Dramatic Iceland mountain landscape with red-roofed huts under cloudy skies

Places to see

Iceland Attractions

Use this page to find the landmarks, landscapes, and scenic areas worth building your route around.

Useful for

landmarksroute anchorsscenic stopsphoto planning

Where to start

Start with a few route-shaping sights.

Use these as quick entry points. The full attraction list is in the searchable results below.

All place guides

Find sights worth building into your route.

Search and filter attraction pages and visual collections without mixing in route or region hubs.

Aerial view of Eskifjörður fjord, Hólmatindur mountain, and the Eastfjords shoreline.

Eskifjörður

Eskifjörður is a small Eastfjords harbor town below Hólmatindur, useful as a slower Ring Road detour, short fjord stop, or base for nearby walks, maritime history, and coastal viewpoints.

Eastfjords harbor town · Ring Road detour · Hólmatindur views
Egilsstaðir beside Lagarfljót with green hills and mountains behind the East Iceland town.

Egilsstaðir

Egilsstaðir is East Iceland’s practical inland town beside Lagarfljót, useful as a Ring Road pause, flight gateway, or base for nearby fjords, forests, waterfalls, lake country, and highland-edge drives.

East Iceland base · Ring Road stop · Lagarfljót gateway
Turf-roofed houses at Skógar Museum below green South Iceland hills.

Skógar

Skógar is a tiny South Coast village beside Skógafoss, useful when you want to turn a famous waterfall stop into a slower cluster with culture, short walks, and route choices.

Village cluster · South Iceland · South Coast
View from the Varmahlíð area across fields and snowy Skagafjörður mountains.

Varmahlíð

Varmahlíð is a small Skagafjörður village on the North Iceland route, useful when you need a practical pause, valley view, or base decision rather than a standalone sightseeing detour.

Skagafjörður village · North Iceland route stop · Ring Road pause · Reykjarhóll views
Open Skagafjörður farmland with Tindastóll mountain and snowy ridges beyond the valley.

Skagafjörður

Skagafjörður is a broad fjord and horse-country destination in North Iceland, useful when you want a slower Ring Road segment with turf history, coastal villages, birdlife, and room for weather-aware detours.

North Iceland · Fjord and horse country · Ring Road segment
Fishing boats in Seyðisfjörður harbor with waterfalls and mountains behind the Eastfjords town.

Seyðisfjörður

Seyðisfjörður is a colorful harbor town at the end of an Eastfjords road, worth the Route 93 detour when you have time for mountain views, Rainbow Street, and a slower fjord stop.

Eastfjords town detour · Route 93 harbor stop · Rainbow Street and fjord views
Snow-covered turf-style buildings and Möðrudalskirkja at Möðrudalur in Northeast Iceland.

Möðrudalur

Möðrudalur is a highland-edge farm settlement on Road 901 in Northeast Iceland, worth a stop when you want cultural texture, Herðubreið views, and a slower pause between Mývatn, Dettifoss, Askja access, and East Iceland.

Northeast Iceland · Farm settlement · Road 901
Hveragerði spread across a green valley below hills in South Iceland.

Hveragerði

Hveragerði is a geothermal town east of Reykjavík, useful as a quick stop, soft overnight base, or Reykjadalur gateway when you decide how much time to give the steam, walks, and nearby routes.

Geothermal town · South Iceland · Golden Circle edge
Aerial view of Höfn harbor, town buildings, water, and mountains in southeast Iceland.

Höfn

Höfn is a small harbor town in southeast Iceland, useful as a Ring Road base when you need food, rest, and route balance between glacier-lagoon stops and East Iceland.

Southeast harbor town · Ring Road base · Jökulsárlón and East Iceland handoff
Hlíðarendi hills and farm fields in the Fljótshlíð district of South Iceland.

Fljótshlíð

Fljótshlíð is a rural saga landscape east of Hvolsvöllur in South Iceland, best for travelers deciding whether a quieter side-road detour adds more than another major waterfall stop.

South Iceland · Saga landscape · Slow detour

Build a trip around the places you want to see.

Once the sights are clear, use planning pages to turn them into a route with realistic timing.