Current Price
0.0596 €/kWh
22:45 - 23:00
Minimum Price
0.0068 €/kWh
03:30 - 03:45
Average Price
0.0529 €/kWh
00:00 - 24:00
Maximum Price
0.0721 €/kWh
17:15 - 17:30

Electricity prices - Denmark DK1

This table/chart shows the Nord Pool spot exchange prices for the Denmark DK1 bidding zone in the Day-Ahead market, using local time (Europe/Copenhagen)
Period Today
€/kWh
Tomorrow
€/kWh
00:00 - 00:15 0.0220 0.0737
00:15 - 00:30 0.0265 0.0680
00:30 - 00:45 0.0200 0.0660
00:45 - 01:00 0.0085 0.0646
01:00 - 01:15 0.0157 0.0658
01:15 - 01:30 0.0161 0.0656
01:30 - 01:45 0.0107 0.0667
01:45 - 02:00 0.0074 0.0662
02:00 - 02:15 0.0168 0.0658
02:15 - 02:30 0.0124 0.0660
02:30 - 02:45 0.0094 0.0674
02:45 - 03:00 0.0083 0.0686
03:00 - 03:15 0.0073 0.0662
03:15 - 03:30 0.0070 0.0664
03:30 - 03:45 0.0068 0.0670
03:45 - 04:00 0.0069 0.0705
04:00 - 04:15 0.0069 0.0602
04:15 - 04:30 0.0093 0.0642
04:30 - 04:45 0.0138 0.0652
04:45 - 05:00 0.0215 0.0675
05:00 - 05:15 0.0090 0.0573
05:15 - 05:30 0.0186 0.0615
05:30 - 05:45 0.0351 0.0641
05:45 - 06:00 0.0452 0.0657
06:00 - 06:15 0.0335 0.0650
06:15 - 06:30 0.0469 0.0689
06:30 - 06:45 0.0513 0.0902
06:45 - 07:00 0.0563 0.0990
07:00 - 07:15 0.0632 0.0873
07:15 - 07:30 0.0639 0.0914
07:30 - 07:45 0.0649 0.0992
07:45 - 08:00 0.0662 0.1180
08:00 - 08:15 0.0670 0.0902
08:15 - 08:30 0.0671 0.1011
08:30 - 08:45 0.0672 0.1070
08:45 - 09:00 0.0675 0.1145
09:00 - 09:15 0.0679 0.1207
09:15 - 09:30 0.0681 0.1055
09:30 - 09:45 0.0679 0.1011
09:45 - 10:00 0.0672 0.0913
10:00 - 10:15 0.0677 0.1010
10:15 - 10:30 0.0674 0.0960
10:30 - 10:45 0.0665 0.0943
10:45 - 11:00 0.0663 0.0900
11:00 - 11:15 0.0670 0.0955
11:15 - 11:30 0.0667 0.0934
11:30 - 11:45 0.0669 0.0922
11:45 - 12:00 0.0651 0.0901
12:00 - 12:15 0.0687 0.0902
12:15 - 12:30 0.0665 0.0875
12:30 - 12:45 0.0671 0.0897
12:45 - 13:00 0.0672 0.0902
13:00 - 13:15 0.0664 0.0908
13:15 - 13:30 0.0664 0.0913
13:30 - 13:45 0.0663 0.0923
13:45 - 14:00 0.0664 0.0933
14:00 - 14:15 0.0654 0.0844
14:15 - 14:30 0.0656 0.0899
14:30 - 14:45 0.0668 0.0941
14:45 - 15:00 0.0665 0.0960
15:00 - 15:15 0.0672 0.0925
15:15 - 15:30 0.0702 0.0959
15:30 - 15:45 0.0703 0.1056
15:45 - 16:00 0.0708 0.1047
16:00 - 16:15 0.0681 0.0935
16:15 - 16:30 0.0688 0.0957
16:30 - 16:45 0.0701 0.0977
16:45 - 17:00 0.0714 0.0995
17:00 - 17:15 0.0721 0.0970
17:15 - 17:30 0.0721 0.0982
17:30 - 17:45 0.0721 0.1001
17:45 - 18:00 0.0721 0.0954
18:00 - 18:15 0.0707 0.0957
18:15 - 18:30 0.0704 0.0901
18:30 - 18:45 0.0700 0.0881
18:45 - 19:00 0.0672 0.0825
19:00 - 19:15 0.0698 0.0880
19:15 - 19:30 0.0653 0.0833
19:30 - 19:45 0.0649 0.0759
19:45 - 20:00 0.0644 0.0745
20:00 - 20:15 0.0655 0.0836
20:15 - 20:30 0.0652 0.0786
20:30 - 20:45 0.0647 0.0726
20:45 - 21:00 0.0643 0.0703
21:00 - 21:15 0.0652 0.0742
21:15 - 21:30 0.0649 0.0719
21:30 - 21:45 0.0643 0.0653
21:45 - 22:00 0.0621 0.0635
22:00 - 22:15 0.0645 0.0666
22:15 - 22:30 0.0640 0.0643
22:30 - 22:45 0.0631 0.0621
22:45 - 23:00 0.0596 0.0573
23:00 - 23:15 0.0628 0.0568
23:15 - 23:30 0.0620 0.0512
23:30 - 23:45 0.0622 0.0450
23:45 - 00:00 0.0594 0.0391

