Copenhagen vs Rome: cost, quality of life, and the winner
Copenhagen (composite 5.6) vs Rome (composite 5.6). Side-by-side on affordability, quality of life, remote-work friendliness and healthcare — with the calculation behind each score.
Composite scores
Overall: Copenhagen wins by 0.0 points
Copenhagen and Rome tie at 5.6, but Copenhagen edges ahead on the decision algorithm—a statistical dead heat that masks fundamentally different urban personalities.
Most city rankings favor either Rome's historical density or Copenhagen's livability systems, yet they score identically here, revealing how metrics can obscure rather than clarify.
Ignore the tie and pick based on what you actually value: medieval streets and art, or bike infrastructure and social welfare—the numbers won't decide this for you.
Score-by-score, side-by-side
Each axis is scored independently with disclosed weights and a calculation string.
| Axis | Copenhagen | Rome | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Affordability | 1.8 | 3.4 | Rome +1.6 |
| Quality of life | 7.9 | 6.2 | Copenhagen +1.7 |
| Remote-work friendliness | 5.2 | 4.7 | Copenhagen +0.5 |
| Healthcare | 7.6 | 8.2 | Rome +0.6 |
Each axis is a weighted aggregate of underlying indicators normalized to a 0–10 scale. Weights are explicit and disclosed per axis. The composite is the unweighted mean of the four axes — axes are not collapsed further because the underlying trade-offs (e.g. low cost vs poor air quality) are user-dependent.
Affordability
- Cost-of-living index (weight 60%)88
- Rent index (weight 40%)72
How this is calculated
Affordability = ((100 − costIndex)/100 × 0.6 + (100 − rentIndex)/100 × 0.4) × 10. For Copenhagen: ((100 − 88)/100 × 0.6 + (100 − 72)/100 × 0.4) × 10 = 1.8.
Copenhagen is among the more expensive cities tracked. Salary expectations should be calibrated to the high cost base before relocating.
Quality of life
- Safety index (weight 40%)75
- Healthcare index (weight 35%)83
- Air quality index (weight 25%)78
How this is calculated
QoL = (safety/100 × 0.4 + healthcare/100 × 0.35 + airQuality/100 × 0.25) × 10. For Copenhagen: (75/100 × 0.4 + 83/100 × 0.35 + 78/100 × 0.25) × 10 = 7.9.
Copenhagen scores good on safety, excellent on healthcare and good on air. The composite quality-of-life signal is strong.
Remote-work friendliness
- Internet (median Mbps) (weight 45%)200 Mbps
- Effective income tax (lower = better) (weight 30%)37.0%
- Cost-of-living (lower = better) (weight 25%)88
How this is calculated
RemoteWork = (min(Mbps/300, 1) × 0.45 + (1 − incomeTax) × 0.3 + (100 − costIndex)/100 × 0.25) × 10. For Copenhagen: (min(200/300, 1) × 0.45 + (1 − 0.37) × 0.3 + (100 − 88)/100 × 0.25) × 10 = 5.2.
Copenhagen works for remote work but isn't optimized for it: internet 200 Mbps, income tax 37%, cost index 88.
Healthcare
- Healthcare quality index (weight 70%)83
- Healthcare out-of-pocket / month (lower = better) (weight 30%)200
How this is calculated
Healthcare = (qualityIndex/100 × 0.7 + max(0, 1 − OOP/500) × 0.3) × 10. For Copenhagen: (83/100 × 0.7 + max(0, 1 − 200/500) × 0.3) × 10 = 7.6.
Copenhagen combines excellent system quality with a manageable out-of-pocket cost (~200 DKK/month). Travel insurance still recommended for non-residents.
Each axis is a weighted aggregate of underlying indicators normalized to a 0–10 scale. Weights are explicit and disclosed per axis. The composite is the unweighted mean of the four axes — axes are not collapsed further because the underlying trade-offs (e.g. low cost vs poor air quality) are user-dependent.
Affordability
- Cost-of-living index (weight 60%)75
- Rent index (weight 40%)52
How this is calculated
Affordability = ((100 − costIndex)/100 × 0.6 + (100 − rentIndex)/100 × 0.4) × 10. For Rome: ((100 − 75)/100 × 0.6 + (100 − 52)/100 × 0.4) × 10 = 3.4.
Rome is among the more expensive cities tracked. Salary expectations should be calibrated to the high cost base before relocating.
Quality of life
- Safety index (weight 40%)55
- Healthcare index (weight 35%)78
- Air quality index (weight 25%)52
How this is calculated
QoL = (safety/100 × 0.4 + healthcare/100 × 0.35 + airQuality/100 × 0.25) × 10. For Rome: (55/100 × 0.4 + 78/100 × 0.35 + 52/100 × 0.25) × 10 = 6.2.
Rome has a mixed quality profile. Safety: good; healthcare: good; air: fair. Weigh the weakest axis against your personal priorities.
Remote-work friendliness
- Internet (median Mbps) (weight 45%)120 Mbps
- Effective income tax (lower = better) (weight 30%)25.0%
- Cost-of-living (lower = better) (weight 25%)75
How this is calculated
RemoteWork = (min(Mbps/300, 1) × 0.45 + (1 − incomeTax) × 0.3 + (100 − costIndex)/100 × 0.25) × 10. For Rome: (min(120/300, 1) × 0.45 + (1 − 0.25) × 0.3 + (100 − 75)/100 × 0.25) × 10 = 4.7.
Rome works for remote work but isn't optimized for it: internet 120 Mbps, income tax 25%, cost index 75.
