen weather can be a mood swing. This tour runs in all weather, and the guidance is to dress appropriately, wear biking-ready footwear, and bring a rain jacket just in case.
Here’s what I’d do if you want comfort for 3 hours:
- Wear layers you can remove when you warm up pedaling
- Bring a rain shell that cuts wind (not just a flimsy poncho)
- Choose closed-toe shoes with grip so you can feel stable at stops
- Keep a small plan for cold fingers, because biking plus wind can chill you quickly
If you come from a warmer climate, don’t underestimate the wind factor. A sunny day can still feel sharp on a bike, especially near open water and bridges.
Price and Value: $102 for 3 Hours That Teach You the City

At $102 per person for a 3-hour, small-group tour, this isn’t a “budget-only” activity—but it often earns its keep if you value time and local guidance.
Here’s what you’re paying for:
- An English-speaking local guide
- A bike included (so you’re not spending time and money hunting one down)
- A route that mixes big landmarks with quieter city pockets
- Regular stops for stories, so you’re learning while you’re moving
Three hours is also a sweet spot. It’s long enough to feel like a real orientation session, but short enough that you’re not losing an entire day. That matters if you’re trying to hit other plans after the tour—like museums, food, or a self-guided ride.
If you already know Copenhagen well or you’re an ultra-confident cyclist who loves building routes from scratch, you might not need a guide. But if you want city knowledge without hours of trial and error, this price can feel fair.
Who This Tour Suits Best (And Who Should Skip It)
This tour is best for active travelers who are comfortable cycling in a foreign urban environment. All participants must be experienced cyclists capable of biking safely.
It’s a strong match if you:
- Want a first-visit overview that goes beyond surface-level sightseeing
- Like learning as you move (stop for stories, then ride on)
- Prefer small-group experiences with a guide you can actually talk to
It’s not a fit if you:
- Can’t ride a bike confidently
- Feel nervous mixing with city movement, even with bicycle lanes
- Need space for luggage or large bags
Final Call: Should You Book This Copenhagen Biking Tour?
I’d book this tour if you want a fast, guided way to understand Copenhagen—how it’s laid out, where the major landmarks sit, and where the quieter city moments hide behind ordinary streets. The small group size and the guide quality signals (with names like Jose, Tom, Diana, and Andrean showing up in feedback) are exactly what you want for an orientation experience.
Skip it if bike comfort is your weak spot. With Copenhagen’s wind and the requirement to be a safe, experienced cyclist, it won’t be the relaxing stroll kind of tour. It’s a ride with frequent breaks, not a walk-and-point situation.
If you’re ready to pedal confidently and you want to leave with a real sense of direction, this is a solid first move.
FAQ
How long is the Copenhagen biking tour?
The tour duration is 3 hours.
What is the group size limit?
It’s limited to a maximum of 10 participants.
Where is the meeting point?
Meet in front of the bike shop Norreport Bikes at Nørre Voldgade 11, 1358 København, next to Nørreport Station. Arrive 5 minutes early.
Is a bike included, and is the tour in English?
Yes. The bike is included, and the guide speaks English.
Do I need my own helmet?
Helmets are not provided. However, helmets can be rented on the day for a small fee.
Do I need to be an experienced cyclist?
Yes. All participants must be experienced cyclists capable of biking safely in a foreign urban environment.
Will the tour run in bad weather?
Yes. The tour operates in all weather conditions, so bring appropriate clothing and a rain jacket in case of rain.

































