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Europe

Iceland

An island of 103,000 km² straddling the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at the edge of the Arctic Circle, where volcanoes, glaciers, geysers and aurorae make up one of the most active geological laboratories on the planet.

4.80Capital : ReykjavikISK
Capital
Reykjavik
Currency
Couronne islandaise (ISK)
Languages
Islandais
Budget
From around €150/day/person — Iceland is among Europe's most expensive destinations

Iceland at a glance

Iceland is one of the youngest and most active islands on the planet: straddling the Mid-Atlantic Ridge where the Eurasian and North American tectonic plates drift apart by a few centimetres each year, it is a full-scale geological laboratory where volcanoes, geysers, glaciers and fissures continue to shape the landscape before travellers' eyes. In 2010, the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull grounded European air traffic for six days; in 2021, 2022 and 2023, the Reykjanes peninsula returned to dramatic eruptive activity visible just a few kilometres from the capital.

But Iceland is not only a land of fire: it is also a land of ice. The Vatnajökull glacier covers 8% of the country's surface and is Europe's largest by volume — a thousand-metre-thick dome of ice beneath which several active volcanoes still simmer. The Ring Road (route 1) unfurls 1,332 km of uninterrupted panorama: waterfalls (Skógafoss, Seljalandsfoss, Goðafoss, Dettifoss), deeply cut fjords to the east and west, black-sand beaches bristling with basalt columns (Reynisfjara), glacial lagoons studded with blue icebergs (Jökulsárlón), steaming geothermal fields (Geysir, Mývatn) and pale green meadows where Icelandic sheep and horses graze.

The capital Reykjavik is the world's northernmost capital and a city on a human scale (130,000 inhabitants) with a distinctively Nordic charm: brightly painted rooftops beneath the soaring concrete spire of the Hallgrímskirkja, a thriving cultural scene (music, design, new Nordic gastronomy) and street art on every corner. It is also the almost obligatory starting point of any trip to Iceland, 50 minutes by bus from the Blue Lagoon and one hour from the Golden Circle sites.

Iceland is one of the most expensive destinations in Europe — count on around €150/day/person for a modest comfort trip — but it offers in return a raw nature experience that few other countries on Earth can rival. It is also one of the most egalitarian, safest and most modern societies in the world, with 100% renewable electricity (geothermal and hydroelectric), almost no crime and a warm welcome from the Icelanders (340,000 inhabitants spread across 103,000 km²) that more than makes up for the harsh climate.

What we love

  • Natural spectacle unmatched in Europe: erupting volcanoes, immense glaciers, Northern Lights, geysers and waterfalls in abundance
  • An extremely safe and egalitarian society: virtually no crime, modern infrastructure, English spoken everywhere
  • 100% renewable energy and the purest tap water in the world — a global environmental model
  • Easy access from Europe: 3 hours from London or Paris, no visa, same time zone (in winter)
  • A 1,332 km Ring Road that lets you self-drive the entire island in 10-14 days

What to know

  • Very high cost of living: Iceland ranks in the top 3 most expensive countries in Europe — dining out and alcohol are prohibitive
  • Extremely changeable weather: violent winds, snow possible at altitude year-round, unreliable forecasts
  • Strong seasonality: highlands inaccessible 9 months a year, no Northern Lights in summer
  • A car is essential beyond Reykjavik and the Golden Circle: public transport is virtually non-existent outside the capital

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Frequently asked questions

Do I need a passport or just a national ID card for Iceland?+
Iceland is a member of the Schengen Area (without being a member of the European Union): EU national ID cards are accepted for entry and stays of unlimited duration. A passport is recommended for smoother controls at Keflavík and remains essential if you transit via a non-EU country. No ETIAS is required as long as Iceland remains in Schengen. Citizens of the UK, US, Canada and Australia need a valid passport but no visa for tourist stays of up to 90 days within any 180-day period.
When is the best time to see the Northern Lights in Iceland?+
The Northern Lights are visible from September to April, peaking in November, December, January and February. Necessary conditions: a sufficiently dark night (impossible from May to August in Iceland because the sun barely sets), clear skies and moderate to strong solar activity (check the KP index on the Icelandic Met Office site Vedur.is). Plan 5 to 7 nights on the ground to maximise your chances: the weather is highly changeable and auroras are never guaranteed.
What budget should I plan for a trip to Iceland?+
Iceland is one of Europe's most expensive destinations. Plan on €150/day/person for modest comfort (mid-range shared hotel room, hire car, mixed restaurants and groceries), €100-120 in budget mode (hostel or campsite, home cooking) and €250/day and up in upper-comfort mode. The Paris/London-Reykjavik return flight costs €200-450 depending on season; a hire car starts at €80/day in summer (€150 in winter); a pub meal runs €25-35 per person; the Blue Lagoon costs €80-150 per entry. Shop at the Bonus or Krónan chains to save heavily on food.
Do I need to hire a car in Iceland?+
Essential as soon as you leave Reykjavik. Public transport is virtually non-existent outside the capital, and even the Golden Circle sites require a vehicle (or an organised tour). For the south coast and the Ring Road, a car is mandatory. Choose a compact 2WD from April to October if you stay on main roads (route 1, Golden Circle, south coast); take a 4x4 if you plan to drive the F-roads of the highlands (forbidden to 2WD, open only mid-June to September) or to travel in winter. Count €80-150/day depending on the season, and more for a winter 4x4.
Can you swim in all of Iceland's geothermal springs?+
No. Most wild springs are risky (water sometimes too hot — 80 to 100 °C — unstable ground, unsecured access). Stick to developed geothermal pools: Blue Lagoon (premium, €80-150), Sky Lagoon in Reykjavik, Mývatn Nature Baths in the north (cheaper, €50-60), Secret Lagoon in Flúðir, the Reykjadalur hot river (one-hour hike + natural pools). Every Icelandic village's public swimming pool (sundlaug) is also geothermal, costs €8-12 and is full of locals — the most authentic experience.

Our verdict

Iceland is one of Europe's most singular destinations and probably one of the world's most striking — a country-laboratory where the planet is still being formed before the traveller's eyes, where the polar night of winter is torn open by the Northern Lights and where summer barely knows a night. Travelling in Iceland is demanding: the weather sets the agenda, distances are large, prices are high, driving can be tough. But the experience is unlike anywhere else. For a first trip, plan 7 to 10 days in June-August to cover the full Ring Road, or 5 to 7 days in winter combining Reykjavik, the Golden Circle, the south coast and an aurora hunt. Book 4 to 6 months ahead for the busiest windows. And don't forget that Iceland's tap water is the best in the world: there is no need to buy bottled water.

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The Editors
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