
Destinations
Discover the most iconic and breathtaking destinations across Iceland, from thundering waterfalls and volcanic landscapes to charming fishing villages and glacial lagoons.
50
Destinations
3+
Tours available
Reykjavík
Iceland's vibrant capital and the world's northernmost capital city, home to colourful streets, world-class dining, and a thriving arts scene.
Harpa Concert Hall
Award-winning waterfront concert hall with a stunning geometric glass facade inspired by Iceland's basalt columns.
Hallgrímskirkja
Reykjavík's iconic Lutheran church and tallest structure, offering panoramic views of the city from its tower.
Perlan
A striking glass-domed landmark housing an interactive nature museum, planetarium, and observation deck overlooking Reykjavík.
Sun Voyager
Iconic stainless-steel sculpture on the Reykjavík waterfront, resembling a Viking longship and symbolising the promise of undiscovered territory.
Þingvellir National Park
UNESCO World Heritage Site where the Eurasian and North American tectonic plates meet, and the site of Iceland's original parliament founded in 930 AD.
Geysir Geothermal Area
Home to Strokkur, a powerful geyser that erupts every 5–10 minutes, shooting boiling water up to 30 metres into the air.
Gullfoss
The 'Golden Waterfall' cascades 32 metres in two dramatic tiers into a rugged canyon, creating a thundering spectacle and rainbow-filled mist.
Kerið Crater Lake
A vivid volcanic crater lake roughly 3,000 years old, with striking red volcanic rock slopes surrounding brilliant aquamarine water.
Friðheimar
A geothermally heated greenhouse and restaurant where visitors enjoy fresh tomato soup surrounded by tomato vines and Icelandic horses.
Seljalandsfoss
A 60-metre waterfall famous for the path behind the cascade, allowing visitors to walk directly behind the curtain of water.
Skógafoss
One of Iceland's largest and most beautiful waterfalls, dropping 60 metres with a staircase to a viewing platform at the top.
Reynisfjara Black Sand Beach
A world-famous black sand beach with dramatic basalt column formations and the towering Reynisdrangar sea stacks rising from the Atlantic.
Vík í Mýrdal
Iceland's southernmost village, nestled beneath the Mýrdalsjökull glacier, known for its dramatic coastline and the iconic church overlooking the sea.
Dyrhólaey
A 120-metre-high promontory and former volcanic island with a massive natural rock arch, offering spectacular coastal views and puffin nesting grounds.
Sólheimajökull
An accessible outlet glacier of Mýrdalsjökull, popular for glacier hiking and ice climbing with views of ash-layered blue ice.
Katla Ice Cave
A stunning ice cave beneath Mýrdalsjökull glacier, featuring otherworldly formations of black volcanic ash layered through ancient blue ice.
Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon
Iceland's most famous glacier lagoon where massive icebergs calve from Breiðamerkurjökull glacier and float serenely toward the Atlantic Ocean.
Diamond Beach
A black sand beach where crystal-clear ice chunks from Jökulsárlón wash ashore, glittering like diamonds against the volcanic sand.
Skaftafell
A lush oasis within Vatnajökull National Park, offering diverse hiking trails through birch woodland, glacier views, and waterfalls.
Svartifoss
The 'Black Falls' waterfall in Skaftafell, framed by striking dark hexagonal basalt columns that inspired the design of Hallgrímskirkja.
Vatnajökull National Park
Europe's largest national park, encompassing the vast Vatnajökull ice cap, volcanic landscapes, glacial rivers, and diverse ecosystems.
Kirkjufell
Iceland's most photographed mountain, an iconic cone-shaped peak on the Snæfellsnes Peninsula, with a picturesque waterfall in the foreground.
Snæfellsjökull National Park
Home to the mystical glacier-capped Snæfellsjökull volcano — the setting of Jules Verne's Journey to the Centre of the Earth.
Arnarstapi
A small fishing village on the Snæfellsnes coast with dramatic sea cliffs, natural stone arches, and a scenic coastal hiking trail.
