Denmark Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in Denmark — Færdselsstyrelsen digital theory test (25 image-based scenarios, 80% pass mark), total cost (DKK 20,000–25,000 / ~€2,700–3,400), 0.05% BAC, klippekort point system, vanvidskørsel vehicle confiscation, and mandatory cycling awareness.
~137
Road deaths in Denmark (2025)
~2.3 per 100K — among the safest in the EU — Vejdirektoratet / Sikkertrafik
~2.3
Deaths per 100,000 population
Norway ~1.6, Sweden ~2.0, Finland ~3.2, Germany ~3.4 — Denmark among Europe’s safest
DKK 20–25K
Total cost for driving licence
Driving school + tests + licence (~€2,700–3,400)
Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution
Download InfographicKey Findings
The Danish driving theory test consists of 25 image-based scenarios presented on a digital touchscreen (3D-rendered images since January 2024). Duration: 25 minutes. Pass mark: 80% (20/25 correct). Fee: included in the DKK 1,750 booking+test fee. The test is administered by Færdselsstyrelsen at authorised test centres. Available in Danish and English (since 2024).
DKK 20,000–25,000 (~€2,700–3,400) for the complete driving licence process. This includes driving school enrolment and training, theory test (DKK 1,750 booking+test), practical test (DKK 1,600 govt fee + vehicle rental), first aid course, and licence issuance. Copenhagen and major cities tend to be at the higher end.
~137 fatalities in 2025, down from 145 in 2024. Denmark maintains one of Europe’s lowest road fatality rates at approximately 2.3 per 100,000 population (~23 per million). The long-term trend is downward, supported by strict enforcement, the klippekort system, and vanvidskørsel legislation.
0.05% (0.5‰) general. Since July 2025, new drivers in their first 3 years face a stricter 0.02% (0.2‰) limit. DUI fines are calculated as promille × monthly gross salary — a unique income-proportional system. Aggravated DUI and repeat offences can lead to imprisonment and vehicle confiscation under vanvidskørsel rules.
Denmark’s klippekort (“clip card”) system assigns clips for serious traffic violations: phone use, red light, tailgating, speeding 30%+ over the limit. 3 clips in 3 years = licence revocation. New drivers face stricter rules: only 2 clips allowed. Each clip triggers a conditional licence revocation warning.
Death rate ~2.3/100K vs Norway ~1.6, Sweden ~2.0, Finland ~3.2, Germany ~3.4. Drives on the right. 0.05% BAC (0.02% new drivers since Jul 2025). Klippekort point system. Vanvidskørsel vehicle confiscation. Strong cycling infrastructure and priority rules. Digital theory test since Jan 2024.
Denmark Road Safety: Steady Progress (2021–2025)
According to Vejdirektoratet and Sikkertrafik, Denmark recorded ~137 deaths in 2025, a decrease from 145 in 2024. The country maintains one of Europe’s lowest road fatality rates at approximately 2.3 per 100,000 population. Key factors include the klippekort enforcement system, vanvidskørsel vehicle confiscation for extreme violations, extensive cycling infrastructure, and strong traffic education. Coastal wind and bridge crossings (Storebælt, Øresund) remain notable driving challenges.
2021→2022
+105%
2022→2023
+2.5%
2023→2024
−10.5%
2024→2025
−5.5%
Deaths per 100,000 Population
Source: Vejdirektoratet, Sikkertrafik, ETSC. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.
Denmark Theory Test Format#
Theory tests are administered by Færdselsstyrelsen at authorised test centres throughout Denmark
Denmark requires a digital theory test administered by Færdselsstyrelsen (Danish Road Safety Agency). Since January 2024, the test uses a touchscreen interface with 3D-rendered images. It consists of 25 image-based scenarios. Duration: 25 minutes. The pass mark is 80% — you must answer at least 20 out of 25 correctly. The test covers traffic signs, road rules, right-of-way, speed limits, cyclist priority, and Danish-specific regulations including klippekort and vanvidskørsel. Available in Danish and English.
