Iceland is a hot tourist destination for a reason; it’s a great place to visit. The locals are friendly; there are delicious restaurants, fun bars, interesting museums, beautiful scenery, and everything from ice climbing to whale watching to horseback riding. More waterfalls than you thought possible. Unfortunately, it’s quite expensive.

See the critical information in our Iceland at a Glance.

Regions

Itineraries

Eat & Drink

Rub23

A fantastic restaurant in Akureyri. Asian fusion cuisine, offering fantastic seafood and sushi and meat dishes. Famous for its unique spice blends.

Jon Riki

A fantastic family owned restaurant and brewery in an old farmhouse, Jon Riki serves up incredible food and creative beers in a beautiful setting.

Brauð & Co.

A small bakery in Reykjavik with some of the best pastries we’ve ever had. Ever. If you’re not getting breakfast here while you’re in Reykjavik, you’re doing it wrong. The bakery also sells fresh bread you can pick up for a brown-bag lunch as well as a variety of cheeses and yogurts.

Suður-Vík

This is a special restaurant offering really wonderful food. Set high on a hill in one of Vik’s oldest houses from 1902, you’ll get beautiful views of the ocean while dining. The restaurant blends local cuisine and tradition with modern flare including a Thai influence.

Englendingavík

A cozy restaurant on Iceland’s west coast situated in an old building (1885) with wood-paneled walls and beautiful views of the coast around Borgarnes. They serve delicious locally-sourced food.

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Apotek Restaurant

A restaurant/bar with great ambiance and excellent specialty cocktails with unique Icelandic ingredients. Prices are high, so visit for drinks during happy hour.

Kaffi Lára El Grillo Bar

You might be surprised when you walk into this two-story restaurant that looks more like a bar on its lower floor. However, it has a wonderful dining area that offers superb food.

Langabúð

A nice stop on the Ring Road between Hofn and the Eastfjords. Set in a historic building from 1790, it’s part restaurant, part museum. The coffee options were wonderful and we highly recommend having one with a pastry.

Gamla Fjósið

An acceptable dining option near Skogafoss. The food was decent though not the most imaginative. The restaurant itself is in an old abandoned barn. The dairy on the menu comes from the 70 grass fed dairy cows on the property, and most of the menu contains ingredients farmed from the surrounding area.

Baejarins Beztu Pylsur

Iceland’s national dish is hotdogs, so obviously you must partake while visiting. There are a few hot dog vendors in Reykjavik, but Baejarins Beztu Pylsur is the most famous and very tasty.

Skúli Craft Bar

Located near the Settlement Exhibition in Reykjavik, Skúli Craftsbar is a great location to try craft beer.

Húsavík öl

Set in the small town of Húsavík, this restaurant serves up good pizza, light meals, snacks, and local beers on tap.

Slippbarinn

While this restaurant is inside of the Icelandair Marina Hotel, it’s a happening place in Reykjavik. It offers up great cocktails and a menu that changes every few weeks.

Snaps Bistro and Bar

This restaurant is a French food meets Icelandic food smorgasbord. It also serves up great wine and cocktails. You can make a reservation on the phone or online before 18:30.

Brynja Ice Cream Shop

Located in Akureryi, this ice cream shop is the perfect place to get dessert or a mid-afternoon ice cream cone.

Ölstofa

A neat bar with a extremely local vibe. Visit to get away from the tourists and for a whiskey or draft beer.

Reykjavik Fish Restaurant

One of the best deals for quality food in Reykjavik, Icelandic Fish & Chips provides fresh seafood made with local ingredients.

Vogafjós Cowshed Café

When you’re exploring Myvatn take a break at Vogafjós restaurant. It’s located inside of a cowshed (you can choose to sit at a table with a window overlooking them) with sweeping views of the lake.

Gamli Baukur

Located right above Húsavík harbor, Gamli Baukur is a great stop before or after your whale watching trip. This cozy restaurant with driftwood décor serves fresh food from local sources, along with a full bar and varied beer and wine lists.

Steðji

Steðji is a neat brewery in an old western Iceland farmhouse. It’s a working brewery so expect long wooden tables in and a dark, stark environment with great music overhead from the owner’s iPhone. It features some unique and truly odd beers.

Smiðjan Brugghús

A neat brewpub in Vík, offering the brewery’s own local beers and a tasty and reasonably priced food menu.

Halldórskaffi

A cozy restaurant in Vík offering tasty meals and desserts. It has a bright cheery atmosphere in this building attached to the tourist center (don’t be alarmed).

Iðnó

Grab a casual dinner on the lake in Rekyjavik. It offers great food, coffee, and cocktails.

Brunnhóll Farm

A guesthouse on a farm serving delicious locally made ice cream sourced from the attached dairy.

