
Places to see
Use this page to find the landmarks, landscapes, and scenic areas worth building your route around.
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Gullfoss works best when the nearby Golden Circle stops are easy to compare, not mixed with unrelated highlights.
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Search and filter attraction pages and visual collections without mixing in route or region hubs.
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Þríhyrningur is a three-peaked mountain above Fljótshlíð in South Iceland, best for travelers who want a quieter marked hike, wide saga-country views, and enough weather flexibility to skip it when cloud or snow wins.
Mountain hike · South Iceland · Near Fljótshlíð
Tindfjöll is a rugged mountain range beside Tindfjallajökull in South Iceland, worth adding when you want wilder Þórsmörk-area views but easy to skip on a tight classic South Coast day.
South Iceland · Mountain ridge · Þórsmörk context
Hjörleifshöfði is a steep South Coast headland on Mýrdalssandur near Vík, best for travelers deciding between a quick Gígjagjá cave stop and a longer rough-edged viewpoint walk nearby.
Vík-area headland · Gígjagjá cave and black-sand views · South Coast add-on · Quiet viewpoint stop
Lómagnúpur is a steep South Coast mountain beside Route 1, best as a flexible photo pause between Kirkjubæjarklaustur and Skaftafell, with safe stopping, weather, and nearby glacier-country timing shaping the decision.
Mountain · South Iceland · South Coast
Torfajökull is a remote volcanic and geothermal area in the South Iceland Highlands, worth planning when you want vivid rhyolite scenery, rough-road adventure, and enough flexibility for weather, access, and nearby Fjallabak stops.
South Iceland Highlands · Volcanic area · F-road planning
Sveinstindur is a remote Highlands mountain above Langisjór, worth adding when the day already fits F-road access, clear weather, and a short steep hike for one of the area’s strongest viewpoints.
Langisjór viewpoint · Highlands hike · F-road access
Reynisfjall is the steep tuff mountain above Vík and Reynisfjara, best for travelers who want cliff scenery, sea-stack views, puffin-season context, and a quieter South Coast pause without treating the ridge road as routine.
Vík-area mountain viewpoint · Reynisfjara and sea-stack context · South Coast scenic add-on · Weather-aware short stop
Jökulheimar is a remote hut and glacier-edge stop west of Vatnajökull, worth adding only when a summer Highlands plan, suitable vehicle, weather window, and slow-day buffer all make sense.
West Vatnajökull · Remote hut stop · Highlands detour
Tindfjallajökull is a remote glacier-capped volcano above South Iceland’s highland edge, worth considering when you want wild mountain views but need to decide whether a distant view is enough.
South Iceland · Glacier volcano · Highland access
Stakkholtsgjá is a narrow canyon near Þórsmörk in South Iceland, reached by high-friction F-road access and river crossings; visit for the stream-bed walk and waterfall chamber only when conditions and access checks support the detour.
Canyon walk · South Iceland · Þórsmörk side
Skjaldbreiður is a broad shield volcano north of Þingvellir, best for prepared self-drive travelers deciding whether highland-edge scenery and geology justify extra time beyond the classic Golden Circle stops.
Shield volcano · Near Þingvellir · Golden Circle extension · Road-sensitive detour
Öræfajökull is the glacier-covered volcano above Skaftafell in southeast Iceland, where travelers need to choose between scenic views, nearby outlet-glacier stops, or a serious guided mountain objective with official checks.
South Iceland · Glacier volcano · Skaftafell area
Magni is a young volcanic cone on Fimmvörðuháls in South Iceland, worth considering only when you are already planning the mountain route and can handle the access, weather, time, and safety checks.
Volcanic crater · Fimmvörðuháls · South Coast
Krakatindur is a jagged volcanic mountain near Hekla in South Iceland's Highlands, best for prepared summer drivers deciding whether a rough-track detour is worth the access, weather, and vehicle commitment.
Hekla-area mountain · Highland track · Remote 4x4 detour
Hvannadalshnúkur is Iceland's highest peak, rising from Öræfajökull above Skaftafell, where travelers must choose between admiring the mountain from the South Coast or committing to a demanding guided glacier summit.
South Iceland · Highest peak · Guided glacier summit
Gígjökull is the rough outlet glacier descending from Eyjafjallajökull toward Þórsmörk; visit for volcanic-glacier scale and 2010 eruption context, but only when access, weather, vehicle, and safety checks support the detour.
Outlet glacier · South Iceland · Þórsmörk side
Fimmvörðuháls is a high mountain pass between Skógafoss and Þórsmörk, worth planning when you want a serious South Coast hike and can solve weather, transport, time, and gear before committing.
Mountain pass · South Coast · Serious hike
Hekla is one of South Iceland’s most famous active volcanoes, best planned as a powerful landmark and route anchor where the main decision is how close current conditions and safety guidance make sensible.
South Iceland · Active volcano · Safety checks
Hengill is a geothermal mountain and volcanic system near Reykjavík and the Golden Circle, worth adding when you want steam, marked trails, and energy-landscape context rather than another quick roadside stop.
South Iceland · Golden Circle · Geothermal trails
Eyjafjallajökull is the glacier-capped South Coast volcano made famous by the 2010 eruption; visit for route context and views, but treat glacier or summit access as serious guided terrain.
Glacier-volcano · South Iceland · South Coast
Langisjór is a remote highland lake near Vatnajökull, worth planning only when road access, weather, vehicle choice, and a full highland day all make sense, with enough flexibility for conditions and nearby route choices.
Southern Highlands · Remote lake · Summer F-road detour
Once the sights are clear, use planning pages to turn them into a route with realistic timing.