Museum Visitor Numbers in Denmark 2025: Record Levels maintained

Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Museum Visitor Numbers in Denmark 2025: Record Levels maintained

Danish museums have successfully maintained the record visitor levels achieved in 2024, according to the 2025 survey by the Danish Museums Association.

Across the 72 institutions that participated, a total of nine million visits were recorded in 2025, confirming that the surge in cultural engagement seen last year has stabilised rather than peaked.

The survey highlights a broadly positive picture of visitor behaviour. Almost one in three museums reported a rise of more than 10% in visitors compared with 2024. Just over half of all respondents recorded stable attendance, experiencing fluctuations of less than 10%. Meanwhile, 18% of museums reported a notable decline. 

The economic expectations for 2025 mirror the visitor trends. 79% of museums anticipate either breaking even or achieving a surplus in 2025. While this indicates ongoing financial resilience, it represents a small drop compared with 2023, when 88% reported the same outlook. At the same time, 14% of museums expect a significant deficit in 2025, up from 10% in 2023.

This year’s data must be understood within the context of Denmark’s museum reform, which requires state-recognised museums to apply stricter criteria for counting visitors. Under the new guidelines, museums may include only visitors who attend exhibitions or those who participate in professional events where a paid ticket is required.

This means that several previously counted guest categories are no longer included. Visitors attending exhibitions in public spaces, participants in events without ticket fees, and users of outdoor areas, cafés or related facilities are excluded from the official visitor figures. As a result, some museums reporting a “decline” emphasise that the downturn is purely methodological rather than a reflection of actual audience engagement.