Cyclists riding through Copenhagen's cycling infrastructure network with dedicated bike lanes along a city street

Copenhagen’s city centre now counts more bikes than cars

For the first time since Copenhagen began counting in 1970 C.E., bicycles outnumber cars in the city’s historic core — and the gap is only growing.

Key numbers

  • Bicycle count: In 2016 C.E., 265,700 bikes entered Copenhagen’s city centre on a typical day, compared to 252,600 cars — a difference of roughly 13,100.
  • Cycling infrastructure investment: The city spent 1 billion Danish krone (approximately £120 million) building out dedicated cycling lanes and 17 bicycle bridges between 2006 and 2019 C.E.
  • Traffic data history: The city has tracked vehicles entering the city centre since 1970 C.E., making this the first year bikes surpassed cars in a count spanning nearly five decades.

How Copenhagen got here

Cities rarely achieve this kind of shift by accident. Copenhagen’s bicycle majority in its city centre is the result of sustained political will, consistent public investment, and a physical infrastructure that makes cycling the easier choice.

The 17 bicycle bridges built between 2006 and 2019 C.E. are a particularly telling example. Rather than asking cyclists to navigate alongside trucks and buses, the city built dedicated routes that bypass road traffic entirely. The message embedded in the infrastructure was simple: cycling should feel safe, fast, and obvious — not brave.

The billion-krone investment in cycling infrastructure over roughly a decade reflects a city that treats bicycle transport as a serious mobility system rather than a hobby or a niche alternative. Lanes are wide, well-maintained, and connected. In Copenhagen, the bike network functions the way metro systems function in other cities.

The city’s Cycling Embassy of Denmark has documented how Danish cycling culture was itself cultivated over decades — it didn’t emerge organically from thin air. After the oil crisis of 1973 C.E. prompted car-free Sundays and public anger at fuel dependency, Danish cities began seriously reconfiguring their streets for cyclists. What looks like a natural cycling culture today is, in large part, an engineered one.

What this looks like on the ground

In practical terms, the city-centre bicycle majority means that the dominant form of movement through Copenhagen’s core is human-powered. Commuters, students, parents pulling cargo bikes loaded with children, and older residents on electric-assist cycles share the lanes in a continuous, relatively frictionless stream.

Copenhagenize Design Co., which ranks cycling cities globally, has long cited Copenhagen’s success as proof that cycling is not a cultural phenomenon unique to the Netherlands or Scandinavia — it is an infrastructure phenomenon. Cities that build for cycling get cycling.

The economic logic also holds. A study published in the Journal of Transport Geography found that cyclists visit local shops more frequently than car drivers, even if they spend less per trip — making cycling-friendly streets a net positive for small businesses, not a threat to them.

Lasting impact

Copenhagen’s milestone sent a signal heard far beyond Denmark. Cities from Paris to Bogotá to Seville have pointed to the Copenhagen model when justifying major cycling infrastructure investments of their own. The shift demonstrated that a wealthy, modern European capital could structurally reduce car dominance without economic collapse or social disruption — a rebuttal to one of the most common objections to urban cycling investment.

The environmental mathematics are equally significant. Replacing car trips with bike trips reduces carbon emissions, cuts particulate pollution, lowers road noise, and decreases the land area dedicated to parking. In a dense city centre, that reclaimed space can be redirected to public use.

The health benefits accumulate quietly but powerfully. Regular cycling is associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and several cancers. A city where cycling is the default commute mode is, effectively, a city with a built-in public health intervention.

Blindspots and limits

The milestone applies specifically to Copenhagen’s city centre — not to the broader municipal area, and not to Denmark as a whole. In fact, bicycle use across Denmark as a whole was slightly declining in 2016 C.E., and the total number of bicycle journeys across the wider Copenhagen municipality had been largely flat for two decades. The city centre success has not yet translated into a national or even citywide trend.

There are also equity dimensions worth naming. Cycling infrastructure investment has tended to concentrate in central, wealthier districts. Outer neighborhoods and lower-income communities in Copenhagen have historically received less cycling infrastructure per capita — meaning the benefits of the city’s cycling culture are not uniformly distributed.

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