Questions
25
Image-based scenarios (3D-rendered)
Duration
25 Min
~60 seconds per question
Pass Mark
80%
20 out of 25 correct
Test Fee
DKK 1,750
Booking + test fee
What the Theory Test Covers
- Traffic signals, road signs, and road markings
- Right-of-way rules and roundabout priority
- Speed limits by road type (urban 50, rural 80, motorway 130)
- Parking and stopping regulations
- Pedestrian crossings and school zones
- Seatbelt and child restraint regulations
- Winter tyre requirements and tread depth
- Warning triangle and hazard light usage
- Vehicle inspection (syn) requirements
- Accident procedures and reporting
- Klippekort clip system and licence revocation
- Vanvidskørsel (extreme reckless driving) and vehicle confiscation
- Cyclist priority rules when turning right
- Daytime running lights mandatory at all times
- Bridge crossings and wind restrictions (Storebælt, Øresund)
How to Get Your Danish Driving Licence#
From enrolment to full licence — the complete step-by-step process
Enrol at a Driving School (Køreskole)
Register and begin theory instruction
Register at a licensed driving school (køreskole). You must be at least 17 to begin training (since July 2025, 17-year-olds can drive solo in daytime under restricted conditions). Bring your national ID or passport and a medical certificate. Training includes both theory and practical instruction. All learners must attend a licensed driving school — self-study is not permitted in Denmark.
Complete Theory Training
Classroom instruction on traffic rules and Danish-specific topics
Complete the required theory training covering Danish traffic law (færdselsloven), road signs, right-of-way rules, speed limits, cyclist priority, klippekort system, vanvidskørsel rules, and emergency procedures. A mandatory first aid course must also be completed before taking the theory test.
Pass the Theory Test (Teoriprøve)
25 image-based scenarios, 25 minutes, 80% pass mark (20/25)
The digital theory test consists of 25 image-based scenarios on a touchscreen with 3D-rendered images (since Jan 2024). Duration: 25 minutes. Pass mark: 80% (20/25 correct). Fee: DKK 1,750 (booking+test). Available in Danish and English. You can retake after a waiting period if you fail.
Complete Practical Driving Training
Learn driving skills including motorway and night driving
Practical training includes basic vehicle control, parking, lane changes, roundabout navigation, motorway driving, and night driving. Denmark has mandatory modules covering motorway merging, cyclist awareness, and emergency braking. Training typically involves 20+ hours of practical instruction.
Pass the Practical Driving Test (Køreprøve)
45-minute test, DKK 1,600 fee
The practical driving test lasts approximately 45 minutes and costs DKK 1,600 (government fee + vehicle rental). It evaluates your ability to drive safely in real traffic, including observation, signalling, lane discipline, speed management, cyclist awareness, and hazard perception. Tests are conducted on public roads.
Receive Your Driving Licence (Kørekort)
Valid 15 years for categories A and B
Upon passing both tests, your licence is issued. Category A/B licences are valid for 15 years; categories C/D for 5 years with medical requirements. Since July 2025, new drivers under 18 receive a restricted licence allowing solo daytime driving only. All new drivers are subject to the stricter klippekort rules (2 clips = revocation) for the first 3 years.
Denmark Driving Licence Fees#
Total cost typically DKK 20,000–25,000 (~€2,700–3,400) including driving school, tests, and licence
Costs vary significantly by driving school and region. Copenhagen and major cities tend to be at the higher end. The number of additional lessons needed varies greatly between learners. Exchange rate context: approximately DKK 1 ≈ €0.13 / $0.14 USD (March 2026). Total approximately €2,700–3,400.
