🇩🇰 Copenhagen, Denmark
Next House
📍 Bernstorffsgade 27, København V, 1577
Photo: official website
Dein Aufenthalt — Next House
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Das Eigentum — Next House
Next House is a modern hostel-hotel hybrid in Vesterbro, Copenhagen’s gritty-chic district. The lobby feels like a co-working space after a party: industrial concrete, warm lighting, a bar, and a stage for live music. It suits solo travellers and young groups who want social energy and clean, private rooms without paying boutique prices. Staff are practical and local, not polished or robotic.
Chroniken von Copenhagen
Copenhagen grew from a 12th-century Viking fishing village into Denmark’s capital by the 15th century, fortified with moats and ramparts. The 1801 Battle of Copenhagen and the 1807 British bombardment levelled large parts of the city, leading to rebuilding in a neoclassical style. The 20th century brought the functionalist ‘Finger Plan’ of suburban railways, while the 1990s onwards transformed the waterfront with modernist buildings like the Opera House. Today, it’s a compact, bike-centric city known for its harbour swimming, New Nordic cuisine, and a laid-back ‘hygge’ social culture.
Beste Zeit zu besuchen
Vollständiger Copenhagen-Guide →Die besten Monate
June, July, August – long, light evenings (sunset after 9pm), average highs of 20-22°C, and outdoor cafés and harbour baths fully open. Crowds are moderate, not overwhelming, because Copenhagen is expensive and filters out budget mass tourism.
Peak / Festival Surge
July – school holidays fill the city with European families and cruise passengers. Hotel prices jump 30-50% above shoulder season. The Copenhagen Jazz Festival (early July) and Roskilde Festival (30km west, late June-early July) drive demand for beds.
Budget Schulter Saison
Mid-May to early June, and September – still pleasant (15-20°C, less rain), with lower room rates and shorter queues at attractions like Tivoli Gardens and Nyhavn.
Wetter & Verpackung
Copenhagen’s weather changes fast: bright sunshine can collapse into drizzle within ten minutes. Pack a light waterproof jacket and comfortable walking shoes – and always bring a jumper even in summer, because evenings by the water turn chilly.
Live City Briefing veröffentlicht — Copenhagen
- Nyhavn’s wooden bridge is closed for restoration until late 2026; visitors heading to the harbour area should use the pedestrian street Lille Strandstræde instead.
- The Cityringen metro line M3/M4 is fully operational, making Next House (a 5-minute walk from Dybbølsbro Station) even better connected to Nørreport and Østerport.
- July 2026 sees the return of the Copenhagen Jazz Festival (1-10 July) and the Distortion street parties (28-31 May, but they’ll affect crowd patterns in Vesterbro through early June). Book restaurants in advance.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Next House, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor facing the rear courtyard (south-west side). These floors are high enough to cut street noise from Bernstorffsgade but still within the lift range, and the courtyard side avoids the main road.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid rooms on the 1st and 2nd floors facing Bernstorffsgade. The street is a busy arterial road with constant traffic and a tram line, so low-floor front rooms pick up the most noise. Also skip rooms directly above the lobby or the breakfast area on the ground floor, as early-morning kitchen sounds carry up.
Best views
The best view is from a top-floor (5th floor) street-facing room on a clear day, looking south-east towards Tivoli Gardens and the central station. But it's trade-off: you get the view with constant street noise. For a quiet view, the rear courtyard offers a pleasant, if less spectacular, outlook over the back streets of Vesterbro.
Quietest floors
Floors 4–5 are the quietest. They're above the street-level bustle and below any potential roof terrace noise, and the lift serves them easily.
🔊 Noise notes
Bernstorffsgade is a main route to the central station, plus there's a tram line. Expect vehicle and tram noise from 6am to late evening. The rear courtyard is much quieter, but occasional service deliveries from the back alley can happen early (around 7am). The lift can also be a source of low hum on nearby rooms, especially on the 2nd and 3rd floors.
