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    Statistics on the Danish national grid

    Analyse geographical areas with the Danish national grid, The Danish national grid, which was established by Statistics Denmark and the Danish Geodata Agency, divides the country into thousands of cells, which can be filled with statistics. You can then analyse and aggregate the information in the grid e.g. for use in market analyses, for local planning or for research., Detailed content that is stable over time, The grid is stable over time, unlike administrative divisions such as municipalities, postcodes and parishes. We provide data on grid cells as small as 100 x 100 meter. Provided our requirements for non-identification of individuals or companies can be met (Privacy Requirements). Contact us if you need a different cell size., Below you can see an example of statistics on the grid. The map shows how many people live within each square kilometer (text in Danish only)., Number of inhabitants by 1 square kilometer cells, Attach population statistics to the cells, Statistics Denmark offers several types of statistics on the Danish national grid e.g. by municipalities, regions or the entire country., Statistics on the nighttime population, Here you will find information on the number of households and persons residing within the cells., Documentation - nighttime population, Table example - nighttime population., Statistics on the daytime population, Here you will find information about the number of people staying in the cells during the daytime. You can order two different datasets - one with the number of people in employment and one with the number of students., Documentation - daytime population - employed, Table example - daytime population - employed, Documentation - daytime population - studentst, Table example - daytime population - students, Statistics by other variables, Here you get statistics on the people who reside in the cells of the grid distributed by a number of variables for you to choose. See the overview and read more about standard variables in the documentation document below., List of variables - the Danish national grid, Prices, The Danish National Grid does not cost anything in itself. However, you can find the detailed price list for deliveries of statistics on the grid here:, Pricelist_National_Grid_2025 - English, Privacy Requirements, If you buy statistics from us, we are very careful to comply with the so-called discretionary - or privacy requirements. In practice, this means that we require a certain minimum number of households in each grid cell. The requirements are either 50, 100 or 150 households, depending on the statistical variable you have selected. Cells with a smaller number of households than the minimum requirement must be aggregated with other cells before statistics can be delivered. The merged cells are called clusters. You can read more about how we produce clusters here:, Fact Sheet about clusters, Fact sheet about clusters, You can find the requirements for number of households in the list of variables below:, List of variables - the Danish national grid, Ordering, To order statistics on the Danish National Grid, please click on the button below and fill out the form. We will then prepare an offer that you must approve., ORDER, Contact information, DST Consulting, tel +45 3917 3600, Allan Hansen, tel: +45 3917 3168, Related products, Statistics based on distances or neighbourhoods, Statistics based on roads and streets,  

    https://www.dst.dk/en/TilSalg/produkter/geodata/kvadratnet

    Signing the project proposal

    The project proposal must be approved before a project becomes effective. It takes a signature from both Denmark’s Data Portal and a user with signatory role in your institution. Here you can read how to sign a project proposal and how, as the person responsible for authorisation or a substitute, you assign the role of signatory to users.,  , See the video guide (in Danish) on how to sign a project proposal in the DDP App, When you have submitted your project proposal to Denmark’s Data Portal, an employee will assess whether the proposal can be approved. If Denmark’s Data Portal estimates that the proposal cannot be approved, the contact person for the project will get a reason for the rejection and an opportunity to adjust the proposal., If the project proposal is approved, Denmark’s Data Portal will sign it. Subsequently, the contact person for the project, the administrator or the contact person with powers who submitted the proposal, as well as the chosen signatory will receive an email with information about the approval., When Denmark’s Data Portal has approved the proposal, the person who has been assigned the signatory role in your institution must sign the proposal. Only users who have been assigned the role of signatory can sign project proposals., To sign it, you – as the signatory – log into the DDP App. On the front page, you select “My overview” followed by “Project proposals for signature”. Here you can see all the project proposals that are ready to be signed., Select the project proposal that you want to sign. You can read the project proposal; see who has access to the project, and who is the contact person for the project. If you wish, you can refuse to sign, and then the project proposal is returned to the contact person for revision., If you want to sign the project proposal, you select the button “Sign”. Read the terms of the signature and tick the two fields to confirm that you want to sign the project proposal and that you are an employee of the institution in question. You can now click the button “Sign”., When as signatory you have signed the proposal, the submitter and contact person for the project will receive an email about the further course., Assignment of the role as signatory , If relevant, see the video guide (in Danish) about assignment of the role as signatory in the DDP App, A person responsible for authorisation or a substitute can assign the role as signatory to a user who is employed in the institution in question. The person responsible for authorisation or his or her substitute is responsible for ensuring that the signatory fulfils this requirement. Note that persons with the signatory role can sign on behalf of the institution to pledge that a project proposal is legal and conforming to Article 6 of the General Data Protection Regulation., Procedure:, When you are the person responsible for authorisation or a substitute and you want to assign a signatory role to a user, you must log into the DDP App., On the front page of the DDP App, you click ‘My overview’., Then select the institution that you want to manage., Click the three dots next to the name of the institution and select ‘Manage signatories’., Click ‘Select’ next to the users you want to make signatories, and click ‘Save’. (If you want to withdraw the role of signatory from a user, you must click the tick, so that it is removed, and then click ‘Save’.), The user has now become a signatory and can be designated to sign project proposals on behalf of the institution.