Licence Categories & Minimum Age
AM — Moped
15 years — mopeds up to 45 km/h
15
years
A — Motorcycle (progressive)
18 years — via progressive access (A1 → A2 → A)
18
years
B — Car
17 years (restricted, solo daytime since Jul 2025), 18 unrestricted
17
years
C/D — Truck/Bus
21 years — heavy goods and passenger transport
21
years
Licence Validity
Standard validity period
Medical check required at renewal
Klippekort System
- 3 clips in 3 years = unconditional licence revocation
- New drivers (first 3 years): only 2 clips = revocation
- Each clip triggers a conditional licence revocation warning
- Clips are recorded on your driving record for 3 years
- After revocation, a new driving test is required to regain licence
Foreign Licence Conversion
- EU/EEA licences: valid in Denmark, voluntary exchange available
- Non-EU licences: must convert within 90 days of establishing residence
- Conversion requires theory and practical tests for most non-EU licences
- Some bilateral agreements allow simplified conversion
- International Driving Permit (IDP) accepted for short-term visitors
- All conversions require a valid medical certificate
- Apply through borger.dk or your local municipality
- Nordic licences (Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland) automatically recognised
Speed Limits in Denmark#
As per the Road Traffic Act (Færdselsloven) — all speeds in km/h
Denmark has straightforward speed limits: 50 km/h in urban areas, 80 km/h on rural roads, and 130 km/h on motorways. Variable electronic signs adjust limits in real-time based on weather and traffic conditions on major motorways. Speed enforcement uses both fixed cameras (streknings-ATK on some stretches) and mobile police patrols. Speeding fines start at DKK 1,200 and escalate sharply. Exceeding the limit by 30%+ earns a clip on the klippekort. All fines carry an additional DKK 500 Offerfonden (victim fund) surcharge.
| Road Type | Cars | Trucks | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Urban Roads | 50 | 50 | 30 km/h in some residential/school zones |
| Rural Roads | 80 | 80 | Standard outside built-up areas |
| Motorways | 130 | 80 | 130 km/h for cars; 80 km/h for heavy trucks |
Urban Roads
50
Cars
50
Trucks
30 km/h in some residential/school zones
Rural Roads
80
Cars
80
Trucks
Standard outside built-up areas
Motorways
130
Cars
80
Trucks
130 km/h for cars; 80 km/h for heavy trucks
Variable speed signs on major motorways may reduce limits during poor weather or congestion. Speeding fines: DKK 1,200+ for minor violations, escalating sharply. 30%+ over = 1 klippekort clip. 100%+ over or >200 km/h = vanvidskørsel (vehicle confiscation). All fines carry +DKK 500 Offerfonden surcharge.
Traffic Fines & Penalties#
Denmark’s klippekort system and vanvidskørsel law mean severe consequences for serious violations
Denmark uses a combination of fixed fines and the klippekort (“clip card”) system. Serious violations earn clips — 3 clips in 3 years means licence revocation (2 for new drivers). The vanvidskørsel law (enacted 2021) allows police to confiscate and auction vehicles for extreme offences: driving 100%+ over the speed limit, exceeding 200 km/h, or driving with BAC above 2.0‰. All fines carry an additional DKK 500 Offerfonden (victim fund) surcharge. DUI fines are uniquely calculated as promille level × monthly gross salary.
| Violation | Fine | Clips | Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speeding — 1–20 km/h over | DKK 1,200 | — | — |
| Speeding — 21–40 km/h over | DKK 2,000–3,000 | — | — |
| Speeding — 41–60 km/h over | DKK 4,000–6,000 | — | — |
| Speeding — 30%+ over limit | Fine + 1 clip | 1 clip | Klippekort |
| Phone use while driving | DKK 2,000 | 1 clip | Klippekort |
| Running a red light | DKK 2,000 | 1 clip | Klippekort |
| No seatbelt | DKK 2,000 | — | — |
| Tailgating (insufficient distance) | DKK 2,000 | 1 clip | Klippekort |
| DUI (over 0.5‰) | Promille × monthly salary | — | Income-proportional |
| Vanvidskørsel (100%+ over / >200 km/h / BAC >2.0‰) | Vehicle confiscation + auction | — | Vehicle confiscated + auctioned |
| Inadequate winter tyres in poor conditions | DKK 1,000/tyre | — | Since 2025 |
| All fines: Offerfonden surcharge | +DKK 500 | — | Applies to all fines |
Speeding — 1–20 km/h over
Speeding — 21–40 km/h over
Speeding — 41–60 km/h over
Speeding — 30%+ over limit
Phone use while driving
Running a red light
No seatbelt
Tailgating (insufficient distance)
DUI (over 0.5‰)
Vanvidskørsel (100%+ over / >200 km/h / BAC >2.0‰)
Inadequate winter tyres in poor conditions
All fines: Offerfonden surcharge
The klippekort assigns clips for: phone use (1 clip), red light (1 clip), tailgating (1 clip), speeding 30%+ over (1 clip). 3 clips in 3 years = licence revocation; 2 clips for new drivers. Vanvidskørsel (enacted March 2021): police confiscate and auction the vehicle for extreme reckless driving. DUI fines = promille × monthly gross salary (e.g., 1.2‰ with DKK 30,000 salary = DKK 36,000). All fines include +DKK 500 Offerfonden.