Insider tips
If you're light-sensitive, pack an eye mask: Copenhagen has long summer daylight, and some rooms have only basic curtains. Request a courtyard room if you want dark mornings. Check with reception about bike rental — the hotel often partners with a local shop, which is the best way to explore Vesterbro and beyond without relying on the tram.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Einrichtungen — Next House
Free, unlimited Wi-Fi throughout the hotel; no login or speed cap (typically 50 Mbps down)
One lift serves all five guest floors; no stairs-only sections
Complimentary digital access to PressReader via QR codes in lobby; no physical newspapers. The building is a 1970s concrete structure with a rooftop terrace overlooking Tivoli Gardens
Check-in from 15:00; early bag drop from 09:00 at reception; late check-out until 13:00 costs DKK 200, subject to availability
Free storage at the front desk during your stay; no lockers
Step-free entrance via ramp at the main door; one adapted room on the ground floor; lift fits standard wheelchairs; no Braille signage or hearing loops
No on-site parking; nearest public car park is Q-Park Tivoli, under the square just south, at DKK 350 per 24 hours; no EV charging on premises
Gebühren, Steuern & Einlagen
City / tourist tax: DKK 25 per person per night, mandatory for all guests over 18
Deposit & card hold: No advance deposit required; a card hold of DKK 500 for incidentals is taken at check-in
Faith & Diät in der Nähe
- Church: Mariakirken (614 m · ~8 min walk)
- Place of worship: Church of Scientology Europe (703 m · ~9 min walk)
- Church: Vartov Valgmenighedskirke (718 m · ~9 min walk)
- Place of worship: Nordland (799 m · ~10 min walk)
Lokaler Lebensstil & Erholung
Fisketorvet — 1.5 km · ~18 min walk
Glyptotekshaven — 359 m · ~4 min walk
Arkæologisk Værksted — 516 m · ~6 min walk
Tivolis Koncertsal — 193 m · ~2 min walk
Det Japanske Tårn — 715 m · ~9 min walk
5 Minuten Radius Essentials
Nearest — 235 m · ~3 min walk
Hovedbanens Apotek — 358 m · ~4 min walk
7-Eleven — 240 m · ~3 min walk
Københavns Hovedbanegård — 245 m · ~3 min walk
Geld & Währung
Get a travel card →Danish Krone, DKK
Use ATMs rather than exchange bureaux; avoid the Forex desks in the airport or central station for poor rates.
Cards are accepted almost everywhere—even small shops and taxis—with contactless and mobile pay (Apple Pay/Google Pay) common.
Not expected; service is included. Round up the bill in taxis or leave 10% at nice restaurants if service was excellent.
Essen, Einkaufen und Reisen auf einem Budget
Cheap car hire →Black filter coffee or espresso from a bakery or kiosk, around 30-35 DKK.
Open-faced rye bread ('smørrebrød') from a takeaway spot or a simple pizza slice, 60-90 DKK.
Pasta or burger at a no-frills pub, around 110-130 DKK for a main.
Visit the Reffen street food market (a short bus ride) for affordable stalls, or the Torvehallerne hall for budget options at lunch.
Netto, Rema 1000 and Lidl are the main discount supermarkets, with a branch of Netto on Bernstorffsgade itself.
Inner city chains like H&M and Zara are on Amagertorv; for cheaper secondhand try the Nørrebro area.
A 24-hour city pass (City Pass Small) costs 80 DKK—covers buses, metro and trains within zones 1-4; from airport, the metro (zone 4) is cheapest at about 36 DKK single.
Buy coffee to go rather than sitting down (table service costs more). Skip sit-down restaurants for lunch and eat at bakeries or the market halls. Use the City Pass rather than single tickets if making more than a couple of trips.
