Jonas Vingegaard’s property portfolio grows again as wife shuts down questions after latest investments

Cycling
Saturday, 25 April 2026 at 14:00
Jonas Vingegaard during stage 5 of the 2026 Volta a Catalunya
Jonas Vingegaard’s growing property story has taken another step, this time with a sharper edge. According to a report by Ekstra Bladet, the Team Visma | Lease a Bike rider and his wife Trine Marie Hansen have continued their run of investments in 2026, taking their total to seven properties across Denmark after two further purchases this year alone.
One of those deals marks a shift in type as well as scale. The couple have moved beyond residential homes by buying a commercial property at Glyngore harbour for 3.2 million kroner (approximately €430,000), securing 281 square metres in a waterfront location. A second purchase came in the form of a summer house on the nearby island of Fur, acquired for 925,000 kroner (approximately €124,000).
The latest developments emerged during a public appearance in Copenhagen, where Trine Marie Hansen was promoting her new travel and experiences app. Asked about the couple’s approach to property, she described the purchases as part of a broader investment strategy, saying they are targeting opportunities they believe will make sense both now and in the future, while confirming the commercial building has not yet been put to use.
When the conversation turned back to the wider strategy behind their expanding portfolio, she quickly brought the topic to a firm close. “No more about property today,” she said, declining to go further on why their investments continue to focus on smaller regional areas rather than major growth markets.

Expansion meets scrutiny

The pace of the buying has drawn continued attention. Their combined investments now exceed 35 million kroner, with a significant proportion concentrated in and around Glyngore, Denmark.
That concentration has already been questioned. Danish housing economist Curt Liliegreen has previously been blunt in his assessment of the area, saying: “This is not a region that is growing,” he told Ekstra Bladet.
He has also pointed to wider structural issues in the local market. “It is an area with a lot of vacancy. A significant proportion of houses are not registered with residents,” he explained.
At the same time, he acknowledges that Vingegaard’s financial position changes the equation. “It’s a buyer’s market. Properties stay on the market for a long time. And if he is able to act — he has strong finances and can put down a deposit and be approved without problems — he can make some fairly good deals, provided he has a use for those properties,” Liliegreen added.
Jonas Vingegaard at the 2026 Volta a Catalunya
Jonas Vingegaard at the 2026 Volta a Catalunya

A defining season unfolding

All of this is playing out during a pivotal stretch in Vingegaard’s racing calendar. His 2026 campaign began with disruption after a training crash in Spain forced him to delay his season start, but the response was immediate. Victories at Paris-Nice and Volta a Catalunya quickly re-established his position at the very top of the sport.
The broader objective is even more significant. This season is set to include his long anticipated Giro d’Italia debut, with a Giro Tour double forming the central ambition of his year. As a two time Tour de France winner and reigning Vuelta champion, success in Italy would move him closer to completing a full set of Grand Tour victories.
That context sharpens the contrast. While Vingegaard is pushing towards one of the most demanding challenges of his career on the bike, the decisions being made away from racing point to longer term planning that is accelerating at the same time.
Seven properties, a move into commercial real estate and a clear reluctance to fully explain the strategy behind it all suggest this is no longer a passing storyline. It is an evolving one, and one that is gathering pace alongside everything else in Vingegaard’s world.
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