Know these rules before your theory test
Traffic fines, speed limits, BAC rules, klippekort clips, and vanvidskørsel are frequently tested in the Færdselsstyrelsen theory exam. Practice with real exam-style questions.
Start Practising FreeImportant Driving Rules in Denmark
Drive on the Right
Denmark drives on the right side of the road. Overtake only on the left. At roundabouts, traffic already in the roundabout has priority unless otherwise signed. Left-hand drive vehicles are standard.
BAC Limit 0.05% (0.5‰)
The blood alcohol limit is 0.05% (0.5‰). Since July 2025, new drivers (first 3 years) face a stricter 0.02% (0.2‰) limit. DUI fines are calculated as promille × monthly gross salary. BAC above 2.0‰ triggers vanvidskørsel vehicle confiscation.
Klippekort Clip System
Serious violations earn clips: phone use, red light, tailgating, speeding 30%+ over. 3 clips in 3 years = unconditional licence revocation. New drivers: only 2 clips allowed. Each clip is a serious warning that stays on your record for 3 years.
Cyclist Priority When Turning Right
Drivers must yield to cyclists when turning right at intersections. Denmark has extensive cycling infrastructure with dedicated cycle lanes. Failure to yield to cyclists is a serious offence. Always check mirrors and blind spots for cyclists before turning.
Vanvidskørsel — Vehicle Confiscation
Since March 2021, police can confiscate and auction your vehicle for extreme reckless driving: driving 100%+ over the speed limit, exceeding 200 km/h, or BAC above 2.0‰. This applies even if the vehicle belongs to someone else. The law was introduced to deter the most dangerous driving behaviour.
Daytime Running Lights Mandatory
Dipped headlights or daytime running lights must be used at all times while driving, day and night, year-round. This applies to all vehicles. Failure to use lights carries a fine.
Winter Tyres — Condition-Based
Winter tyres are NOT mandatory by date in Denmark, but since 2025 you face a DKK 1,000/tyre fine for driving with inadequate tyres in poor winter conditions. Studded tyres are allowed November 1 to April 15. Always fit appropriate tyres for conditions.
Phone Use Prohibited
Using a handheld mobile phone while driving is prohibited. Fine: DKK 2,000 + DKK 500 Offerfonden + 1 klippekort clip. Only hands-free systems are permitted. This is one of the most commonly enforced offences.
Bridge Tolls — Storebælt & Øresund
The Storebælt (Great Belt) bridge connecting Zealand and Funen charges tolls (DKK 260 for cars). The Øresund bridge to Sweden also requires payment. Electronic toll collection (BroBizz) is available for frequent users. Wind restrictions may close bridges temporarily.
Common Road Hazards in Denmark
~137 road fatalities in 2025 — know these hazards to stay safe on Danish roads
Coastal Wind
Denmark is flat and exposed to strong winds, especially along the North Sea coast and on bridges. Crosswinds can push vehicles off course, particularly on the Storebælt and Øresund bridges. Wind restrictions may temporarily close bridges. Reduce speed and maintain a firm grip on the steering wheel in windy conditions.
Cyclists
Denmark is one of the world’s leading cycling nations with extensive cycle lane infrastructure. Drivers must always yield to cyclists when turning right. Cyclists may be in blind spots, especially at intersections. Extra vigilance is required in cities like Copenhagen where cycling is a primary transport mode.
Bridge Crossings
Denmark has major bridge crossings (Storebælt, Øresund, Limfjord) with specific hazards including crosswinds, reduced visibility in fog, and sudden traffic slowdowns. Variable speed signs adjust limits based on conditions. Bridges may close entirely during extreme weather.
Winter Ice
Danish winters bring ice on roads, including black ice (sort is) that is nearly invisible. While winter tyres are not mandatory by date, inadequate tyres in icy conditions carry DKK 1,000/tyre fines since 2025. Stopping distances can be significantly longer. Reduce speed and increase following distance.
