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Activities in Keflavík, Iceland include visiting the Viking World museum, which features the full-scale Viking ship Íslendingur, and immersing yourself in local culture at the Duus Museum, focused on regional history and art. Stroll along Keflavík Harbour to experience waterfront dining and charming views of boats, all conveniently close to town.


Step onto a full-sized Viking ship and delve into Norse maritime history. Experience the Íslendingur up close, interactive exhibits, and a short film.
Quick facts: A full-scale Viking longship rests beneath a bright glass hall, its smoky oak planks, iron rivets, and curved ribs visible from a nearby walkway. Interactive displays combine saga excerpts with hands-on navigation demonstrations, allowing you to try reading stars and weather like a Norse mariner.
Highlights: Lean over the railing and the tar-scented oak, iron rivets, and shadowed ribs make the hull feel almost alive, like a paused voyage you can walk around. A wall label states the hull's length as 22 metres, a number you can verify by pacing the gallery and suddenly understanding how many rowers would have shared that cramped space.


Explore Keflavík’s local history and lively art scene in a compact, engaging museum. Discover maritime artifacts, period rooms, and changing contemporary exhibits.
Quick facts: Step into a compact museum that blends naval history, town lore, and contemporary art in a welcoming space, featuring rooms with creaky ship models, faded uniforms, and vibrant community photography. Friendly volunteer guides enjoy sharing old sea tales while you explore unusual artifacts such as signed flight jackets and a photographic archive documenting daily life over decades.
Highlights: Downstairs, a dim room smells of old wood and salt, where over 30 taped oral histories play on request. You can hear an ex-fisherman named Jón describe navigating past NATO ships in 1963. A small glass case holds a handwritten 'knot book' with 12 lifesaving knots annotated by Sigurður Magnússon; you can nearly feel the oil-stained pages under your fingertips when a guide opens it.


Listen to Iceland’s rock history from NATO-era concerts to today’s indie culture. Interactive displays, original instruments, vintage posters, and musician stories.
Quick facts: You can explore decades of Icelandic rock through hands-on exhibits and a vinyl-focused collection including over 500 records and many stage-worn items. A lively audio tour includes concert clips and backstage stories from artists like Björk and Mugison, so you’ll find yourself humming riffs between displays.
Highlights: Down a narrow stairwell, a dim listening room glows red with headphones letting you isolate raw guitar tracks and hear a rare demo by Þeyr up close. Visitors are invited to scrawl on a communal electric guitar, which bears over 2,000 signatures and doodles in pen and paint, allowing you to run your fingers over decades of scribbles while a bass loop plays beneath your feet.


Bright fishing boats and seafood huts reveal authentic Icelandic harbour life. Walk along the quay, watch boats dock, and capture coastal views with Mount Keilir in the background.
Quick facts: Salt-tinged air and the scrape of nets create the atmosphere along the narrow quay, where brightly painted skiffs sit beside seafood restaurants serving the day's catch. Several small crews land fresh cod and langoustine here most afternoons, so diners often watch fishermen unload crates just steps from their tables.
Highlights: Locals point out a weathered trawler named Gunnar tied at the fish pier, where crews often unload 20 to 30 live langoustines that chefs purchase directly off the deck. A neighborhood ritual gathers about fifteen people behind a cracked blue boathouse to share smoked cod and a dram of Brennivín under string lights, the smoke and salt blending into the flavor.


Rugged coastal scenery and Icelandic lighthouse heritage on the Reykjanes Peninsula. Walk cliff trails, observe waves breaking, and photograph dramatic seascapes.
Quick facts: Perched on wind-battered black lava, the tower marks a dramatic meeting of sea and basalt where spray often drenches the cliff path. A steady white beam sweeps the horizon after dark, and on stormy nights the foghorn rumbles so deeply you feel it in your ribs.
Highlights: Salt stings your lips and wind steals your breath as you walk down to the viewpoint, the sound of crashing waves filling your ears like a drumline. Old stories about a keeper named Gunna still circulate locally, with fishermen pointing to the exact ledge where she was said to have appeared during a January gale.


serves many Keflavík visitors
Relax in milky-blue geothermal waters within a dramatic lava field. Enjoy warm pools, steam rooms, and silica mud treatments with ocean views.
Quick facts: Milky-blue geothermal water averages around 37 to 39°C, feeling silkier than most hot springs due to its high silica and mineral content. Pools and wooden walkways sit among black lava fields, and the facility circulates millions of liters of mineral-rich water daily from nearby geothermal runoff.
Highlights: At twilight, plumes of steam hover over the electric-blue surface, and the contrast with dark lava creates an almost otherworldly glow that photographers seek for golden-hour shots. Visitors have a ritual of applying chalky white silica mud to their faces for 10 to 20 minutes, the gritty paste drying to a matte mask before being rinsed off to reveal noticeably smoother skin.


