Hotel d'Angleterre Copenhagen
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
Anchored on Kongens Nytorv at the centre of Copenhagen, Hotel d'Angleterre has held court since 1755, its stately Victorian facade fronting a interior that pairs heritage proportions with restrained Nordic design. The scale is substantial: 92 rooms and 55 suites, plus Marchal, the restaurant whose origin story (a French servant, the royal chef's daughter) is effectively the hotel's own. A champagne bar, a pâtisserie turning out serious pastries, and Amazing Space spa with a marble-lined indoor pool, stone steam room and a broad treatment menu round out the public realm. Service runs formal and polished.
Who's it for
Best for:
Couples and culturally minded travellers who want a landmark address within walking distance of Nyhavn, the Royal Theatre, Strøget shopping and Rosenborg Castle Gardens. It suits guests who value historic grandeur softened by Danish art and craft, a proper spa day, and a concierge that will book everything from helicopter rides to bike hire.
Should look elsewhere:
Design purists chasing strictly contemporary Scandi minimalism may find the Victorian bones too traditional. Families looking for kids' programming, and anyone wanting a quiet, tucked-away bolthole, will be better served elsewhere: this is a busy central-square hotel, not a retreat.
Bottom line
What you're paying for here is location and continuity: a 270-year-old institution on Copenhagen's main square, with a credible spa and a restaurant that doubles as the hotel's founding myth. Worth it for travellers who want to be in the thick of the old city in comfort. Book a d'Angleterre Suite for the most characterful rooms, or the Royal Suite (1,600-plus square feet, balcony over Kongens Nytorv) if budget allows.