Foreigners owe millions in unpaid Copenhagen parking fines

11.5 million kroner in 22,500 unpaid parking fines amassed in two years

When drivers from abroad are fined for parking illegally in Copenhagen, a high proportion do not pay. In fact, only about 50 percent part with their money.

Figures from 2013-2014 show the Danish capital amassed 11.5 million kroner in 22,500 unpaid parking fines from foreign drivers. The city has been forced to hire two Swedish debt collector agencies that specialise in collecting debt from abroad.

“A soon as we get outside the national border, there are challenges because we can’t see who owns the car,” Charlotte Jakobsen, a spokesperson for the parking ticket department at Copenhagen Municipality, told Metroxpress newspaper.

“We do it out of a principle of justice and economy. But as long as there are not any other options to collect the money, we can’t do it any better.”

READ MORE: New system to eliminate parking tickets in Denmark

Similar issues in Aarhus
The most unpaid parking tickets by drivers from abroad from 2013-2014 hailed from Germany whose citizens failed to pay 5,237 tickets worth 2.7 million kroner.

The top five was rounded up by Sweden (1.7 million kroner from 3,303 tickets), France (1.2 million kroner from 2,355 tickets), Poland (755,000 kroner from 1,482 tickets) and Bulgaria (650,000 kroner from 1,272 tickets).

The issue has now landed on the political agenda list at Copenhagen City Hall in Copenhagen, where local politicians are looking into how to get foreign drivers to walk the line when it comes to paying fines.

Aarhus has experienced similar problems. In 2014, just one fourth of foreign drivers paid their parking tickets, although the total owed in Denmark’s second biggest city was ‘just’ 300,000 kroner.




  • Danish Intelligence Service: Threat from Russia has intensified

    Danish Intelligence Service: Threat from Russia has intensified

    In the internal Danish waters, Russia will be able to attack underwater infrastructure from all types of vessels. The target could be cables with data, electricity and gas, assesses the Danish Defense Intelligence Service

  • Denmark to explore screening citizenship applicants for anti-democratic sentiments

    Denmark to explore screening citizenship applicants for anti-democratic sentiments

    A few weeks after Alex Vanopslagh’s comments about “right values,” the government announced that an expert committee would be established to examine the feasibility of screening citizenship applicants for anti-democratic attitudes.

  • The Future Copenhagen

    The Future Copenhagen

    The municipality plan encompasses building 40,000 houses by 2036 in order to help drive real estate prices down. But this is not the only huge project that will change the shape of the city: Lynetteholmen, M5 metro line, the Eastern Ring Road, and Jernbanebyen will transform Copenhagen into something different from what we know today

  • It’s not you: winter depression is affecting many people

    It’s not you: winter depression is affecting many people

    Many people in Denmark are facing hard times marked by sadness, anxiety, and apathy. It’s called winter depression, and it’s a widespread phenomenon during the cold months in Nordic countries.

  • Crime rates are rising, but people are safer

    Crime rates are rising, but people are safer

    Crime in Denmark is increasing for the second consecutive year, but it is more focused on property, while people appear to be safer than before. Over the past year, there were fewer incidents of violence

  • Novo Nordisk invests 8.5 billion DKK in new Odense facility

    Novo Nordisk invests 8.5 billion DKK in new Odense facility

    Despite Novo’s announcement that its growth abroad will be larger than in Denmark, the company announced this morning an 8.5 billion DKK investment for a new facility in Odense. This is the first time the company has established a new production site in Denmark this century.