Experience raw geothermal energy near Keflavík’s shore. Walk boardwalks past steaming vents and colorful boiling mud pools.
Quick facts: Steam hisses from bubbling mud pools, and a sharp sulfur scent hits your nose as soon as you step onto the boardwalk. Ground temperatures often exceed 120°C at a meter down, so elevated paths keep visitors safely a few meters from scalding vents.
Highlights: A local legend tells of a woman named Gunnhildur who was swallowed by a steam vent in the 18th century, and many friends who have lingered near a certain plume swear they hear whispers in the hiss. Stand close on a windy day and you can feel heat on your face while salty sea mist and mineral-rich steam color the air with yellow and ochre shades, a surreal mix photographers chase for golden-hour shots.


Stand between two tectonic plates and sense Earth’s slow shifts. Cross the short footbridge, photograph the rift, and take in wild Atlantic views.
Quick facts: You can stand with one foot on each tectonic plate and look into the visible rift where oceanic crust gives way to continental rock. Researchers monitor the plates moving apart at about two to three centimeters per year, so the crack widens by roughly a fingernail’s width every few years.
Highlights: Local visitors have a playful tradition of lining up for a 'two-continent' selfie, often spending five to ten minutes balancing each foot on a different plate while a friend takes the photo. Sharp, salty air and the mineral scent of cooled lava greet you as wind whistles through the rift, the hollow clack of the footbridge underfoot turning a simple crossing into a surprisingly cinematic moment.


Lava-formed sea pool on a rugged headland near Keflavík. Feel the pounding Atlantic waves, examine sculpted black lava rock, and capture expansive coastal views.
Quick facts: Rugged lava rock traps seawater in a shallow pool, letting you observe anemones and tiny crustaceans while waves thunder nearby. A narrow, wind-swept ledge makes the spot feel cinematic at golden hour, and photographers love the glossy reflections against the basalt.
Highlights: A hollow basin roars like a kettle when a large swell hits, sending salty spray that tingles on your face and smells sharply of iron. Stand just a few meters from the rim on a narrow rock shelf and you can watch one spectacular moment where wet black basalt flashes molten-orange as the sun sets, a moment many locals time for photos.


Steam, bubbling mud, and vivid mineral hues create a surreal geothermal scene. Walk raised boardwalks past fumaroles, mud pots, and hot springs for close-up photos.
Quick facts: Bright yellow, orange, and emerald mineral streaks rim steaming fumaroles and bubbling mud pots, while a sharp sulfur scent lingers on the breeze. Well-placed wooden boardwalks and short loop trails allow visitors to get surprisingly close to hissing vents and mud pots without stepping on fragile crust.
Highlights: A compact loop of about 2 kilometers runs within 3 to 5 meters of active steam vents, where bursts of steam can reach nearly boiling temperatures and deposit bright mineral stains. Local guides often point out bacterial mats called iron-oxidizing bacteria and cyanobacteria that color runoff in rusty reds and neon greens, thriving in water between 40 and 80°C so close you can smell the minerals.
Selected by City Buddy based on guest reviews and proximity to top attractions
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Skyr is creamy, thick and technically a cultured dairy product rather than true yogurt. Locals in Keflavík enjoy it with wild berries for breakfast, and it has been a staple since Viking times.

Kleinur are twisted, airy fried pastries flavored with cardamom, they were once made to use up leftover dough and became a beloved snack at Kaffihús in Keflavík.

Pönnukökur are paper-thin pancakes served rolled with jam and whipped cream, they are a party favorite in Keflavík where children learn to flip them for festive gatherings.

Hákarl is fermented Greenland shark with a powerful ammonia aroma. Trying it in Keflavík is treated like a local rite of passage and it is often washed down with Brennivín.

Kjötsúpa is a hearty lamb and vegetable soup that kept fishermen and families warm through harsh Icelandic winters. In Keflavík it is a symbol of home cooking and communal meals.

Harðfiskur is wind-dried fish that flakes like paper and was vital as a lightweight, high-protein snack for seafarers. Locals in Keflavík still eat it with a smear of butter.

Brennivín is a caraway-flavored schnapps nicknamed black death, it is the traditional chaser for Hákarl and a bold emblem of Icelandic drinking culture in Keflavík.

Icelandic beer enjoyed a renaissance after prohibition ended in 1989, and Keflavík now boasts lively microbreweries that mix global styles with local ingredients like glacier water and Arctic herbs.

Skyr smoothies are a modern Keflavík favorite, blending protein-rich skyr with local berries for a thick, refreshing drink that fuels long walks along the coast.
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Iceland's capital with museums, cafes, and nightlife.
Classic route with rifts, geysers, and waterfalls.
Diverse landscapes, lava fields, and coastal cliffs.
Volcanic sites, hot springs, and dramatic coastlines.
From KEF take the Flybus shuttle or taxi to Keflavík/Reykjanesbær; prebook in summer.
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Comments (5)
Airport area felt more industrial than scenic, only worth staying if you're doing nearby tours or have a long layover.
Crazy windy, bring layers. Locals were friendly and coffee spots are great, nightlife is tiny so plan day trips.
Avoid restaurants right at the terminal, walk 8 to 10 minutes inland for cheaper fish soup and better portions.
Book the Flybus shuttle online for a lower fare and reserved seat, it saves time on busy morning arrivals.
Small town vibes and dramatic coastline, food was surprisingly good but pricey. Perfect for 1 or 2 nights.