In total, their property investments now amount to more than 31 million kroner.
From ownership to organisation
What makes this development significant is not just the scale of the purchases, but the structure now being put in place around them. Trine Marie Hansen has registered a company named V. Hansen Ejendomme ApS, with real estate investment and related activity listed as its purpose. At the same time, a holding company, V. Hansen Invest ApS, has also been established.
Together, the two-company setup points to a shift away from purely private ownership towards a more organised, long-term approach to managing property assets. It suggests that what began as buying close to home has now evolved into something more deliberate and strategic.
A portfolio built close to home
The pattern behind the investments has been consistent. Rather than spreading purchases across different regions, the family has concentrated heavily in one area, steadily adding neighbouring and nearby properties over several years. That approach reflects a strong personal attachment to the location, but it also underlines how central property has become to their off-bike planning.
Earlier this month, Vingegaard was asked about the most recent purchase and described it in straightforward terms, pointing to its seaside location and calling it a good investment. Others have been more cautious. A Danish housing economist quoted in the same report questioned whether concentrating so much capital in one small area makes sense from a purely financial perspective, noting that it is not a region experiencing strong growth.
Momentum on and off the bike
The off-bike developments are unfolding during one of the most intense and scrutinised periods of Vingegaard’s career. January has already brought confirmation that 2026 will mark his Giro d’Italia debut, with
Team Visma | Lease a Bike committing to a Giro–Tour double that represents a significant shift in his Grand Tour strategy.
Preparations have not been entirely smooth. During a training camp in Spain earlier this month,
Vingegaard was involved in a crash after being closely followed by an amateur rider, an incident that sparked renewed debate around rider safety and fan behaviour during training. Visma publicly urged fans to give riders space and peace, underlining the pressures that come with his status as one of the sport’s biggest names.
Despite that setback, Vingegaard remains firmly on track for the season ahead. A two-time Tour de France winner and reigning Vuelta champion, he enters 2026 with the chance to chase victories across all three Grand Tours. Against that backdrop, the formalisation of the family’s property interests feels less like a side story and more like parallel planning during a defining phase of his career.