You are sitting at the dining table with a laptop and headphones. The children are making noise in the living room. There is no door to close, and the camera on Teams shows the kitchen mess behind you. Working from home is here to stay — but most Danish homes do not have a room for it.
Here are solutions from the affordable niche to the full-blown outbuilding.
Why it does not work
The problem is rarely willpower — it is architecture. Most Danish detached houses and flats were designed at a time when work happened at the office. There simply is not a room to spare:
- The bedroom is too private — and it is hard to sleep in a room that reminds you of work.
- The dining table is in the way of the rest of the family’s life — and there is no peace.
- The guest room is used four times a year. The rest of the time it collects dust.
- The basement is dark, damp and uninspiring.
A home office requires three things: a door, daylight and proper air quality.
Solution 1: Niche or screen (5,000–15,000 DKK)
The cheapest solution. A wardrobe-desk, a bookshelf as a room divider, or a corner with proper lighting and a door that can be closed. Works in living rooms and bedrooms that have the space.
Works for: People working from home 1–2 days a week who can live with compromises. Does not work for: Video meetings, focused work or full-time working from home.
Solution 2: Conversion — a dedicated room (30,000–100,000 DKK)
Convert an existing room into an office:
- The guest room: Make it an office with a sofa bed. Guests still sleep there — but the room is usable 360 days a year.
- Divide a large room. An 18 m² bedroom can be split into two rooms with a lightweight partition (10,000–20,000 DKK).
- Take part of the living room. A glass wall or sliding door creates an enclosed space without losing light.
New window for daylight: 5,000–12,000 DKK. New electrical (sockets, network): 5,000–15,000 DKK. Sound insulation in partition: 3,000–8,000 DKK.
Solution 3: The loft or basement (80,000–300,000 DKK)
The loft: If the roof structure allows it, the loft is an obvious office — private, separated from the family’s rooms, with daylight from dormers or skylights. Requires insulation, vapour barrier, staircase and electrical. Typically 8,000–15,000 DKK/m².
The basement: Cheaper to fit out (5,000–10,000 DKK/m²), but requires proper moisture protection, daylight (light shaft or roof window) and ventilation. Without daylight it is not a good workspace.
Solution 4: Outbuilding in the garden (200,000–500,000 DKK)
The most effective solution — and the most expensive. A detached outbuilding of 10–15 m² with insulation, windows, electricity, heating and internet gives a fully functional office. You are at home, but you are away.
The outbuilding must comply with the plot coverage ratio and setback requirements. Up to 50 m² of secondary construction is permitted on most plots. Check the local plan for specific requirements on materials and placement. A building permit is required for outbuildings with installations.
Prefabricated office pods cost 100,000–200,000 DKK and can be ready in 2–4 weeks. Bespoke outbuildings cost more, but can be adapted to the plot and style.
Light, sound and air — the three critical factors
Regardless of solution, three principles apply:
Daylight. A window with a view is essential for concentration and wellbeing. At least one window — ideally north- or east-facing to avoid overheating and glare.
Sound. A door that closes. Sound insulation in walls (45 mm mineral wool in a partition makes a noticeable difference). Heavy curtains and soft surfaces absorb sound.
Air. A closed room with one person builds up CO₂ quickly. Make sure there is a window that can be opened, or install a ventilation unit. Air quality directly affects concentration — BUILD/SBi recommends a maximum of 1,000 ppm CO₂.
Which homes are most at risk?
Flats under 80 m². No room to spare. The niche solution is often the only option.
Detached houses at maximum plot coverage. No possibility of extension or outbuilding. Loft or basement are the alternatives.
Terraced houses. Limited plot, but often unused loft space. An outbuilding in the garden may require a neighbour’s agreement and may be regulated by the residents’ association.
New builds with open plan. Paradoxically, many new houses lack enclosed rooms — everything is open and integrated, but there is nowhere to close a door.
Tax and deductions
If you are self-employed and use a room exclusively for business, you can deduct a proportionate share of the home’s running costs — heating, electricity, insurance and maintenance. The room must have a door and must not be used privately.
Employees cannot normally deduct a home office. But the BoligJob scheme provides a tax deduction for labour costs on improvements such as insulation, window replacement and plumbing work — regardless of whether the room is used as an office.
An outbuilding used for business can in some cases be depreciated for tax purposes. Talk to an accountant before planning — the rules are complex and depend on your situation.
Ergonomics — the overlooked problem
A home office is not just architecture. It is also about the body:
- Desk at the correct height: 72–75 cm (or height-adjustable)
- Chair with proper back and lumbar support
- Screen at eye level — not laptop on the table (causes neck pain)
- Lighting from behind the screen — not in front (causes glare)
A proper ergonomic setup costs 5,000–15,000 DKK and is at least as important as the room itself.
How to move forward
Before you buy furniture or call a contractor, find out what the house actually allows. Can the loft be converted? Is there room for an outbuilding? What does the plot coverage ratio say? An overview of the possibilities is the best first step.
If you generally lack space in the home, a home office can be incorporated into a comprehensive solution. Good daylight and fresh air are essential for concentration — and both can often be improved with simple measures.
Sources: BUILD/SBi — indoor climate, Bolius — home office, BR18