
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.
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Þorlákshöfn is a harbor town on South Iceland's southwest coast, useful when you want a quieter coastal pause, ferry-contingency context, or Lighthouse Trail stop before deciding whether the detour strengthens your day.
Harbor town · South Iceland · Coastal pause
Hópsnes is a lava-built headland by Grindavík, where an orange lighthouse, shipwreck remains, and rough coast make a short Reykjanes stop worth weighing against access and weather checks.
Reykjanes Peninsula · Lighthouse and shipwrecks · Short coastal stop
Reykjanesviti is Iceland’s oldest lighthouse area on the far southwest Reykjanes Peninsula, best visited with Gunnuhver, Valahnúkamöl, and other volcanic coast stops.
Reykjanes lighthouse · coastal viewpoint · maritime history · short stop
Once the sights are clear, use planning pages to turn them into a route with realistic timing.