Hótel Skógafoss

Located at the bass of the incredible Skogafoss waterfall, this restaurant is charming. It has large windows looking onto the nearby falls. The food is decent though not spectacular. They serve local beer on tap.

Áskaffi Tea Room

This quaint restaurant on the site of the Glaumbaer Farm and Museum boasts homemade local cakes, breads, and sandwiches. The dishes are decently priced and quite good.

Hotel Reykjavik Centrum

A decent deal for lunch, especially if you’re in the center of downtown Reykjavik. The burgers are very well priced.

See

Þingvellir National Park

A fascinating mix of history and natural beauty. Þingvellir was the site of the Alþingi, Iceland’s first parliament and, dating from 930, one of the oldest parliaments in the world.

Skógafoss

One of Iceland’s most spectacular waterfalls (and that’s saying something), Skógafoss is a must-see.

Seljalandsfoss

Off the Ringroad towards Vik, this is a beautiful waterfall with a path that circles behind the falls. Take the path and get soaked, but experience the power of this waterfall.

Dettifoss

Europe’s most powerful waterfall is beautiful, but it can be tricky to get to and may be out of your way (it’s sort of on the way from the East Fjords to Husavik). Once you get to the waterfall itself, you can walk directly up to the edge and get a terrifying, yet amazing view.

Gullfoss

Seen on a tour of the Golden Circle, this massive two-stage waterfall plunges dramatically into a steep gorge. Walk along an easy pathway to see multiple vantage points.

The Settlement Exhibition

The Settlement Exhibition details the history of Iceland’s settlement through multimedia and surrounds the foundations of a Viking-aged farmhouse dating to the tenth century.

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Akureyri Botanical Garden

A short walk from downtown Akureyri, this garden is one of the most northern botanical gardens in the world. It’s a beautiful display of thousands of different types of plants, well organized by region.

National Museum of Iceland

A very comprehensive and interesting place, Iceland’s national museum contains artifacts from the Settlement Age to modern day and also has photography and rotating exhibits. It gives a good overview of Icelandic history and culture and is worth the trip if you have an extra day in Reykjavik.

Hraunfossar and Barnafoss

Two waterfalls in western Iceland near Reykholt. Hraunfossar is a beautiful series of falls streaming over the side of a long ridge. Barnafoss gushes down a gully and has an interesting history of association with Icelandic folktales.

Snorrastofa

About a 40 minute drive from Borgarnes, the hamlet of Reykholt was where Snorri Sturluson, Iceland’s most famous thirteenth century Icelandic chieftain, scholar, and saga writer lived. If you’re in Iceland, you’ll hear about Snorri. It features Snorralaug, a hot spring where Snorri once bathed, and Snorrastofa, a cultural center with exhibits regarding Snorri.

Glaumbær Farm & Museum

A farmhouse has stood on this site since around 900 CE. It currently hosts the preserved historical farm, a large complex of turf-roofed rooms, the oldest of which date to the 18th century and the most recent of which were built in the late 19th century. The museum is a fascinating look at how Icelanders lived between 100 and 300 years ago.

The Settlement Center

This museum in Borgarnes is split into two parts. The first uses multimedia to explore the Settlement period of Iceland. The second explores Egill’s Saga. There is an attached restaurant with good reviews.

Goðafoss

On the way between Laugar and Akureyri, this is a beautiful horseshoe-shaped waterfall in north Iceland. It’s also where Christianity became Iceland’s official religion (pick up a guide book to learn more). Walk the paths to check out the various viewpoints.

Geysir

Visit this site of the original geyser, accounts of which date to 1294. Geysir is rarely active, but Strokkur, a nearby geyser, erupts with a 30 meter spout every five to ten minutes.

Krafla Volcano

Krafla volcano is a mountain in north Iceland which has been intermittently errupting for the past 3,000 years. The Viti crater is filled with a beautiful, clear lake. You can drive there to check out the lake, and there’s a hiking trail around the crater if you want even more scenic views.

Skógar Museum

A complex of three museums: an outdoor museum featuring farmhouses from different eras of Iceland’s history; a folk museum showing off artifacts from daily life, and a technology museum. Interesting to get a feeling what life in southern Iceland was like.

Reynisfjara Beach

On the Ringroad towards Vik, this is a black sand beach on Iceland’s southern coast. Three jutting rocks offshore are known as the Troll Rocks. There’s also a cliff of hexagonal basalt columns that you can climb. A neat stop if you’re in the area and have the time, but nothing you have to see.

Grjótagjá Cave

A beautiful cave near Myvatn containing a hot spring. You can’t swim in the water, but the cobalt pool is picturesque, and a scene from Game of Thrones was filmed here if you’re a fan.

