🏛️ Museums (Culture + Changing Tables)
- National Museum of Denmark (Nationalmuseet) – Family toilets with changing tables sit just behind the information desk on the ground floor. Check the floor-plan icon marked “baby changing.”
- Statens Museum for Kunst (SMK) – All public restrooms include changing stations, and you may feed your baby anywhere in the galleries.
- Designmuseum Danmark – Freshly renovated and stroller-friendly; diaper facilities are next to the foyer toilets.
🛍️ Department Stores & Malls
- Magasin du Nord – Level 5 hosts a spacious “family room” with changing tables, microwave, kids’ corner and plenty of high chairs.
- Illum – Follow signs for Puslerum on the 4th floor; the room is big enough to wheel in a pram and includes its own toilet and sink.
- Fisketorvet – Copenhagen Mall – Multiple toilets are equipped with changing tables; the dedicated “Baby Lounge” has extra space and a quiet breastfeeding nook.
- Field’s (Ørestad) – Listed services include a baby-care area, stroller loans and wide family parking bays.
🚉 Transport Hubs
- Copenhagen Central Station – The main-hall restrooms include baby-changing facilities—handy for early-morning arrivals when little else is open.
🌞 Outdoor & Street-Food Spots
- Reffen Street Food Market – Disabled toilets (ask at BnW Bar for the key) and the indoor Werkstatt building both contain changing tables.
💡 Practical Tips & Nice-to-Knows
- The Danish word you need on signage is “Puslerum” (changing room) or simply look for the diaper icon.
- Most chain cafés—and many independent ones near playgrounds—offer a changing table, but it’s polite to ask when you arrive.
- Large S-train and Metro stations have accessible toilets that double as ad-hoc changing areas; keep a 2 DKK coin handy for older coin-operated doors.
- Taking a day-trip to Aarhus? The waterfront culture hub Dokk1 has dedicated breastfeeding and baby-changing areas that set the gold standard.
Happy exploring, and may every nappy change be swift and drama-free!
