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DANISH TRADITIONS

What’s open and what’s closed on May 1st in Denmark?

May 1st, or Labour Day, is widely celebrated in Denmark, with a large proportion of the workforce joining marches and attending political speeches across the country. But it's not a public holiday, so what's open and what's closed?

What's open and what's closed on May 1st in Denmark?
With this many people off work in Denmark on May 1st, what's still open? Photo: Emil Nicolai Helms/Ritzau Scanpix

International Workers’ Day, or Labour Day, is an occasion keenly celebrated by thousands across Denmark, a country known for its social democratic traditions.

In Denmark, the state does not give you the day off on May 1st like in other countries including Sweden and Norway. In other words, it’s not a public holiday like Christmas Day, Ascension Day or Maundy Thursday, for example.

You could be forgiven for thinking that May 1st is a national day off if, for example, you pass by Fælledparken in Copenhagen on Labour Day. You’ll see huge gatherings of workers carrying banners, people gathering to eat and drink, and major speeches by both union leaders and politicians.

Many workers in Denmark do in fact have the right to a half or full day off on May 1st, provided by the collective bargaining system, the Danish labour model on which working terms are negotiated and agreed between trade unions and employers’ confederations.

But what does this mean for operating hours at businesses and services across the country?

What’s closed?

Labour Day-related closures are arguably most common in sectors like construction and the production industry, where collective bargaining agreements are highly likely to stipulate a May 1st fridag or day off, as described by the Confederation of Danish Industry.

Builders, renovation companies and specialist production industries like carpenters all have the day off on May 1st under collective bargaining agreements, unless they have agreed to overtime on the day.

Social services like home carers are generally entitled to take the day off but can be paid Sunday rates if they work in the afternoon.

Your local borgerservice, the public-facing service desk at your local town hall, will probably be closed because public servants like municipal administrators have the day off. So if you need to pick up a new driving license, for example, leave this errand until later in the week or, in some cases, the beginning of next week.

GPs are generally open, but it’s best to check ahead because employers can choose to close their practices for the day (and thereby require doctors and other staff to use a day of their annual leave).

What’s open?

Childcare institutions like kindergartens and creches (børnehaver and vuggestuer) are not closed on Labour Day, so children can be dropped off at preschool as usual.

Schools are generally open. Last year, 10 of Denmark’s 98 municipalities closed for Labour Day, although both Copenhagen and Aarhus gave kids the day off.

Supermarkets and other shops are not generally closed on May 1st. Denmark is strict with shop opening times, with the Lukkeloven, or closing law, requiring most shops to remain shuttered on holidays, but this doesn’t apply on Labour Day.

Finally, if you are planning to do some sightseeing in Denmark on Labour Day, you’ll find most museums – like the National Gallery of Denmark, for example – treat May 1st as a regular day and remain open as normal. Others, like Museum Østjylland, close – so check ahead before you set out.

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For members

DANISH TRADITIONS

Why is Whit Monday a public holiday in Denmark, but not in Sweden?

People in Denmark have the day off on Whit Monday, but people in Sweden still have to work. Why is this?

Why is Whit Monday a public holiday in Denmark, but not in Sweden?

Whit Monday, also known as Pentecost Monday (Anden pinsedag or pinsemandag in Danish), falls on the day after Pentecost Sunday, marking the seventh Sunday after Easter.

It is a time when Christians commemorate the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples of Jesus, an event described in the Bible.

READ ALSO: Why is Maundy Thursday a holiday in Denmark and Norway but not in Sweden?

Denmark (and Norway’s) head start in axing public holidays

When they were still Catholic counties, Sweden, Denmark and Norway, had far more religious holidays than they do today, with the third and fourth days of Pentecost also holidays. 

But after Denmark’s King Christian III defeated his Roman Catholic rival in 1536, he abolished nearly twice as many public holidays in Denmark as his counterpart Gustav Vasa did in Sweden. 

“Denmark carried out a much more extensive reduction of public holidays in connection with the Reformation,” Göran Malmstedt, a history professor at Gothenburg University, told The Local in February. “In Denmark, the king decided in 1537 that only 16 of the many medieval public holidays would be preserved, while in Sweden almost twice as many public holidays were retained through the decision in the Church Order of 1571.”

So it wasn’t until 1772, that the third and fourth day of Pentecost stopped being holidays in Sweden, when the Enlightenment monarch Gustav III, abolished 20 holidays in den stora helgdöden, or “the big public holiday slaughter”, including Maundy Thursday, which remained a holiday in Denmark and Norway.

Whit Monday, however, survived in all three Scandinavian countries. 

Sweden’s government inquiry

The inquiry launched by Persson’s government also looked at May 1st, Ascension Day and Epiphany as alternative victims of the axe, but in the end settled on Whit Monday, after “all churches and faith associations in Sweden agree that Whit Monday is the least bad church holiday to remove”.

Because Whit Monday always falls on a Monday, whereas June 6th some years falls on a Saturday or Sunday, this means that Swedish workers don’t always get an extra day off for National Day. This is still a source of bitterness for many Swedes.

What next? 

The axing of Whit Monday didn’t mark the end of holiday reform in Scandinavia, however, Great Prayer Day becoming a normal work day on Apr 26th this year. In the run up to the vote in parliament on the abolition in 2023, many arguing Whit Monday should go instead. 

Jakob Brandt, the head of SMVDanmark, which represents small businesses like cafes, argued that Whit Monday had no commercial significance with Christian Friis Bach, an MP for the Social Liberal Party making the same point. 

“There are many more good experiences and traditions which for me are connected with Great Prayer Day, when my mother always baked Great Prayer day buns. On the other hand, I can’t really think of anything connected to Whit Monday,” he told the Kristelig Dagbladet newspaper

Some blame Persson’s decision to deprive the Swedish public of Whit Monday for his defeat in the election in 2006. Will the Danish government’s decision to scrap Store Bededag have the same effect? 

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