CuisineSmørrebrød
Price$$
Neighbourhoodindre-by
Why locals love it: Open since 1894 a stone's throw from the Royal Palace, Sankt Annæ remains a working-Danes smørrebrød lunch spot rather than a tourist set piece.
Tip: Tuesday to Saturday lunch only. Walk-ins easier after 14:00.
Location
Address: Sankt Annæ Plads 12, 1250 København K, Copenhagen
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Why locals love it: Small basement on Møllegade in Nørrebro; no sign and no reservations. Locals know it as the entry-price natural wine bar a short walk north of Nørrebrogade.
Tip: Walk-in only; turn up early or after 22:00 when the after-dinner crowd thins.
Why locals love it: Out at Refshaleøen's industrial fringe, the Lille kitchen reads more local-bake than tourist haunt despite being top-10 on the Opinionated About Dining cheap-eats list 2025.
Tip: Wednesday is the freshest viennoiserie. Pair with Mikkeller Baghaven next door.
Why locals love it: Copenhagen's oldest working bakery has been on Sankt Peders Stræde since the 17th century but the Wednesday cinnamon roll keeps the queue local, not tourist-led.
Tip: The onsdagssnegl only bakes on Wednesday. Closed weekends.
Why locals love it: Tucked on Wildersgade in Christianshavn since 1984, the corner-canal room is a local lunch fixture that tourist itineraries skip in favour of glossier Nyhavn cafes.
Tip: The terrace gets the morning sun. Lunch runs daily; book on the website for Saturday.
Why locals love it: The Rosforth & Rosforth wine bar hides behind a discreet door on the inner harbour; almost no signage from the street, but the by-the-glass natural list is one of the city's best.
Tip: Closed Sunday. The harbour terrace seats fill on warm evenings; arrive by 17:30.
Why locals love it: Apollo Bar tucks behind Kunsthal Charlottenborg's main gallery on Nyhavn; the cobbled courtyard kantine is invisible from the busy Nyhavn quay 30 metres away.
Tip: Daytime cafe, evening wine bar (Thu-Sat). The courtyard seats are the summer pick.
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