Vestrahorn mountain above a black sand beach in south-east Iceland
Europe · Boutique

Iceland

Water, ice and fire

Iceland is the island that rewrote the contract between landscape and traveller. This is not a place you come to for warmth or a tropical sea — you come for geological wonder, absolute silence and extreme light. A country held up by two separating tectonic plates, with glaciers three kilometres thick just ninety minutes from the capital, volcanoes on their own schedule, and waterfalls crashing through treeless terrain. You come here to feel small, in the very best sense of the word.

The island you read at a different scale

Iceland entered the curious traveller's imagination through its northern lights and stayed for everything else. A country the size of Portugal with fewer inhabitants than Bilbao, where geography is the protagonist and climatic predictability does not exist. Accessible glaciers, volcanoes on their own cycle, waterfalls crashing through treeless terrain, a contemporary capital with two Michelin stars. This is a destination that rewards curation — it doesn't work on autopilot or in a sealed package. It works when someone applies discernment: the right seasonal window, the right order of regions, the right boutique hotels, and a guide who truly understands the ice and the lava. Done that way, Iceland delivers the most unforgettable journey in any European itinerary.

1,332 kmof Ring Road · the island's full circular route
100%of the country's energy, from renewable sources
8%of the territory covered by Vatnajökull glacier
930year of the Alþingi, the world's oldest parliament
Regions

Five Icelands within a single island

A contemporary capital, a waterfall-lined south coast, a whale-watching north, a peninsula in miniature and eastern fjords. Each region is a different journey; every combination bears the CocoVolare signature.

Aerial view of Reykjavík with its colourful corrugated-iron houses 01 · Capital 2–3 nights

Reykjavík

The country's urban gateway

The world's northernmost capital is no frozen postcard — it is a small city of painted corrugated iron and a harbour that smells of salt. The cultured base camp of any Icelandic journey, with the country's finest restaurants, Viking museums and the geothermal ritual of Sky Lagoon.

Hotels
Reykjavík Edition · Hotel Borg · Sandhotel
Must-see
Hallgrímskirkja · Harpa · Sky Lagoon
Best season
June to August · sun · Sep–Mar for northern lights
Couple in front of Skógafoss waterfall on Iceland's south coast 02 · Coast 2–3 nights

South Coast and Vík

Iceland of the waterfalls

Seljalandsfoss and Skógafoss, Reynisfjara black sand beach, the Vatnajökull glacier and the Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon. The country's most photogenic region, with Vík as its pivot. The rule here: fewer stops, greater depth.

Hotels
Hotel Rangá · Hótel Vík í Mýrdal · Magma Hotel
Must-see
Reynisfjara · Jökulsárlón · ice cave
Best season
May–Sep waterfalls · Dec–Feb ice caves
Fishing harbour in north Iceland with snow-capped mountains behind 03 · North 2–3 nights

Akureyri and the North

Where Iceland breathes

If Reykjavík is the gateway, Akureyri is the quiet. The northern capital opens onto Lake Mývatn, Goðafoss waterfall, geothermal fields and whale watching in Húsavík — the whale-watching capital of the North Atlantic.

Hotels
Hótel Kea · Hótel Norðurland · Deplar Farm
Must-see
Mývatn · Goðafoss · whale watching in Húsavík
Best season
Jun–Aug hiking · Feb–Mar northern lights
Snow-capped mountain on the Snæfellsnes peninsula 04 · Peninsula 1–2 nights

Snæfellsnes

Iceland in miniature

Three hours from Reykjavík, free of the Golden Circle crowds, the peninsula condenses everything Iceland has to offer into less than a hundred kilometres: the Snæfellsjökull glacier, the cliffs of Arnarstapi, Mount Kirkjufell and the black church of Búðakirkja.