Healthcare
- Healthcare quality index (weight 70%)78
- Healthcare out-of-pocket / month (lower = better) (weight 30%)40
How this is calculated
Healthcare = (qualityIndex/100 × 0.7 + max(0, 1 − OOP/500) × 0.3) × 10. For Rome: (78/100 × 0.7 + max(0, 1 − 40/500) × 0.3) × 10 = 8.2.
Rome combines good system quality with a manageable out-of-pocket cost (~40 EUR/month). Travel insurance still recommended for non-residents.
Monthly cost delta: Copenhagen vs Rome
Normalized to DKK at 1 EUR = 7.4600 DKK.
| Category | Copenhagen | Rome | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| housing | DKK 12,500 | €1,300 | -22% |
| food | DKK 3,500 | €400 | -15% |
| transport | DKK 470 | €35 | -44% |
| utilities | DKK 1,200 | €170 | +6% |
| leisure | DKK 3,000 | €350 | -13% |
| healthcare | DKK 200 | €40 | +49% |
Where each city's money goes
Two cities can have the same monthly total but very different shapes — one might burn 50% on housing while the other splits more evenly. The composition matters as much as the headline.
The biggest shape difference is housing: Copenhagen spends 3.2 percentage points more of its budget on it (60% vs. 57%). If you're sensitive to that category, weight the per-axis scores accordingly.
Salary equivalence: Copenhagen ↔ Rome
What earning the same purchasing power costs in each city. Cost-adjusted using the local cost-of-living index (Copenhagen = 88, Rome = 75); currency-converted at 1 EUR = 7.4600 DKK. Tax differences are not modeled.
| Copenhagen gross | Rome equivalent |
|---|---|
| DKK 40,000 | €4,570 |
| DKK 75,000 | €8,568 |
| DKK 120,000 | €13,709 |
| Rome gross | Copenhagen equivalent |
|---|---|
| €40,000 | DKK 350,123 |
| €75,000 | DKK 656,480 |
| €120,000 | DKK 1,050,368 |
Equivalence here means same cost-of-living purchasing power, not same net take-home. Effective tax rates differ between countries; a salary equivalent on cost can still net more or less depending on the destination's tax regime. Use the calculator for tax-adjusted figures at a specific lifestyle tier.
Pros and cons
Why pick Copenhagen
- Wins on quality of life (+1.7 points vs Rome).
- Wins on remote-work friendliness (+0.5 points vs Rome).
Why pick Rome
- Wins on affordability (+1.6 points vs Copenhagen).
- Wins on healthcare (+0.6 points vs Copenhagen).
Copenhagen trade-offs
- Trails Rome on affordability by 1.6 points.
- Trails Rome on healthcare by 0.6 points.
Rome trade-offs
- Trails Copenhagen on quality of life by 1.7 points.
- Trails Copenhagen on remote-work friendliness by 0.5 points.
Who should choose which
The composite winner doesn't always match what matters to you. These four reader profiles weigh the axes differently — find the closest fit.
Single, salaried remote worker, 25-40, optimizing for runway + bandwidth.
Axes scored: affordability, remoteWork
Couple with school-age children, prioritizing safety, healthcare, and air quality.
Axes scored: qualityOfLife, healthcare
Fixed income, healthcare-sensitive, prefers low cost and stable infrastructure.
Axes scored: healthcare, qualityOfLife, affordability
Salary stretch matters most. Cuts everything else if it lowers the burn rate.
Axes scored: affordability
Profiles use simple axis averaging — for a deeper read with your own weights, use the per-axis breakdown above.
Going deeper
Visa landscape for both countries — and case studies that touch this corridor.
Tools that work for either choice
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How this page is calculated
Data sources
- Mundevo per-city dataset. Cost basket, rent index, safety, healthcare, air quality and median internet for both cities. Reference date: 2026-05-28 (Copenhagen) and 2026-05-28 (Rome).
- FX rate. 1 EUR = 7.4600 DKK, used to normalize cost baskets.
- CityScoreCalculator. Four axes (Affordability, Quality of life, Remote work, Healthcare) computed with explicit weights and explanations. See per-axis calculation strings rendered on this page.
- ComparisonService. Per-category cost deltas (housing, food, transport, utilities, leisure, healthcare) normalized to the origin currency.
Update cadence
Data as of . Last reviewed .
Calculation
For each of the four axes we compute an independent 0–10 score using the formulas printed beside each axis. The composite is the unweighted mean of the four axes. The overall winner is the city with the higher composite, unless the margin is under 0.05 points — in which case Copenhagen is shown first as a tiebreaker to keep results stable.
Limitations
- Climate is not scored — we don't yet hold a maintained climate dataset, so weather-driven preferences are not modeled.
- Tax differences between cities in the same country are not modeled (Spain and Germany don't have material regional differences for this dataset).
- Indices are population-level. Personal cost varies with neighborhood, employer benefits and family status.
- Quality-of-life axis weights (safety 0.4 / healthcare 0.35 / air 0.25) are editorial defaults — readers with strong preferences should re-weight manually.
Frequently asked questions
Copenhagen vs Rome: which is cheaper?
Rome is roughly 18% cheaper than Copenhagen on the monthly cost basket (housing, food, transport, utilities, healthcare). Copenhagen has cost index 88 vs Rome at 75 (both with New York = 100).
Which city has better quality of life?
Copenhagen scores 5.6/10 on the Mundevo composite versus Rome at 5.6/10. The composite weights safety (40%), healthcare (35%) and air quality (25%). Copenhagen wins overall by 0.0 points.
Is Copenhagen or Rome better for remote work?
Copenhagen has 200 Mbps median internet vs Rome at 120 Mbps. The four-axis decision rubric on this page (affordability, quality of life, remote work, healthcare) gives a per-dimension breakdown rather than a single answer.