Búðakirkja
A striking black church set against the dramatic backdrop of the Snæfellsnes lava fields, one of Iceland's most photographed buildings.
Djúpalónssandur
A dramatic black pebble beach framed by lava formations, with historic lifting stones once used to test the strength of fishermen.
Stykkishólmur
A charming harbour town on the northern Snæfellsnes coast, gateway to the Westfjords ferry and known for its colourful houses and fresh seafood.
Dynjandi
The crown jewel of the Westfjords — a majestic 100-metre tiered waterfall that fans out like a bridal veil across the mountainside.
Látrabjarg
Europe's largest bird cliff and the westernmost point of Iceland, home to millions of seabirds including puffins, razorbills, and guillemots.
Rauðasandur
An extraordinary red and golden sand beach stretching 10 kilometres along the southern Westfjords coast, strikingly different from Iceland's typical black beaches.
Ísafjörður
The unofficial capital of the Westfjords, a picturesque town nestled on a sand spit surrounded by dramatic flat-topped mountains.
Akureyri
Iceland's 'Capital of the North', a lively town set at the head of Eyjafjörður with botanical gardens, excellent skiing, and a vibrant food scene.
Húsavík
Europe's whale-watching capital, a colourful fishing town on Skjálfandi Bay famed for humpback whale sightings and the Whale Museum.
Goðafoss
The 'Waterfall of the Gods' — a wide, horseshoe-shaped cascade where, according to legend, pagan idols were cast in the year 1000 AD.
Dettifoss
Europe's most powerful waterfall, thundering 44 metres into the Jökulsárgljúfur canyon with an average flow of 193 cubic metres per second.
Mývatn
A shallow volcanic lake surrounded by extraordinary lava formations, pseudocraters, and geothermal areas, rich in birdlife and natural beauty.
Námaskarð
A surreal geothermal pass near Mývatn with bubbling mud pots, steaming fumaroles, and vivid sulphur-stained earth in shades of orange and grey.
Ásbyrgi Canyon
A massive horseshoe-shaped canyon in Vatnajökull National Park, lush with birch and willow, said in Norse mythology to be a hoofprint of Odin's horse.
Aldeyjarfoss
A powerful waterfall framed by extraordinary dark basalt columns, set in the barren highlands north of Sprengisandur — a photographer's dream.
Seyðisfjörður
A colourful artistic town at the end of a dramatic fjord, known for its rainbow-painted street, Norwegian heritage, and thriving arts community.
Borgarfjörður Eystri
A remote hamlet in the Eastfjords famous for its large and accessible puffin colony and spectacular hiking trails through rhyolite mountains.
Lagarfljót
A long, narrow glacial lake in East Iceland shrouded in legend — said to harbour the Lagarfljótsormur, Iceland's own lake monster.
Landmannalaugar
A geothermal highland paradise of rainbow-coloured rhyolite mountains, natural hot springs, and the trailhead of the famous Laugavegur hiking route.
Þórsmörk
A lush mountain valley sheltered by three glaciers, accessible only by super jeep or highland bus, and the endpoint of the Laugavegur trail.
Askja
A vast volcanic caldera in the remote central highlands with the milky-blue Víti crater lake, where NASA astronauts trained for the Moon landings.
Kerlingarfjöll
A mountain range in the highlands featuring vivid geothermal hot springs, steaming vents, and rhyolite peaks painted in red, yellow, and green.
Blue Lagoon
Iceland's world-famous geothermal spa with milky-blue mineral-rich waters, set amidst a dramatic black lava field on the Reykjanes Peninsula.
Reykjanes Geopark
A UNESCO Global Geopark on the Reykjanes Peninsula with active volcanic sites, the bridge between continents, hot springs, and rugged coastal scenery.
Keflavík
A coastal town on the Reykjanes Peninsula, home to Iceland's international airport and surrounded by dramatic lava fields and Viking heritage sites.
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