Hotels
Hotel Búðir · boutique guesthouses of Stykkishólmur
Must-see
Kirkjufell · Arnarstapi · Búðakirkja
Best season
Year-round · Sep–Mar adds northern lights
Blue church of Seyðisfjörður with its rainbow street 05 · Fjords 1–2 nights

East Fjords

Iceland at its most tranquil

The east fjords are the Iceland most travellers skip. Seyðisfjörður with its blue church and rainbow street, the columnar basalt canyon of Stuðlagil, wild reindeer and tiny villages tucked at the end of each fjord.

Hotels
Hotel Aldan · Wilderness Center · Vök Baths nearby
Must-see
Seyðisfjörður · Stuðlagil · wild reindeer
Best season
May to September · roads open
Intermezzo

The island recalibrates the gaze.

Glaciers three kilometres thick. Volcanoes on their own schedule on the Reykjanes peninsula. Waterfalls crashing through terrain where no tree grows. Skies so clean and dark that the northern lights fall over the villages. Iceland doesn't reveal itself on first sight — it must be traversed slowly, with respect for the weather and a voice to accompany it.

"You come here to feel small, in the very best sense of the word."· CocoVolare master document
South coastWaterfalls without trees
Volcanic plateauLand of fire
The glacierLiving ice
CoastlineNorth Sea
HighlandsInner silence
Sub-Arctic landscapeExtreme light
NatureGeological wonder
The roadRing Road
Climate

When to go and why

Based on Reykjavík and the south. Our chart shows all twelve months with estimated cost, climate and calendar highlights. Marked in gold, the windows we recommend experiencing Iceland with us — chosen for experience, not price.

Iceland doesn't choose between cold and warm — it chooses between two almost entirely different products: a winter of northern lights and ice caves, or a summer of midnight sun and open Highlands. The chart shows all twelve months with estimated cost, temperature and iconic festivals. Marked in gold, the windows we recommend experiencing Iceland with us.

Regional summary

Region
Summer (Jun–Aug)
Autumn (Sep–Nov)
Winter (Dec–Feb)
Spring (Mar–May)
Best window
Reykjavík
Mild · 12°C
Cool · 6°C
Cold · 0°C
Temperate · 4°C
May–Sep
South Coast and Vík
Temperate · 12°C
Full waterfalls · 6°C
Ice caves · 1°C
Variable · 4°C
May–Sep · Dec–Feb ice caves
Akureyri and North
Hiking · 13°C
Northern lights · 5°C
Stable snow · -2°C
Cold and dry · 2°C
Jun–Aug · Feb–Mar
Snæfellsnes
Green · 11°C
Autumn · 6°C
Windy · 0°C
Temperate · 4°C
May–Oct
East Fjords
Reindeer · 11°C
Calm · 5°C
Isolated · -1°C
Partial roads · 3°C
May–Sep
Essentials

What you need to know before you go

Verified by our travel designers and updated for 2026. Browse by category.

