
Places to see
Use this page to find the landmarks, landscapes, and scenic areas worth building your route around.
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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
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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
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
Mýrdalsjökull is a large South Coast glacier above Katla, best planned as a route-defining landscape where travelers must choose between distant views, guided glacier access, or a simpler nearby stop.
South Iceland · Glacier and Katla · Guided access checks
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
Katla is an active volcano beneath Mýrdalsjökull on Iceland’s South Coast, best planned as a safety-sensitive landscape stop where the main decision is whether to view it, book guided access, or skip close plans.
South Iceland · Volcano under glacier · Safety checks
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
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
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
Eldvörp is a steaming crater row and lava-field area northwest of Grindavík on Reykjanes, worth adding only when access, volcanic alerts, weather, and a slower peninsula route all make sense.
Reykjanes crater row · Geothermal steam · Rough access check · Lava-field walk
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
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.