For Copenhagen businesses

A loyalty program for Copenhagen, the most cashless city in Europe

Your customers pay with a phone or a card for everything — and then you hand them a paper stamp card, the last analog thing in their pocket. Stampit puts your loyalty card in the phone wallet they already live in.

  • No app for customers
  • Set up in 15 minutes
  • Free trial

Why paper cards fail in Copenhagen

The last analog thing in the pocket

Copenhageners tap a phone for the metro, the supermarket and the bakery. A cardboard stamp card is the one thing in the transaction that still needs a wallet nobody carries — so it stays home, or gets binned.

Ten competitors within a five-minute walk

On Jægersborggade or Istedgade, your regular passes half a dozen other coffee bars and bakeries before reaching you. Without visible progress toward a reward, the choice resets to zero every morning.

A program you can't measure

Paper tells you nothing: how many cards are out there, who is one stamp from a reward, whether Nørrebro behaves differently from Vesterbro. You're running a marketing channel with no numbers.

How it works at the counter

Built for a city that expects everything to be one tap.

01

Set up your card once

Pick your logo, colors, stamp icon and reward in the Stampit dashboard. A working loyalty card takes about 15 minutes — no developers, no hardware beyond the phones your staff already have.

02

Customers scan a QR code

A small stand next to your terminal. One scan and the card lands in Apple Wallet or Google Wallet — no app download, no sign-up form, no email. For a phone-first city, joining feels completely natural.

03

Staff stamp in one tap

Your team scans the customer's pass with the Stampit Partners app, or taps phones via NFC. It takes about as long as a contactless payment, and every stamp is tied to a staff login.

The numbers for a Copenhagen coffee bar

Take a typical card: 10 stamps, one per visit, 10th cup free. At a 45 kr. coffee, a customer spends 450 kr. to earn a roughly 45 kr. reward — right at the healthy 5–10% of spend, and funded at your ingredient cost, not the menu price. Add a 38 kr. kanelsnegl to the average ticket and the reward share drops even lower.

A regular who stops by three mornings a week completes the card in just over three weeks — inside the 4–8-visit-per-reward-milestone rhythm that keeps a card motivating. Research on café stamp cards (Kivetz, Urminsky & Zheng, 2006) shows customers actually speed up as the reward gets closer.

Two settings worth switching on from day one: start every new card with a stamp already given — the endowed-progress effect (Nunes & Drèze, 2006) shows started cards get completed far more often — and run double stamps in launch week so staff have a natural opening line.

You can change the card length, reward and earn rate any time in the dashboard — every card updates itself in the customer's wallet, nothing to reprint.

Built for how Copenhagen shops actually run

Lives in the wallet app

Apple Wallet and Google Wallet — the same place as travel cards and event tickets. Always in the phone your customer is already holding at the counter.

No app, no sign-up

Customers join by scanning a QR code. No download, no account, no form — joining takes less time than paying.

Surfaces near your shop

Location-aware passes can appear on the lock screen when a card holder walks past your door — a quiet nudge on a street full of alternatives.

Numbers per neighborhood

Cards issued, active cards, stamps and rewards redeemed — per location. If you run shops in both Nørrebro and Østerbro, you finally see how each one performs.

Messages on the card itself

New seasonal bake? Changed weekend hours? Push an update straight onto the pass in your customers' wallets — no email list needed.

One card, all your locations

Stamps add up across every branch, so a customer who buys coffee near work and pastries near home stays on one card — and you see the overlap.

Questions Copenhagen businesses ask us

Does Stampit actually operate in Denmark?

Yes. Denmark is one of Stampit's core markets, the product is fully localized in Danish, and support is available in both Danish and English.

Do my customers need to install an app?

No. The loyalty card is a pass in Apple Wallet or Google Wallet, added by scanning a QR code in a few taps. An optional Stampit app exists for customers who want all their cards in one place, but it is never required.

Is a digital loyalty card GDPR-compliant?

Yes. Joining requires no sign-up form, so the program collects far less personal data than a typical email-based scheme, and Stampit is built by an EU company (Innovai Labs s.r.o.) operating under GDPR.

How do staff give stamps during the morning rush?

They scan the customer's pass with the Stampit Partners app or tap phones via NFC — about as fast as a contactless payment. Every team member has their own login, so stamps are traceable and cards can't be self-stamped.

I run more than one shop in Copenhagen — does one card cover them all?

Yes. One loyalty card can span all your locations, stamps accumulate across them, and the dashboard shows statistics per location so you can compare how each neighborhood performs.

What does it cost?

Stampit starts with a free trial, and plans scale with your business — see the pricing page for current tiers. There is no long-term contract and no per-stamp fee.

Copenhagen went cashless. Your stamp card should too.

Create your digital loyalty card today — free trial, no app for customers, live before the afternoon rush.