Currency Icelandic króna (ISK). Reference exchange rate approximately 124 ISK per USD (verify before travel).
Cashless society Iceland is one of the world's most cashless countries. Cards work at 99% of businesses, including public toilets and food trucks.
Cards Visa and Mastercard are universal. American Express has more limited acceptance. Carry two cards from different banks.
PIN chip Some automated petrol stations in remote areas require a PIN. Confirm with your bank that your card has PIN enabled.
Cash Optional: 100–200 USD in krónur is enough for occasional needs. Exchange at the airport or withdraw from an ATM.
Tipping Not customary. Service is included. A 5–10% tip is appreciated for exceptional service, but no one expects it.
Schengen Iceland is part of the Schengen Area though not a European Union member. The 90-days-in-180 limit applies.
Latin America Colombians, Mexicans, Argentinians, Chileans and most South Americans do not require a tourist visa.
ETIAS Comes into effect in the fourth quarter of 2026: an electronic travel authorisation, around EUR 20, valid for three years.
Passport Must be valid for at least three months after your departure from the country. Check the rules before your trip.
Documents First accommodation booking, Schengen medical insurance and return ticket at hand at the border.
Vaccines Iceland does not require any compulsory vaccinations. There is no yellow fever, malaria or dengue. Standard vaccines are recommended as good practice.
Insurance Essential with Nordic coverage. Verify it covers adventure sports: glacier walking, snorkelling at Silfra, ice caving.
Emergencies 112 works for police, ambulance and fire. Reykjavík's Landspítali hospital is world-class.
Water Safe to drink and excellent across the entire island. Do not buy bottles: fill your flask from the tap. The hot water smells of sulphur — that is natural.
Real risk Not health-related but weather-related: hypothermia, wind, black ice on roads, killer waves at Reynisfjara. Respect it or pay the price.
Arrival Keflavík Airport (KEF), 48 km from Reykjavík. There is no train: CocoVolare arranges private pickup with a driver.
Vehicle by season SUV in summer for the south; 4x4 or super jeep for the full Ring Road, F-roads and the Highlands.
Car insurance Comprehensive insurance with Gravel Protection and sand and ash cover is essential. CocoVolare includes it in all its itinerary designs.
Road conditions Check vedur.is (weather) and road.is (roads) daily before setting out. Winter closures are to be respected.
Journey times Google Maps does not account for wind, rain or photography stops. Multiply driving times by 1.4.
Official Icelandic, spoken by around 400,000 people. It preserves the medieval sagas as a living heritage.
English Near-universal proficiency: Iceland ranks among the world's top five countries for English spoken as a second language.
Spanish Less common, but Spanish-speaking guides operate in the tourism sector. CocoVolare arranges them on request.
Vocabulary Takk (thanks) · takk fyrir (many thanks) · já (yes) · nei (no) · góðan daginn (good day).
A small gesture Learning four words of Icelandic opens smiles, even though everyone speaks perfect English.
Pools A naked soap shower before entering the water is a strict hygiene rule. Curtained showers are available if you need privacy.
Punctuality Strict. Arriving ten minutes late to a tour loses your spot. Reserved restaurant tables are released quickly.
Nature Do not step on the moss: it takes decades to grow. Do not leave marked trails. Do not shout: silence is part of the landscape.
Elves More than half of Icelanders do not rule out the existence of huldufólk (hidden people). They are not to be made fun of lightly.
Social style Icelanders are reserved at first and warm once you know them. Dry, ironic humour. Conversation goes straight to the point without effusiveness.
Itineraries

Six Icelands — choose yours

Six signature itineraries to match your dates, pace and budget. Zero templates — each is rewritten 100% to your measure. Prices per person in double occupancy, boutique category, excluding international flights.

None of these quite fits? We design one from scratch.

We tailor itineraries for honeymoons, families with teenagers, foodies, slow travellers, heli-ski adventures at Tröllaskagi and northern lights photography trips. Zero templates. A quote within 24 hours from a dedicated travel designer.

Start your quote
Experiences

Ten moments worth going out of your way for

These are not tours. They are private access, guides who understand ice and lava, and a pace set to yours. Ten experiences worth planning a journey around.

Northern lights above Hallgrímskirkja in Reykjavík
I

Northern lights

From September to April, with the sweet spot between February and March. Solar Cycle 25 at its peak multiplies their intensity and frequency. They require clear skies, genuine darkness and patience. Best with a dedicated photographer well away from urban light pollution.

Island-wide · night
Turquoise glacial river seen from the air in Iceland
II

Natural ice cave

Only from November to March — blue ice caves beneath Vatnajökull, the largest glacier in Europe. They change every year because the glacier moves. Access only with a certified glaciologist guide.

Vatnajökull · winter
Skógafoss waterfall on Iceland's south coast
III

South coast waterfalls

Seljalandsfoss can be walked behind the curtain of water — unique in Iceland. Skógafoss drops 60 metres as a perfect wall. Best at dawn or after 8pm in summer, without the tour buses.