    https://www.dst.dk/en/TilSalg/data-til-forskning/anmodning-om-data/underskrivelse-af-projektindstilling

    Contact Denmark’s Data Portal

    You can contact Denmark’s Data Portal by email or call during our opening hours. In the drop-down menu below, you can find contact information depending on the nature of your inquiry., IT-support for remote login, servers or other IT issues, If you need help with remote login, servers or other IT problems, you can contact IT-support., Phone: +45 39 17 38 00, Opening hours:, Monday-Thursday: 8:30-16:00, Friday: 8:30-15:30, Mail:, servicedesk@dst.dk, Denmark’s Data Portal Support, If you have questions about Statistics Denmark’s microdata schemes, user access, or the process of ordering data via the DDP App, you can contact Denmark’s Data Portal Support on weekdays. Please note that we do not transfer calls to individual staff members., The hotline is currently closed due to technical issues. Please contact Denmark’s Data Portal Support via mail., Find answers to the most frequently asked questions about the DDP App here, Phone: +45 39 17 31 30, Opening hours:, Monday-Friday: 10:00-12:00, Mail:, danmarksdatavindue@dst.dk, Mails are answered within two working days., Error support for the DDP App, If you experience technical problems or errors in the DDP App, you can contact DDP App Support., DDP App Support will be closed from Monday, December 22nd through Friday, January 2nd., Mail:, ddvsupport@dst.dk, Inquiries about project proposal in the DDP App, If your inquiry is about a project proposal in the DDP App, you can contact the project owner at Statistics Denmark (SD). You can find the project owner in the DDP App under ’about the project’. If the project has not been assigned a SD project owner, you can contact Denmark’s Data Portal Support., Read more about how to order data in the DDP App here , Inquiries about authorisations, If you have questions regarding applications for authorisation or client authorisation, please write to the mail below. , Mail:, fseautorisation@dst.dk, Read more about authorisation of institutions here, Inquiries about rules and data security, If you have questions regarding rules for working with microdata, including rules on transfer of analysis results and sanction rules, please write to the mail below., Mail:, fsehjemtag@dst.dk, Read more about rules and data security here, Inquiries about physical tokens, For inquiries regarding physical tokens, please write to the mail below., Mail:, les@dst.dk,  , Delivery times in Denmark’s Data Portal, At Denmark’s Data Portal, we process your inquiry/task as quickly as possible, and all inquiries/tasks are processed in the order they are received., The current delivery times are as follows:, From your first inquiry to the delivery of data, the average processing time is about 21 days., From contract signing/price approval to delivery, the average processing time is 12 days.,  ,  ,  

    https://www.dst.dk/en/TilSalg/data-til-forskning/om-danmarks-datavindue/kontakt-danmarks-datavindue

