Live electricity overview
Electricity prices in Denmark, live.
Energy Price
15-minute price curve
Energy Price
15-minute price curve
Balancing Energy Markets
15-minute price curve
DSO Tariffs
DSO Tariffs
Find your Danish grid company and see DSO tariffs by address, customer type, flow type, date, currency, and unit. DSO tariffs are local grid charges for the electricity network that delivers power to homes and businesses.
DSO Lookup
Find DSO by address
DSO tariffs
DSO Tariffs
DSO tariffs
15-minute tariff curve
Energinet
See Energinet TSO tariffs for Denmark, including transmission tariff, system tariff, feed-in tariff for production, and production balancing tariff. Energinet operates the high-voltage grid and keeps the Danish electricity system balanced.
TSO tariff
15-minute tariff curve
Cost overview
Cost Overview
Enter a Danish address to see the full electricity cost in one view. DanishGrid combines the electricity spot price, DSO tariffs, TSO tariffs, and electricity tax for the selected customer type and date.
Cost overview
15-minute cost curve
Knowledge Base
Electricity prices, tariffs and bills explained
Simple answers about electricity prices in Denmark, spot price, DK1 and DK2, DSO tariffs, TSO tariffs, balancing markets, imbalance prices, electricity tax, VAT, power outages, and how your electricity bill is built.
Electricity basics
What is electricity?
Electricity is the energy that powers lights, appliances, heat pumps, EV chargers, computers, and other devices in homes and businesses.
Where does electricity come from?
Electricity is produced by wind farms, solar panels, hydro plants, biomass plants, gas plants, coal plants, and imports from connected countries.
How does electricity reach my home?
Electricity moves through high-voltage transmission lines, then into local distribution networks, and finally through the connection to your home or business.
Can electricity be stored?
Yes, but only in limited amounts with batteries and other storage systems. Most electricity is used very close to the time it is produced.
Electricity prices and the power market
Why does the electricity price change every hour?
Electricity prices change because demand, wind production, solar production, imports, exports, and power plant availability change through the day.
What is the spot price?
The spot price is the wholesale market price of electricity before supplier fees, DSO tariffs, TSO tariffs, electricity tax, and VAT are added.
Who decides the spot price?
The spot price is set by buyers and sellers trading electricity in the day-ahead market. It reflects supply, demand, and grid constraints for each price area.
What affects electricity prices?
Prices are affected by weather, wind power, solar power, demand, fuel prices, outages, power plant availability, imports, exports, and the cost of balancing the grid.
Why is electricity cheaper at night?
Demand is often lower at night, so the market price can be lower. Strong wind at night can also push prices down.
Why is electricity expensive in the evening?
Evening prices often rise because many people cook, heat homes, run appliances, and charge electric cars after work.
What is peak demand?
Peak demand is the time when electricity use is highest. In Denmark it often happens during busy morning and evening hours.
Can electricity prices be negative?
Yes. Negative electricity prices can happen when supply is much higher than demand, often during very windy or sunny periods.
Danish electricity price areas
Why does Denmark have two electricity price areas?
Denmark is split into DK1 and DK2 because there can be limits on how much electricity can move between western and eastern Denmark.
What is DK1?
DK1 is Western Denmark. It covers Jutland and Funen.
What is DK2?
DK2 is Eastern Denmark. It covers Zealand, Copenhagen, Bornholm, Lolland, Falster, and nearby islands.
Why are DK1 and DK2 electricity prices different?
DK1 and DK2 can have different prices because local supply, demand, wind production, imports, exports, and grid bottlenecks can be different in each area.
DSO tariffs and TSO tariffs
What is a DSO?
A Distribution System Operator, or DSO, owns and operates the local electricity network that delivers power to homes and businesses.
Can I choose my DSO?
No. Your DSO depends on the address where your electricity meter is connected.
What is a grid tariff?
A grid tariff is the price you pay to use the electricity network. For households it is usually charged per kWh and can change by time of day.
Why do I pay DSO charges?
DSO charges pay for the local grid, including operation, maintenance, metering, repairs, new connections, and local grid capacity.
What is a TSO?
A Transmission System Operator runs the high-voltage electricity grid. In Denmark, the TSO is Energinet.
What does Energinet do?
Energinet operates the transmission grid, balances supply and demand, maintains grid stability, and connects Denmark with neighbouring countries.
What is the difference between DSO tariffs and TSO tariffs?
DSO tariffs cover the local grid. TSO tariffs cover the national high-voltage grid and system operation handled by Energinet.
Balancing markets in Denmark
What are balancing markets in Denmark?
Balancing markets help Energinet keep electricity production and consumption equal in real time. They are used when the power system needs more electricity, less electricity, or faster correction than the day-ahead market planned.
Why does Denmark need balancing markets?
Electricity has to be balanced every moment. Wind, solar, demand, plant outages, and cross-border flows can change quickly, so Energinet uses balancing energy and reserves to keep the grid stable.
What is an imbalance price?
The imbalance price is the settlement price used when actual production or consumption differs from the planned schedule. It shows the cost of being out of balance in a specific 15-minute period.
What is balancing energy?
Balancing energy is electricity that is activated in real time to correct a surplus or deficit in the power system. It can be upward regulation or downward regulation.
What is aFRR?
aFRR means automatic frequency restoration reserve. It is activated automatically to help restore balance in the power system when frequency or system balance starts moving away from target.
What is mFRR?
mFRR means manual frequency restoration reserve. It is activated by the system operator when more manual balancing energy is needed to correct the system.
What is the difference between balancing capacity and balancing energy?
Balancing capacity is paid availability, so providers are ready if the grid needs support. Balancing energy is the actual activated electricity used when Energinet calls on that support.
Electricity bills, tax and VAT
What is included in my electricity bill?
A Danish electricity bill can include the spot price, supplier fee, DSO tariff, TSO tariff, electricity tax, and VAT.
Why is my bill higher than the spot price?
The spot price is only one part of the final electricity cost. Grid tariffs, transmission charges, electricity tax, supplier fees, and VAT are added on top.
What is electricity tax or elafgift?
Elafgift is a government tax on electricity consumption in Denmark. It is separate from the market price and grid tariffs.
Does everyone pay the same electricity tax?
The standard rate is generally the same for ordinary consumption, but some businesses and special cases can have different rules.
What is VAT on electricity?
VAT is value-added tax. It is added to electricity costs in Denmark, including many of the price components on the bill.
Smart electricity use
When is electricity usually cheapest?
Electricity is often cheapest late at night, during low demand, or when wind and solar production are high.
How can I reduce my electricity bill?
You can shift flexible usage to cheaper hours, charge your EV at low-price times, use efficient appliances, improve insulation, and monitor your electricity use.
Should I charge my EV at night?
Often yes. Night hours can have lower spot prices and lower grid tariffs, but the best time depends on your contract, DSO tariff, and daily price curve.
Does wind lower electricity prices?
Often. Strong wind increases supply, which can lower electricity prices when demand and grid conditions allow it.
Can solar lower electricity prices?
Yes, especially during sunny daytime hours when solar production adds more electricity to the market.
DanishGrid
What is DanishGrid?
DanishGrid shows Danish electricity prices, DSO tariffs, TSO tariffs, electricity tax, cost overview data, and balancing market information in one place.
How often is DanishGrid updated?
DanishGrid updates data when new official market information is available. Current and near-term data can change as source data is published or corrected.