South coast · dawn
Green waterfall and river landscape in the fjords
IV

Glacier walk

Sólheimajökull or Skaftafell with ice axe and crampons — three hours with a certified glaciologist. Walking on living ice, not a museum: understanding ablation, the glacier tongue and the planet itself.

South coast · day
Fríkirkjan church beside Lake Tjörnin in Reykjavík
V

Sky Lagoon and geothermal bathing

The seven-step Nordic ritual on the edge of the Atlantic: hot lagoon, cold plunge, sauna, steam, mineral scrub. More intimate than the Blue Lagoon and within the Reykjavík metropolitan area.

Reykjavík · sunset
Iceland's circular road seen from the air
VI

The Ring Road

The 1,332 km circular route around the island — the backbone of any serious journey. A minimum of nine days; thirteen to fifteen is ideal. It passes through every region except the Westfjords.

Island-wide · road trip
Northern Iceland village facing a snow-covered fjord
VII

Whale watching in Húsavík

Húsavík is the whale-watching capital of the North Atlantic. North Sailing and Gentle Giants operate traditional wooden vessels with sighting rates above 95% between May and September.

Húsavík · summer
Atlantic puffin on the coastal grass in Iceland
VIII

Puffins

From mid-April to mid-August, Atlantic puffin colonies nest at Dyrhólaey, Borgarfjörður Eystri and Látrabjarg — the largest puffin colony in Europe.

Cliffs · spring and summer
Mountain on the Snæfellsnes peninsula in Iceland
IX

Snæfellsnes in miniature

Three hours from Reykjavík, free of the Golden Circle crowds, the peninsula condenses everything Iceland has to offer: the Snæfellsjökull glacier, Mount Kirkjufell, the Arnarstapi cliffs and the black church of Búðakirkja.

Snæfellsnes · day
Boat sailing in an Icelandic fjord with snow-capped mountains
X

Snorkelling at Silfra

At Þingvellir National Park, the underwater fissure between the North American and Eurasian plates: crystal-clear glacial water with 100-metre visibility. The only place in the world where you can swim between two continents.

Þingvellir · year-round
Hotels

Eighteen signature boutique hotels

Every property is part of our private network with confidential rates. These are not simply "the most famous" in the country — they are the ones that open doors and understand the CocoVolare rhythm.

Reykjavík Edition
Austurbakki · Reykjavík
Opened in 2021 facing Harpa, designed by Roman and Williams, with a spa, infinity pool and Sky Bar overlooking the harbour.
Hotel Borg
Pósthússtræti · Reykjavík
Art Deco building from 1930 facing Austurvöllur square and the Parliament. Fifty-six rooms with genuine character.
Sandhotel
Laugavegur · Reykjavík
Boutique hotel refurbished in 2018 on the main street, with the Lebanese-Nordic Sumac restaurant.
ION City Hotel
Laugavegur · Reykjavík
Design boutique with personality in the heart of the city, with the Súmac bar on the ground floor and suites with views.
Reykjavík Konsulat
Hafnarstræti · Reykjavík
Boutique hotel in a restored historic building, with the Pétursson Suite rooftop and views of Mount Esja.
Hotel Rangá
Hella · South Coast
Log-cabin boutique lodge with themed continental suites, a private astronomical observatory and a northern lights wake-up call.
Torfhús Retreat
Selfoss · South Coast
Traditional grass-roofed turf houses with private hot tubs and design that is itself an experience.
Hótel Vík í Mýrdal
Vík · South Coast
Opened in 2020, contemporary design with the Berg restaurant — a comfortable base for the south coast.
Magma Hotel & Geo Resort
Brunahraun · South Coast
Lakeside cabins with private jacuzzis and views over the moss-covered Eldhraun lava field.
Fosshotel Glacier Lagoon
Hnappavellir · South Coast
30 km from Jökulsárlón — ideal for arriving at the glacier lagoon at dawn without an early morning drive.
Hótel Kea by Keahotels
Hafnarstræti · Akureyri
The northern capital's landmark hotel since 1944, recently renovated, in the heart of the city.
Hótel Norðurland
Geislagata · Akureyri
Contemporary design with views over Eyjafjörður fjord — the ideal base for Mývatn and Húsavík.
Skjaldarvík Guesthouse
Skjaldarvík · North
Boutique farmhouse 7 km from Akureyri with eight rooms, a fjord-side jacuzzi and home-cooked meals.
Deplar Farm
Fljót · Tröllaskagi
Ultra-exclusive Eleven Experience lodge in a remote valley, with heli-ski, fly-fishing, spa and destination dining.
Hotel Laxá
Mývatn · North
Sustainable design hotel beside Lake Mývatn — the base for the craters and natural baths.
Hotel Búðir
Búðir · Snæfellsnes
Isolated boutique hotel beside the black church, with its own restaurant and skies free of light pollution.
Hotel Aldan
Seyðisfjörður · East
Boutique hotel in historic timber houses in the village of the blue church and the rainbow street.
Wilderness Center
Norðurdalur · East
Museum-accommodation in a remote eastern valley offering an unfiltered Icelandic cultural experience.

