+ 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.