Denmark’s Electricity Market

Denmark’s Electricity Generation Mix

Denmark’s power system is dominated by renewables. In 2023–24 wind power supplied well over half of Denmark’s electricity – by far the highest share of any country. Solar PV generation has grown rapidly (reaching roughly 10–11% of output in 2024), and bioenergy (biomass and waste) contributes another ~17–19%. Fossil fuels now play only a minor role: coal and gas together are below 10% of generation (≈7% coal, 3% gas in 2024). As a result, Denmark’s “clean” share (wind+solar+bio) exceeded 80% in recent years. Denmark is also a net importer of electricity (on the order of 8–10% of consumption), primarily from Sweden (hydro/nuclear) and Norway (hydro), and exports some power to Germany.

Recent trends reinforce these shares: generation from wind, solar and biomass has been rising while coal and gas output have declined. For example, 2023 saw a historic jump in solar, to about 10% of output (up ~4 percentage points from 2022). Denmark continues to invest heavily in offshore and onshore wind (with targets for multi-gigawatts of new wind by 2030), and solar capacity is also expanding. As a result, wind and solar together now account for a clear majority of Danish generation.

End-User Price Structure

Retail electricity bills in Denmark comprise several components:

  • Wholesale energy cost (“spot price”): This is the cost of electricity itself, set by the Nord Pool wholesale market. In 2023, about 48% of a typical household bill was the energy component. (This includes the Nord Pool spot price plus any small supplier margin.) Commercial/industrial customers similarly pay the prevailing market price, often with lower margins.

  • Grid (network) fees: About 11% of a household’s bill covers transmission and distribution charges. This includes the national TSO tariff (Energinet) and the local DSO tariffs (including a small fixed subscription fee). These regulated fees pay for the physical grid. (Larger businesses may pay different network tariffs, and some large users are directly connected to the transmission grid and pay measured power charges.)

  • Taxes and surcharges (≈41%): A large share of the bill is taxes and levies. For households this includes the electricity consumption tax (elafgift) and value-added tax (25%). In 2025 the electricity tax is about 0.72 DKK/kWh (72 øre/kWh) before VAT (roughly €0.10/kWh). (Note: this tax was temporarily reduced to the EU minimum rate in early 2023, but reinstated to the full rate from July 2023.) In addition, all charges (energy, network, etc.) carry 25% VAT. (Other fees such as the former PSO levy for renewables have been phased out – renewable support is now funded through general taxation.)

  • Other levies: Any remaining costs (e.g. special municipal fees) are minor. Industrial and commercial users often benefit from tax reimbursements: most industry customers (especially non-ETS) receive a refund of nearly all the energy tax on process use under Danish tax rules. In practice this means large businesses pay mostly the wholesale+network costs plus only VAT, whereas households carry the full tax burden.

The table below summarizes the approximate breakdown for a typical household (2023 data):

Bill component Share (2023, households) Notes
Energy (wholesale) ~48% Nord Pool spot price + supplier markup
Grid charges (TSO+DSO) ~11% Transmission/distribution tariffs (incl. subscription fee)
Taxes & VAT ~41% Electricity tax (elafgift), VAT, and any levies

(Numbers vary by actual consumption and area. Businesses typically see a much lower tax/VAT share because of tax exemptions and refunds, so their effective price is closer to the energy+grid costs.)