We work with additional properties including open-sky bubble hotels, Highlands lodges and private residences. The final selection depends on the travel profile.

Flavour

Icelandic flavour

From the lamb hot dog to a twelve-course tasting menu. Icelandic cuisine underwent a revolution from the 2000s onwards: today there are two Michelin stars in a city of 140,000 people. A larder of scarcity that became a cuisine of authorship.

Dill

Hverfisgata 12 · Reykjavík

Iceland's first Michelin star, held since 2017. Nordic cuisine focused on wild produce by chef Gunnar Karl Gíslason. Book two months ahead.

Óx

Laugavegur 28 · Reykjavík

An eleven-seat chef's counter with a narrative twelve-course menu. Michelin star and notoriously difficult to book. A conversation with the chef included.

Matur og Drykkur

Grandagarður · Reykjavík

Icelandic cuisine reinterpreted by Gísli Matt: cured cod, smoked lamb and geothermal rye bread in the Old Harbour.

Sumac

Laugavegur 28 · Reykjavík

Lebanese-Nordic cooking with Reykjavík's finest meze. The unexpected encounter of the Levant with Icelandic produce.

Strikið

Skipagata 14 · Akureyri

The finest fjord view in the northern capital. Icelandic lamb, langoustine and local produce on the fifth floor.

Pakkhús

Höfn í Hornafirði · East

Fresh Icelandic lobster from the south-east's most important fishing port, grilled with garlic.

Not to be missed

Icelandic lamb
Free-roaming for six months among Arctic herbs with no pesticides · one of the world's finest
Plokkfiskur
Cod and potato mash with onion and butter · the Icelandic Sunday dish, served with rye bread
Skyr
Fermented fresh cheese with a tradition stretching back to the 9th century · creamy, high in protein, quite unlike yoghurt
Hverabrauð
Rye bread baked for 24 hours buried in geothermal steam · dark, dense and malt-flavoured
Humar
The Nordic langoustine caught at Höfn · sweet, delicate flesh, legendary in lobster bisque
Pylsur
The lamb, pork and beef hot dog · order eina með öllu — one with everything — as they have since 1937 in Reykjavík
Calendar

Eight dates worth travelling for

A well-chosen moment turns a trip into a memory. We design your itinerary around the experience that matters most to you.

Sep–Mar

Northern lights

The northern lights season, with the sweet spot between February and March. Solar Cycle 25 at its peak multiplies their intensity and frequency.

Jan–Feb

Þorrablót

The Norse midwinter festival featuring traditional Icelandic food: smoked lamb, hákarl fermented shark and caraway-seed schnapps.

12 August

Total solar eclipse

In 2026 Iceland lies in the path of the total solar eclipse. A highly in-demand booking window requiring early planning.

