The honest answer is "it depends": on how much you study, what you already speak, and what you mean by "learn". So set those below and get a real timeline. The base figures come from the U.S. Foreign Service Institute, which puts Danish at about 750 hours to professional proficiency (Category I).
Danish takes about 750 hours of study to reach professional working proficiency (about CEFR C1) for an English speaker, according to the U.S. Foreign Service Institute. That places it in FSI Category I; conversational B1 arrives far sooner. This calculator turns those hours into A1 to C1 milestones and adjusts for your native language and daily study time.
Time to hold a conversation (B1)
11 months
about 340 hours of study ยท Danish for English speakers
Estimates only. FSI hours are measured for native English speakers in intensive classroom study; the "for you" adjustment scales them by how close Danish is to your native language and script. Real timelines vary with method, motivation and exposure.
Whatever your timeline, you get there quicker by meeting Danish in real sentences, again and again. Lingo7 lets you read real books in Danish with tap-to-translate and native-narrated audio. Free to start.
The base figure is the FSI study-hour estimate: how many classroom hours the U.S. Foreign Service Institute found a native English speaker needs to reach professional working proficiency. Danish is Category I, about 750 hours. That number maps to roughly CEFR C1, so the earlier levels (A1 through B2) are scaled down from it using standard CEFR effort ratios.
When you pick a different native language, the total is adjusted for linguistic distance: a language in your own family branch and sharing your writing system transfers a lot and gets easier; an unrelated language with a different script gets harder. Then your daily study time turns those hours into calendar time, since the same hours spread over more minutes a day simply finish sooner.
It's an estimate, not a guarantee. What it's genuinely good at is showing that conversational Danish arrives much sooner than "fluent", and that steady daily contact, especially reading, is what moves the timeline.
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For an English speaker, the U.S. Foreign Service Institute estimates about 750 hours of study to reach professional working proficiency (roughly C1) in Danish, which is FSI Category I. At one hour a day that is 2 yr 1 mo; conversational level (B1) comes far sooner, around 11 months. Your own pace, native language and method shift the figure, which is why the calculator above lets you adjust them.
Conversational ability (CEFR B1) takes roughly 340 hours, about 11 months at an hour a day. At B1 you can handle everyday conversations, travel independently and follow the gist of simple authentic texts. Reading real Danish books with parallel translation gets you there faster because you meet useful words again and again in context.
Danish is FSI Category I, one of the easier tiers for English speakers. Danish features the unique stod (glottal stop) that distinguishes words, has undergone dramatic vowel weakening that makes it sound very different from its written form, and uses a vigesimal (base-20) counting system. How hard it actually is depends heavily on the languages you already speak. A related language and shared script cut the time considerably, which the calculator reflects when you pick your native language.
Yes. The FSI hours assume classroom study; immersion and daily contact with the language compress the calendar time. The biggest levers are consistency (a little every day beats long gaps) and meeting the language in real context. Extensive reading with audio is one of the most efficient methods, because it builds vocabulary and grammatical intuition at scale.
Danish pronunciation is notably challenging even for other Scandinavians due to vowel reduction, the stod (glottal stop), and soft consonants. However, Danish grammar is very simple and the written language is accessible for English speakers. Reading Danish is considerably easier than understanding spoken Danish.