· updated monthly
The five schools Denmark parents researched most this year, chosen from the 31 international schools in the country. Ranked by how many families opened each school’s profile and spent time reading it between July 2025 and June 2026, then the full picture on curricula, class sizes and fees.
The 2026 ranking
Ranked purely by parent interest — the number of families who opened each school’s profile and spent time reading it between July 2025 and June 2026.
The International - Academy and Boarding School of Denmark is a Cambridge IGCSE provision for learners aged 14 to 17, hosted at Campus Vedersø in West Jutland. All classes are taught in English, and the school has been a Cambridge-certified centre since 2016. Students follow an international Cambridge IGCSE curriculum with eight subjects at a high level, including Cambridge English, Cambridge Math, Cambridge Global Perspectives, Cambridge Combined Science, and Cambridge Enterprise, plus Cambridge German, Spanish, French and Danish. Danish FP10 is available as a supplement to Cambridge examinations. A varied timetable combines core subjects with sport, arts and other electives, enabling tailored study pathways alongside Danish language studies. The school shares facilities with Vedersø Idrætsefterskole, offering a lively campus programme where students mingle weekly. Profile electives include sport and performing arts such as Dance, Badminton, Surfing and E-sport. A well-being mentor supports students, and trips enrich learning within efterskole tradition.
Copenhagen International School (CIS) is a private, day international school in Copenhagen that serves ages 3 to 18. It delivers all three IB programmes—PYP, MYP and DP—alongside an American high school diploma, with English as the language of instruction and Danish taught within the curriculum. English as an Additional Language support helps learners access the programmes, and Danish language studies prepare students for national tests and continued Danish study in the Diploma Programme. The school is an IB World School accredited by NEASC for the full IB continuum and the U.S. diploma. The Nordhavn campus spans about 25,000 square metres, housing four towers and capacity for around 1,200 students. Facilities include a theatre, two rooftop greenhouses, multiple music rooms, three gyms and dedicated spaces for design, ceramics and visual arts. CIS also provides extensive after‑school activities, a Mother Tongue Program and Service Learning tied to global goals for students worldwide.
Herlufsholm Skole is a Denmark-based boarding school for students aged 11 to 18, and the oldest boarding school in the country, founded in 1565. The school combines Danish Middle School (grades 6–10), the 10th Grade, Danish High School (STX), and Pre-IB with the IB Diploma. The IB Diploma is a two-year, university-preparatory program taught exclusively in English, while Pre-IB strengthens reflective and academic skills to prepare students for IB. In addition to the IB track, the school offers Dutch Curriculum and five fields of study in the High School, supporting multiple university pathways. The campus includes historic Skygningen, a range of boarding houses, and extensive dormitory facilities, with a dedicated well-being team. On-site sporting facilities include a gym and an active extracurricular program with 30+ activities. Round Square conferences, the Exchange Program, and a variety of clubs foster global awareness, leadership, and community involvement, within a sense of tradition and belonging.
Rygaards International School is a co-educational school in Denmark offering an English-language curriculum for students aged 4 to 16. In the Primary School, pupils follow the English National Curriculum with a Cambridge framework for English, Maths and Science, alongside Danish language outcomes and Danish as a Second Language. In the Secondary School, students study a broad subject-by-subject programme, moving to IGCSE/GCSE courses such as English Language and Literature, Mathematics, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, History, German and Spanish, with additional options including Global Perspective and GCSE Astronomy. Danish language strands run throughout the curriculum. The school traces its roots to 1909 and now welcomes over 1,000 students from around 80 nationalities, offering a Learning Resource Center, two science laboratories, two art rooms, two music rooms, and dual gymnasiums on a campus. Extracurriculars include Scenekunst, Robotics and Debate clubs, Duke of Edinburgh programme, and well-being framework recognized with the WAS award in 2024.
Odense International School is the international department of Henriette Hørlücks Skole in Denmark, delivering Cambridge curriculum for primary through secondary, including IGCSE, and taught in English. The school welcomes students aged 4 to 16 from more than 40 nations. Primary follows the Cambridge International Curriculum with cross-curricular projects, Danish instruction, and Danish language support; French begins in Upper Primary (Grade 6). Upper Secondary leads to IGCSE in Secondary 10 and 11, with Cambridge ICE awarded for seven passed subjects when criteria are met. The campus features a design and technology makerspace, 3D printing, laser cutting, and science labs renovated in 2020; CleverTouch smart boards in all classrooms; KUBO, LEGO WeDo, LEGO MINDSTORMS and micro:bits support coding and robotics. Enrolment includes field trips, clubs such as Model United Nations from Secondary 8, and After-School program. Students may continue to the IB Diploma, Danish high school, or Danish vocational pathways after IGCSE.
What’s on offer
The mix of programmes and teaching languages across all 31 schools. Many offer more than one curriculum, so totals run higher than the school count.
Number of schools teaching each curriculum.
Number of schools teaching in each language.
Size & classes
School size and class size shape day-to-day experience as much as curriculum does.
Schools grouped by total enrolment.
Average school size is 535 students · based on the 17 schools that report enrolment.
Schools grouped by typical class size.
Average class size is 20.7 students · based on the 11 schools that report it.
What it costs
Fees shown are one year for a 12-year-old (or the closest age available), excluding one-time enrolment costs.
Across the 17 schools that publish a price for a 12-year-old. All figures in DKK.
How many schools sit in each annual-fee range.
Tell Doris your budget, your child’s age and what matters most — we will shortlist the right schools in Denmark, free and impartial.