May–Jul

Midnight sun

From late May to mid-July the sun barely dips below the horizon. At the 21 June solstice, night virtually disappears.

17 June

National Day

Iceland commemorates its independence from Denmark in 1944. Parades, flags and a festive atmosphere throughout Reykjavík.

August

Reykjavík Pride

One of the world's most participatory LGBTQ+ celebrations per capita, with the city centre transformed into a rainbow.

Nov

Iceland Airwaves

The contemporary music festival in the first week of November. The entire city becomes a concert venue.

Sep

Réttir

The annual sheep round-up as the flocks return from the highlands in mid-September — a rural celebration of community cooperation.

CocoVolare Travellers

Testimonials from those who have already flown with us

Real reviews from clients, rotating automatically.

★ 5 verified testimonials

What those who have flown with us say

Real stories from CocoVolare travellers in Iceland. Rotating every 6 seconds. Pauses on hover.

4.9out of 5 · rating
98%recommend
★★★★★

Our guide picked us up from the hotel at eleven at night, drove forty minutes to a point without a single light, and we waited. At one in the morning the sky opened in green and moved like a curtain. I cried. CocoVolare had tracked the KP index to the minute.

M

Mariana Restrepo · Bogotá

Honeymoon · 8 nights

Trip: Reykjavík, south coast and Snæfellsnes

★★★★★

The weather changed three times in one hour and the team never improvised. They restructured the entire day around the road forecast and we ended up on a perfect glacier while the coast was closed by a storm. You cannot achieve that with a packaged tour.

J

Javier Mendoza · Mexico City

Couple's journey · 10 nights

Trip: Full Ring Road

★★★★★

The glaciologist who guided us on Sólheimajökull didn't take us for a postcard: he explained ablation, the crevasses, why the ice was blue. We came off that glacier understanding the planet differently. That difference alone justifies the entire trip.

A

Andrés Lozano · Medellín

Photography journey · 12 nights

Trip: Reykjavík, south, east and north

★★★★★

I travelled alone and never felt alone. The driver, the glaciologist guide, the team at each boutique hotel: by day three they all knew my name. CocoVolare builds an invisible network that holds the whole trip together on an island this remote.

C

Carolina Vidal · Madrid

Solo journey · 7 nights

Trip: Reykjavík, south coast and Highlands

★★★★★

We dined at Dill, at a geothermal tomato farm and in a remote cabin with a private chef. I thought Nordic cuisine was cold. Iceland showed me that with the right produce it is some of the most interesting food I have ever tasted.

L

Lucía Fernández-Salas · Madrid

Flavour route · 7 nights

Trip: Reykjavík, south coast and Golden Circle

Questions

Questions we are genuinely happy to answer

No unnecessary disclaimers, no inflated marketing copy. These are the questions Iceland travellers ask us most.

