
Places to see
Use this page to find the landmarks, landscapes, and scenic areas worth building your route around.
Useful for
Where to start
Use these as quick entry points. The full attraction list is in the searchable results below.

Gullfoss is the Golden Circle waterfall that feels powerful even on a short stop, but it is best planned with viewpoint time, weather, and nearby stops in mind.

Reynisfjara is a dramatic South Coast black sand beach near Vík, currently best treated as a viewpoint-first stop because surf, erosion, and warning lights control access.

Dynjandi is the signature Westfjords waterfall, reached by a short uphill walk past smaller cascades to a broad, thunderous main fall.

Diamond Beach is the black-sand shoreline beside Jökulsárlón where glacier ice can wash ashore, creating one of the South Coast’s most changeable photo stops.

Hallgrímskirkja is Reykjavík’s landmark church, with a sculptural exterior, spare interior, large organ, and tower view over the city.

Lóndrangar is a pair of basalt sea stacks on the Snæfellsnes coast, best experienced from the marked cliff viewpoints and nearby coastal paths.
All place guides
Search and filter attraction pages and visual collections without mixing in route or region hubs.
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Víti in Krafla is a blue-green maar crater above Lake Mývatn, useful as a short Diamond Circle volcanic stop when road, wind, and rim conditions support more than a quick viewpoint.
North Iceland · Krafla area · Crater lake
Skútustaðagígar is a protected group of grassy pseudocraters on the south side of Lake Mývatn, worth adding when you want an easy volcanic walk, birdlife, and a calmer North Iceland stop.
North Iceland · Lake Mývatn · Pseudocraters
Öskjuvatn is the deep caldera lake inside Askja in North Iceland’s Highlands, worth slowing down for only when the full Askja access, weather, vehicle, and safety picture makes sense.
North Iceland · Askja · Highland lake
Lúdentarborgir is a quiet crater row southeast of Lake Mývatn, useful for geology-minded self-drivers deciding whether a rougher volcanic side stop adds enough context beside easier Mývatn sights.
North Iceland · Crater row · Mývatn side stop
Leirhnjúkur is a steaming volcanic crater and lava-field walk in the Krafla area near Lake Mývatn, worth adding when you have time for uneven geothermal ground beyond the easier roadside stops.
North Iceland · Krafla lava field · 45-90 minutes
Krafla is a volcanic area north of Lake Mývatn, where Víti crater, Leirhnjúkur lava fields, steam, and a geothermal power station make a strong but condition-sensitive North Iceland stop.
North Iceland · Mývatn area · Volcanic landscape
Hverfell is a dark volcanic crater beside Lake Mývatn, best for travelers who want a short climb, wide crater-rim views, and enough flexibility to skip it when wind, ice, or tight timing weakens the stop.
North Iceland · Volcanic crater · Diamond Circle · 45-90 minutes
Herðubreið is a flat-topped Highland mountain north of Vatnajökull, best for prepared summer self-drivers deciding whether the remote F-road effort truly strengthens an Askja or North Iceland route.
Mountain · North Iceland · Highlands F-roads
Gjástykki is a rugged Krafla rift valley north of Mývatn, where young lava, fissures, and rough access make it a specialist North Iceland stop for travelers who can verify conditions first.
North Iceland · Krafla area · Volcanic lava field
Lake Mývatn is North Iceland’s volcanic lake district, where shallow wetlands, pseudocraters, lava formations, geothermal areas, and birdlife sit close together.
North Iceland lake district · Diamond Circle anchor · volcanic and wetland cluster · birdlife and geothermal stops
Hverir Geothermal Area is a compact, highly active mud-pool and fumarole field beside Route 1 in the Mývatn area of North Iceland.
Mývatn geothermal field · Route 1 stop · North Iceland
Once the sights are clear, use planning pages to turn them into a route with realistic timing.