Gut zu wissen — Copenhagen
Type C/E/K · 230V
safe
$1 ≈ kr6.53 · DKK
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Copenhagen, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Next House
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Nearest — 235 m · ~3 min walk — pharmacy · Hovedbanens Apotek — 358 m · ~4 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Umher zu kommen
Copenhagen Airport (CPH) → København H (Central Station) - 7 min walk to hotel
💡 Most reliable and economical option; AirportExpress fastest but pricier; regular trains cheaper and just 3 mins longer
Copenhagen Airport (CPH) → Axel Guldsmeden Hotels (Helgolandsgade 11)
💡 Pre-book through hotel for guaranteed rate; Uber typically cheaper but less reliable than official airport taxis
Copenhagen Airport (CPH) → City Center (Axel Guldsmeden Hotels area)
💡 Cheapest airport transfer; slower but scenic route through city; good for budget travelers; download Rejseplanen app for local transit
Copenhagen Airport (CPH) → Nørreport Station - 8 min walk to hotel
💡 24-hour service weekends; most frequent service in city; buy 10-ticket card (DKK 200) for local transit savings
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What are the best rooms at Next House?
Request a room on the 4th or 5th floor facing the rear courtyard (south-west side). These floors are high enough to cut street noise from Bernstorffsgade but still within the lift range, and the courtyard side avoids the main road.
Which rooms should I avoid at Next House?
Avoid rooms on the 1st and 2nd floors facing Bernstorffsgade. The street is a busy arterial road with constant traffic and a tram line, so low-floor front rooms pick up the most noise. Also skip rooms directly above the lobby or the breakfast area on the ground floor, as early-morning kitchen sounds carry up.
Is Next House noisy?
Bernstorffsgade is a main route to the central station, plus there's a tram line. Expect vehicle and tram noise from 6am to late evening. The rear courtyard is much quieter, but occasional service deliveries from the back alley can happen early (around 7am). The lift can also be a source of low hum on nearby rooms, especially on the 2nd and 3rd floors.
Which rooms have the best views at Next House?
The best view is from a top-floor (5th floor) street-facing room on a clear day, looking south-east towards Tivoli Gardens and the central station. But it's trade-off: you get the view with constant street noise. For a quiet view, the rear courtyard offers a pleasant, if less spectacular, outlook over the back streets of Vesterbro.
What are insider tips for staying at Next House?
If you're light-sensitive, pack an eye mask: Copenhagen has long summer daylight, and some rooms have only basic curtains. Request a courtyard room if you want dark mornings. Check with reception about bike rental — the hotel often partners with a local shop, which is the best way to explore Vesterbro and beyond without relying on the tram.
What time is check-in at Next House?
Check-in at Next House is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Next House have Wi-Fi?
Free, unlimited Wi-Fi throughout the hotel; no login or speed cap (typically 50 Mbps down)
Is there a city or tourist tax at Next House?
DKK 25 per person per night, mandatory for all guests over 18
Where can I eat cheaply near Next House?
Open-faced rye bread ('smørrebrød') from a takeaway spot or a simple pizza slice, 60-90 DKK.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Next House?
A 24-hour city pass (City Pass Small) costs 80 DKK—covers buses, metro and trains within zones 1-4; from airport, the metro (zone 4) is cheapest at about 36 DKK single.
When is the best time to visit Copenhagen?
June, July, August – long, light evenings (sunset after 9pm), average highs of 20-22°C, and outdoor cafés and harbour baths fully open. Crowds are moderate, not overwhelming, because Copenhagen is expensive and filters out budget mass tourism.
Top-Attraktionen in Copenhagen
💡 Go early on a weekday before 9am to dodge crowds and see the boats come in. For cheap coffee, walk two minutes down to Café Norden on Store Strandstræde.
💡 Entry is free but you need to book a timeslot online in advance. Go straight to the first floor — the prehistory collection is the best part.
💡 Bring lunch and sit by the Hercules Pavilion at the north end — quieter than the main lawn and you can see the peacocks.
💡 Grab a map from the main gate to find the famous graves quickly. Best time is late afternoon on a sunny day when the light filters through the old trees.
💡 No photography on Pusher Street — it's a strict rule. Walk down to the lake and watch the swans. Try the organic vegetarian food at the Morgenstedet cafe; it's cheap and excellent.