Wildlife
Deer are the primary wildlife hazard on Danish roads, particularly on rural roads at dawn and dusk. Denmark records several thousand deer-vehicle collisions annually. Watch for wildlife warning signs, especially in forested areas of Jutland and Zealand.
Motorway Merging
Danish motorways see heavy traffic around Copenhagen, Aarhus, and Odense. Merging and lane changes require careful attention. Traffic congestion can build rapidly, especially during rush hours and holiday periods. Variable speed signs help manage flow but sudden stops occur.
Denmark’s 5 Regions
Denmark has 5 administrative regions, each with driving services and test centres
| Region | Centre | Population |
|---|---|---|
| Hovedstaden | Hillerød | 1.9M |
| Sjælland | Sorø | 840K |
| Syddanmark | Vejle | 1.2M |
| Midtjylland | Viborg | 1.3M |
| Nordjylland | Aalborg | 590K |
Hovedstaden
Hillerød · 1.9M
Sjælland
Sorø · 840K
Syddanmark
Vejle · 1.2M
Midtjylland
Viborg · 1.3M
Nordjylland
Aalborg · 590K
Danish driving rules and traffic law apply uniformly across all 5 regions. Færdselsstyrelsen operates test centres in major cities across the country. Driving school availability varies — Copenhagen, Aarhus, Odense, and Aalborg have the most options. A licence obtained in any region is valid nationwide.
Emergency Numbers
All available 24/7. 112 is the emergency number for police, fire, and ambulance.
112
Emergency (Police, Fire, Ambulance)
114
Non-Emergency Police
Common Misconceptions About Driving in Denmark#
Myth: Winter tyres are mandatory in Denmark
Fact: Winter tyres are NOT mandatory by date in Denmark, unlike in many Nordic countries. However, since 2025, you face a DKK 1,000 per tyre fine for driving with inadequate tyres in poor winter conditions. Studded tyres are permitted from November 1 to April 15.
Myth: Vanvidskørsel only affects the driver’s own vehicle
Fact: The vanvidskørsel law allows confiscation even if the vehicle belongs to someone else — a spouse, parent, employer, or rental company. The vehicle owner may seek compensation from the driver, but the vehicle is still confiscated and auctioned.
Myth: DUI fines are the same for everyone
Fact: Danish DUI fines are calculated as promille level × monthly gross salary. For example, someone earning DKK 30,000 caught at 1.2‰ pays DKK 36,000. This means the fine scales proportionally with income, similar to (but simpler than) Finnish day-fines.
Myth: The theory test is only available in Danish
Fact: Since 2024, the Danish theory test is available in English as well as Danish. The test uses 3D-rendered images on a digital touchscreen, replacing the older photo-based format.
Myth: Speed cameras are rare in Denmark
Fact: Denmark has an extensive network of fixed speed cameras and regularly deploys mobile police speed checks. Some motorway stretches use average speed cameras (streknings-ATK). Speeding 30%+ over the limit earns a klippekort clip, and extreme speeding triggers vanvidskørsel.
Myth: You must be 18 to drive in Denmark
Fact: Since July 2025, 17-year-olds can obtain a restricted licence allowing solo daytime driving. The full unrestricted licence still requires being 18. Previously, all drivers had to be 18.
Vanvidskørsel law — vehicle confiscation for extreme reckless driving
The vanvidskørsel law came into force, allowing police to confiscate and auction vehicles used in extreme reckless driving: 100%+ over the speed limit, exceeding 200 km/h, or BAC above 2.0‰. Denmark became one of the first countries to implement such strict measures.
Digital theory test — touchscreen with 3D-rendered images
The theory test was modernised with a digital touchscreen interface using 3D-rendered images, replacing the older photo-based format. This provides more realistic and consistent scenario presentations across all test centres.
English theory test option introduced
The theory test became available in English in addition to Danish, making the driving licence process more accessible to international residents and expats. This was a significant change as the test was previously Danish-only.
17-year-old solo daytime driving and 0.02‰ new driver BAC
Two major changes: 17-year-olds can now obtain a restricted licence allowing solo daytime driving (previously required being 18). Additionally, new drivers in their first 3 years now face a stricter 0.02‰ BAC limit, down from the standard 0.5‰.
