How hard is Danish to learn?
The U.S. Foreign Service Institute places Danish in Category I, the easiest tier for English speakers, requiring approximately 600-750 hours of study to reach professional proficiency. This classification reflects genuine structural similarities between the languages, suggesting that English speakers can make substantial progress without facing the steepest learning curves required for more distant languages.
Several linguistic factors support this accessible ranking. Danish uses the familiar Latin alphabet, eliminating the barrier of learning a new writing system. As a fellow Germanic language within the Indo-European family, Danish shares considerable vocabulary with English and maintains comparable grammatical patterns, though it does retain some complexities like grammatical gender and verb conjugations that English has largely simplified. These challenges are manageable compared to the structural differences English speakers encounter with unrelated language families, making Danish a realistic goal for motivated learners.
About Danish
| Native speakers (L1) | 5.5M (approximate — from a per-language infobox) |
|---|---|
| Language family | Indo-European (Germanic) |
| Primary regions | Denmark |
| Writing system | Latin |
Speaker counts, language-family and region data from Wikipedia (Ethnologue figures), licensed CC BY-SA 4.0.
Calculate your study hours →Hours to learn Danish → · How to approach it →
Hours and weeks are the canonical FSI figures for Category I, from the US State Dept FSI list (public domain), verified June 2026. How we compile this — confirm against state.gov on an operator pass before relying on it.