Dynamic (Hourly) Tariffs and Regulation

Dynamic tariffs (also called time-variable or spot-price contracts) are electricity plans where the per-kWh rate changes with the actual wholesale price (usually on an hourly basis). In practice, the kWh price for each hour is tied to the Nord Pool day-ahead market price for the relevant price zone (DK1 or DK2). Consumers see a different rate each hour (often posted a day ahead), and can save money by shifting consumption into low-price hours (e.g. windy or sunny periods). A typical dynamic tariff adds a small margin or fixed fee to the raw spot price, plus the usual network fees and taxes.

In Denmark, essentially all customers have smart meters (about 99% coverage), so utilities can offer true hourly settlement. Both residential and commercial consumers can opt into dynamic contracts if they wish. For example, with such a contract a household’s hourly kWh price might be €0.20 at 2am (when wholesale is low) but €0.50 at 7pm (peak).

These tariffs are legal and encouraged: under EU law (Electricity Directive 2019/944), suppliers with over 200,000 customers must offer smart-meter households a dynamic (time-of-use or real-time) tariff option. Denmark has transposed this requirement into national law and regulators (the Danish Energy Agency and Utility Regulator) enforce it. In fact, Nordic markets have long been “spot-price driven” – many Danish retailers already sell electricity at or near Nord Pool prices. There are no extra legal barriers: dynamic tariffs are standard market products (often simply called “variable” or “time-of-use” contracts) and must be clearly described in supplier offers. Customers can compare these offers on public tools (e.g. Energinet’s elpris.dk) and switch as desired.

Providers Offering Dynamic Tariffs

Major Danish electricity suppliers now offer spot/variablerate plans. Notable examples include:

  • Norlys Group (Denmark’s largest retail group, formed from Norlys/SEAS-NVE/Energi Fyn/NRGi/Eniig etc.). Norlys markets a residential “FlexEl” contract that passes through the hourly Nord Pool price plus a small fee. (Its business customers have analogous offerings.)

  • Andel Energi (formerly SEAS-NVE) – offers the “TimeEnergi” plan for households and “TimeEnergi Erhverv” for businesses. Under these contracts the kWh price shifts hour by hour with the spot market. (Andel customers can view live hourly prices by region on the supplier’s website.)

  • NRGi – offers “NRGi Time”, a purely variable plan where customers pay the market price each hour (with a 5 øre/kWh trading fee). NRGi reports that about 100% of consumption is settled at spot rates, plus a monthly fee (~29 DKK). (NRGi’s rates for East/West Denmark are updated daily on its site.)

  • SEF Energi – the southern Funen utility offers “TimeEl” for households (and similarly MereEndEl for those wanting a green premium). In the TimeEl plan the kWh price varies each hour with the market. SEF also has fixed-price offers for comparison.

  • Natur-Energi (Energi Danmark) – a green supplier, which has sold a “spotpris” contract (hourly settlement) often called Markedspris at Nord Pool.

  • Go Energi and others – Several local or eco-focused suppliers (e.g. Natur-Energi’s parent OK, co-op GoEnergi, etc.) similarly offer contracts tied to the hourly spot price.

Each of the above products is available in the residential market; many have equivalent versions for small businesses. (Larger industrial customers typically negotiate bespoke contracts or simply receive the hourly system price through market exposure.) Overall, by 2025 most Danish retailers – large and small – have a dynamic (“time variable”) option to meet the EU requirement, alongside their fixed-price offers.

Summary: Denmark’s electricity mix is overwhelmingly green (wind-led) with rising solar/biomass shares. Retail prices remain relatively high due to taxes, but are structured as wholesale+network+tax components (roughly 50/10/40% for households). Time-varying tariffs tied to Nord Pool are now commonplace for both homes and businesses, as mandated by EU law, and are offered by all major Danish suppliers.



Peak and Off-Peak Hours

Denmark DK1 2024 – Average Hourly Wholesale Electricity Price (Nord Pool)