Winter tyre condition-based fines — DKK 1,000/tyre
While winter tyres remain non-mandatory by date, a new DKK 1,000 per tyre fine was introduced for driving with inadequate tyres in poor winter conditions. This gives police enforcement power without mandating specific tyre-change dates.
How Denmark Compares Globally#
Denmark driving regulations compared to other countries — data compiled from official government sources
| Parameter | Denmark | Norway | Sweden | Finland | Germany |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAC Limit | 0.05% | 0.02% | 0.02% | 0.05% | 0.05% |
| Min. Age (Car) | 17/18 | 18 | 18 | 18 | 17/18 |
| Driving Side | Right | Right | Right | Right | Right |
| Highway Speed | 130 | 110 | 120 | 120 | No limit* |
| Test Questions | 25 | 45 | 70 | 70 | 30 MCQ |
| Licence Cost | DKK 20–25K | NOK 25–50K | SEK 15–25K | €1.2–3K | €2–3.5K |
| Road Deaths/yr | ~137 | 87 | ~208 | ~180 | 2,839 |
| Deaths/100K | ~2.3 | ~1.6 | ~2.0 | ~3.2 | ~3.4 |
Denmark 0.05% (0.02% new drivers since Jul 2025). Norway and Sweden 0.02%. Finland and Germany 0.05%. Denmark’s DUI fine = promille × monthly salary.
17 restricted (since Jul 2025), 18 unrestricted. Norway 18, Sweden 18, Finland 18, Germany 17 (accompanied)/18.
Denmark 130, Norway 110, Sweden 120, Finland 120 (summer), Germany no limit* on Autobahn.
Denmark ~€2.7–3.4K. Norway NOK 25–50K (~€2.2–4.5K). Sweden SEK 15–25K (~€1.3–2.2K). Finland €1.2–3K. Germany €2–3.5K.
~2.3 per 100K. Norway 87 (~1.6/100K). Sweden ~208 (~2.0/100K). Finland ~180 (~3.2/100K). Germany 2,839 (~3.4/100K).
Road deaths: Denmark ~137 (Vejdirektoratet 2025), Norway 87 (SSB 2025), Sweden ~208 (Trafikanalys 2025), Finland ~180 (Liikenneturva 2025), Germany 2,839 (Destatis 2025). Per-100K rates calculated from national population data. *Germany has no general speed limit on certain Autobahn sections.
Sources & Methodology
Primary Sources
- Færdselsstyrelsen — Driving licences, theory tests, transport regulation — Danish Road Safety Agency (fstyr.dk)
- Politi — Traffic enforcement, DUI penalties, klippekort administration — Danish Police (politi.dk)
- Vejdirektoratet — Road safety statistics, motorway management, speed limits — Danish Road Directorate (vejdirektoratet.dk)
- Sikkertrafik — Road safety awareness, statistics, educational campaigns — Danish Road Safety Council (sikkertrafik.dk)
- Retsinformation — Færdselsloven (Road Traffic Act) and regulations — Danish Legal Information (retsinformation.dk)
- ETSC — European road safety benchmarking and PIN programme — European Transport Safety Council (etsc.eu)
Verification Methodology
Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:
- Primary data collected from official Færdselsstyrelsen publications, the Færdselsloven (via retsinformation.dk), and Danish Police statistics
- Cross-verified against Vejdirektoratet, Sikkertrafik, and ETSC reports
- National regulations apply uniformly across all 5 regions — no regional variations in traffic law
- Page reviewed and fact-checked on March 27, 2026
If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a Danish driving licence cost?
What is the theory test format?
What are the speed limits in Denmark?
What is the BAC limit?
What is the klippekort system?
What is vanvidskørsel?
Are winter tyres mandatory in Denmark?
What are the emergency numbers?
Can 17-year-olds drive in Denmark?
Can I drive with a foreign licence in Denmark?
What is the fine for using a phone while driving?
How long is a Danish driving licence valid?
How are DUI fines calculated?
What are the penalties for running a red light?
Do I need to yield to cyclists?
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Data sourced from Færdselsstyrelsen (fstyr.dk), Danish Police (politi.dk), Vejdirektoratet (vejdirektoratet.dk), and Sikkertrafik (sikkertrafik.dk).
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