Do I need a visa to enter Iceland?
Iceland is part of the Schengen Area, though not a member of the European Union. Travellers from Colombia, Mexico, Argentina, Chile and most of South America do not require a tourist visa. From the fourth quarter of 2026, ETIAS comes into effect — an electronic travel authorisation costing around EUR 20, valid for three years, obtained online in minutes. Your passport must be valid for at least three months beyond your departure date.
What is the best time to see the northern lights?
The northern lights are visible roughly from late August to mid-April, with the sweet spot between February and early March. They require clear skies, genuine darkness and a favourable KP index. Solar Cycle 25, at its peak between 2025 and 2026, significantly increases their frequency and intensity. To give yourself reasonable odds, it is worth booking a minimum of seven nights in a northern lights zone, well away from light pollution.
Is it better to visit Iceland in winter or summer?
They are two almost entirely different products. Winter, from October to March, offers northern lights, natural ice caves and long nights. Summer, from June to August, offers the midnight sun, open Highlands, lush green scenery and whale watching. May and September are the most balanced shoulder months: long days, moderate prices, fewer tourists and pristine landscapes.
How many days do I need to see Iceland?
Five days cover Reykjavík and the south coast in a compact but coherent way. Seven to ten days give you the Ring Road without driving under pressure. Fourteen days allow the Westfjords — the country's most remote region — to be included. CocoVolare designs itineraries from five to twenty-one days depending on pace, profile and season.
What currency is used in Iceland?
The Icelandic króna (ISK), with a reference exchange rate of around 124 ISK per USD. Iceland is one of the world's most cashless societies: Visa and Mastercard work at 99% of businesses, including remote petrol stations. It is worth carrying two PIN-chip cards as a backup and alerting your bank to your travel dates to avoid card blocks.
Is it safe to travel to Iceland?
Yes. Iceland consistently tops the Global Peace Index and violent crime is virtually non-existent. The only real risks are weather and geography: storms that can erupt in fifteen minutes, wind strong enough to pull car doors off, black ice on roads and the notorious killer waves at Reynisfjara beach. CocoVolare designs itineraries that respect conditions, not calendars, with safetravel.is protocols built in.
Do I need any vaccines to travel to Iceland?
Iceland does not require any compulsory vaccinations for travellers from Latin America or Europe. Standard international vaccines are recommended as good travel practice, not as a requirement. There is no yellow fever, malaria or dengue. A travel insurance policy with full Nordic coverage — and one that covers adventure sports such as glacier walking, snorkelling at Silfra or ice caving — is essential.
How much does a trip to Iceland cost?
Iceland is one of the most expensive destinations in the world by structure: Scandinavian wages, everything imported, long distances and fuel costs that feed into every price. A boutique seven-day trip, excluding international flights, starts from around USD 4,500 per person in double occupancy in the comfort bracket. CocoVolare signature itineraries start from USD 4,500 per person for five days.
Is it better to hire a car or use a private driver?
It depends on your itinerary and the season. For the south coast in summer, a self-drive SUV works well. For the full Ring Road, F-roads and the Highlands you need a 4x4 or super jeep, and driving in winter demands experience with ice and wind. CocoVolare arranges a season-appropriate vehicle with full insurance, or a dedicated private driver for days when self-driving is not advisable.
Is the full Ring Road worth doing?
Completing the Ring Road in fewer than seven days is stressful and reduces the experience to a visual toll. Ten days give you room to sleep properly in each zone. Fourteen or more allow detours to the Westfjords and the Tröllaskagi peninsula. The 1,332 km Ring Road is the backbone of any serious Icelandic journey.
Is it better to visit Blue Lagoon or Sky Lagoon?
Sky Lagoon opened in 2021 with contemporary design, a seven-step Nordic ritual and a location within the Reykjavík metropolitan area. The Blue Lagoon is the historic name with its unique milky water, but it gets very crowded. For a boutique traveller, Sky Lagoon delivers more experience per dollar invested. Mývatn Nature Baths in the north is the rustic, less-touristy alternative.
Can I travel to Iceland with children?
Yes, with the right design. For families with young children, an itinerary with your own vehicle, fewer craters and more stories works best: guides who tell the sagas as fairy tales, the Friðheimar tomato farm, Icelandic horse riding and the Whales of Iceland museum instead of actual whale watching. For families with teenagers, add glacier walking, snorkelling at Silfra and snowmobile rides.
What does a CocoVolare trip to Iceland include?
Itinerary design from scratch, a season-appropriate vehicle with full insurance or a private driver, boutique hotels with breakfast, specialist glaciologist and geologist guides, signature experiences, domestic flights where applicable, site admissions and 24/7 concierge. Every journey is designed from scratch according to your profile, pace and the right seasonal window.

Your Iceland, your way

Tell us what excites you and we will have a tailor-made proposal in your hands in under 24 hours, with a dedicated travel designer.

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★★★★★ 4.9 · 287 reviews
"I travelled alone and never felt alone. CocoVolare builds an invisible network that holds the whole trip together."· Carolina Vidal · Madrid