    Request for subscription

    In the DDP App, you can request a subscription if your institution has a project database scheme or authority scheme. , As an administrator or contact person, you can request a subscription in the , DDP App, . If you have an authority scheme or project database scheme, you can take out a subscription directly in the , DDP App, ., A subscription allows you to pre-order non-published data that are expected to be published in the selected delivery year. The subscription is valid for one calendar year., Note that a subscription is based on your last approved project proposal. You are only allowed to take out a subscription for registers that are part of that project. If you want to take out a subscription for registers that are not part of your last approved project proposal, you must first create and obtain approval of a re-proposal with the relevant data, for which you can subsequently take out a subscription., After you have requested a subscription, you will receive a quote and a contract for final approval. The subscription is not binding until both parties (your institution and Statistics Denmark) have signed the contract., This is how you request a subscription, Log into the DDP App., Select ‘My overview’., Access ‘Projects’ and click your project database or authority scheme., Access ‘Subscriptions’ and then click the ‘+’ icon. Click ‘Select registers’ to continue., In the box ‘Select subscription period’, you must select the year that you want a subscription for., Select which registers you want to include in the annual contract by clicking the small squares to the left of the register names., a. If you want to select all registers, you can click the square to the left of the heading ‘Register’., b. Squares with a grey slash through indicate that the register cannot be selected, for example because the register is no longer being updated., Under the column ‘Data set’, you can indicate how many data sets you want to receive., a. Select the option ‘All’: If the register is updated more than once a year, and you want e.g. to get all quarterly sets., b. Select the option ‘Annually’ (31.12.YYY): If you only want data for the whole year, even though it is updated quarterly., c. Select the option ‘Other’: Write to your Statistics Denmark project owner and elaborate on your wish. For example, it could be relevant for some users in connection with the DREAM register, which is released as monthly versions, but not every month, and where the release pattern is determined by the source providing data to DREAM., Continue by clicking ‘Submit’ at the bottom of the page. You can also save your request along the way. You can return to the subscription again by accessing ‘Subscriptions’, followed by clicking the subscription with the status ‘Created’. Select ‘Edit’ under the three dots., Click ‘OK’ in the info box to submit the request to Denmark’s Data Portal. You do , not , have an option to subsequently edit the subscription., After you have submitted it, your Statistics Denmark project owner may suggest specific data sets for the individual registers. You can see these suggestions via ‘My overview’ (select the project and then ‘Subscriptions’)., You can now engage in dialogue with your Statistics Denmark project owner as to whether you agree with the suggested data sets. You cannot change the selection yourself, but your project owner from Statistics Denmark can., When you have agreed on the contents, your Statistics Denmark project owner will prepare the contract for the subscription., When both parties have signed the contract, the subscription will be approved.

    https://www.dst.dk/en/TilSalg/data-til-forskning/anmodning-om-data/anmodning-om-abonnement

    Merging of projects

    It is possible to merge projects. This may be relevant if you wish to broaden existing projects. , With the new pricing model being introduced in 2026 and 2027 (, read more here, ), there may also be a financial advantage to merging projects, as payment thereafter will be calculated based on the number of users and the number of data packages in each project., When should you merge projects?, Denmark’s Data Portal,  recommends that you already begin considering which projects may beneficially be merged, but wait with the actual merging until the new pricing model comes into effect in January 2026., How to merge projects, Contact , Denmark’s Data Portal, Contact the , Denmark’s Data Portal, project owner responsible for one of the projects you wish to merge and specify which projects you want to merge., Denmark’s Data Portal, will assess whether the projects should be combined into a new project proposal or under an existing project with a broader project description., New project proposal is created or previous proposal is revised, The project description must include purpose, description, and importance to society covering all projects to be merged. Keep the purpose broad, so that it is possible to cover several relevant aspects of a topic and expand the project along the way with new data., Select relevant data in the DDP App and add additional data sources as well as any discontinued data from our databank of basic data with accompanying documentation. Paths to external data must be sent by email to the , Denmark’s Data Portal,  project owner responsible for the project., Make sure to obtain and submit all necessary approvals from external data providers. This is a prerequisite before we can transfer data., If one of the projects includes the Danish pharmaceutical products database (LMDB) or external data from the Danish Health Data Authority, you must apply for renewed approval to transfer data to the new project., o Please note that LMDB and , The Danish National Prescription Registry,  (LSR) cannot be ordered for the same project., Submit project proposal, Once the project proposal has been submitted, the , Denmark’s Data Portal,  project owner will send a price contract based on a framework agreement. The framework agreement covers the processing of the project proposal, re-delivery of data from our databank of basic data, processing of external data and any discontinued registers, as well as the transfer of files and programs from the workdata folder., Approval, delivery, and completion, You agree on a deletion date for the old projects with the , Denmark’s Data Portal,  project owner., Denmark’s Data Portal, and the signatory at your institution sign the new project., If files from the workdata folder need to be transferred, you must send an email to the , Denmark’s Data Portal,  project owner with the path to both the old folders/files and the new project. In the email, you must confirm that the files do not contain microdata (e.g., key variables or other identifiable information)., Denmark’s Data Portal, delivers the data from our bank of basic data, external data and transfers the content from the workdata folders to the new project., Important points of attention, In rare cases, users may have hardcoded de-identified values. These cannot be retrieved after merging, as a new key will be applied., The same applies if de-identified values have been used to remove outliers., Sorting will change, as data is sorted by de-identified values. If row numbers have been used in programs (e.g., for random selection), these will no longer work.

    https://www.dst.dk/en/TilSalg/data-til-forskning/anmodning-om-data/sammenlaegning-af-projekter