Námafjall Hverir Viewpoint

Hverir is a large geothermal area near Myvatn. A wasteland full of pools of boiling water and mud and smoking fumaroles, it’s surrounded by red soil. It also has a heavy scent of sulphur, but gives a decent understanding of what powers the whole country: geothermal energy from volcanoes and springs. Evidently, it’s the closest you can get to the feel of Mars on Earth.

Harpa Concert Hall

A beautiful modern concert hall made of glass cubes that illuminate with light shows in the winter months. Visit to see a show, or enter for free to check out the architecture and beautiful views of surrounding Reykjavik.

Krafla Power Plant

Geothermal energy provides about a quarter of Iceland’s energy. Krafla power plant is a living, working power plant in north Iceland. It’s free to visit, and it has a quick and neat exhibit on geothermal power.

Akureyrarkirkja

A church on Iceland’s north coast in the city of Akureyri.

Do

Landmannalaugar Day Tour

An incredible journey into the highlands of Iceland. You’ll see unmatched beauty of rugged volcanic fields, soaring mountains streaked in bright colors of orange, red, green, and grey, and sparkling lakes surrounded by greenery. It has a wild feel to the countryside and a hike in this area makes you feel like you’re on another planet. You can also bathe in a true natural hot spring.

Húsavík Whale Watching

A fantastic whale watching tour in a bay on Iceland’s northern shore; we recommend you go with North Sailing. You’re likely to see more humpback whales than you can count. North Sailing also offers a whale and puffin tour.

Horseback Riding with Lava Horses

Run by a family who has lived in the area for more than 200 years, Lava Horses provided a fantastic horseback adventure in northern Iceland through diverse landscapes of lava, a birch forest, along a riverbank and back. Ride the iconic Icelandic horses and try out their famous gait, the tölt.

CityWalk Reykjavik Tour

2 hours long, this tour departs from the main square Austurvöllur. A free and entertaining walking tour of Reykjavik. Our knowledgeable guide (a graduate student at the University of Iceland) took us on foot around Reykjavik and explained the history and culture of Iceland and specifically, Reykjavik.

Glacier Climbing with Icelandic Mountain Guides

An exhilarating and exciting ice climbing trip in Vatnajökull National Park. Explore the glacier and do some incredibly fun ice climbing on soft walls and crevasses. If you’re lucky, your guide will take you to explore an amazing ice cave.

Krauma

Krauma is a relatively new hot spring in western Iceland. It’s got a series of several springs at different temperatures. The facilities and the setting are beautiful, and, though not a bargain, it’s not insanely expensive either.

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Secret Lagoon

Along the Goldenroad you will come upon the town of Fludir, which is unremarkable aside from the Secret Lagoon. A geothermal pool surrounded by subalpine meadows, the Secret Lagoon is a great place to relax with a drink. Not nearly as expensive as the Blue Lagoon, it’s a more natural feel and a nice stop on your tour of the Golden Circle.

Skaftafell Ice Cave & Glacier Walk

Spend a morning or an afternoon exploring the incredible glaciers of Skaftafell National Park. If you’re lucky, you might also get to visit an ice cave! Tours with this company span from 2 hours to a few days.

Blue Lagoon (Bláa Lónið)

While it’s one of Iceland’s iconic tourist attractions, it’s probably not a must-see, especially on a repeat trip to Iceland. However, it’s one of those once-in-a-lifetime price tag experiences that, as the most well known activity in the country, gives you a shared experience with every other tourist that visits the country and does offer iconic blue photos. Entirely man-made you can explore the pool with a drink in your hand (part of the admission price).

Glacier Lagoon Zodiac Tour

Zip through a glacial lake filled with icebergs while your guide tells you about the area and its history.Our boat did not take us particularly close the glacier which was the most disappointing part. It’s a fun way to spend a morning, but not a must-do on your trip to Iceland.

F550 (Kaldidalsvegur)

The F550 is a 40 km scenic drive through some of western Iceland’s beautiful mountains. While it a four-wheel-drive vehicle is not legally required to drive it, many rental companies won’t allow a two-wheel-drive vehicle on this route, so check ahead of time.

Stay

Old Farmhouse by Eyjafjallajökull

A great place to stay on a beautiful farm in southern Iceland. There’s a full kitchen, comfy living area, and two small bedrooms in the loft.

Einishús Cottages

Beautiful, modern cottages in northern Iceland. Each cottage has a hot tub and a loft.

North Star Cottage

These are cute cottages that overlook the Eyjafjöll Mountains. As they’re self-catering, you can cook. They’re located right on the Ring Road next to Eyjafjallajökull Glacier and visitor center and a 10 minute drive to Skogafoss. They offer charming wooden interiors and an outdoor patio.

Lambhus Glacier View Cabins

Cozy cottages at the foot of the Vatnajökull Glacier. The cottages are tiny and the kitchens are basic, but the views can’t be beat.