[citation needed] Hills in Mols rise to 137 metres, high by Danish standards.
It has unspoiled country, farms, rolling hills that descend to the sea, and very few large resorts.
[2] Tourism is important on Mols, with many summer rentals, marinas and a total of twenty-two popular sandy beaches in the general area of Djursland, all of which are public as almost all of Denmark's coastline.
Denmark and Mols are not densely populated, compared to central Europe, making the area uncrowded.
Situated on the eastern side of Jutland, and part of the small shallow Kattegat sea separating Denmark and Sweden, the seawater warms up fast in the summer and the coastlines are not exposed to rough tides and waves as normally experienced on the Jutlandic west coast.