
Reykjavík
Start / End
Most loops start and end here, or at Keflavík (KEF). Pick up the rental car and spend Night 0 in the city.

Iceland · Ring Road (Route 1)
The Ring Road is Iceland's classic full loop — about 1,330 km of paved highway that connects almost every well-known region of the country. Done in the right season, with the right pacing, it's one of the great drives in Europe. This guide walks through the practical decisions.
Some links in this guide may lead to partner sites. IcelandStart does not process bookings. Affiliate Disclosure
Intro
Last updated ·
Route 1 — the Ring Road or Þjóðvegur 1 — is a paved highway that loops the country, connecting the South Coast, glacier lagoon, East Fjords, Lake Mývatn, Akureyri and West Iceland back to Reykjavík. It is roughly 1,330 km if you drove it without stopping, which nobody does. Realistic Ring Road trips cover 1,800–2,200 km once viewpoints, waterfalls and short detours are added.
Critically, Route 1 is not the only road in Iceland. It avoids the highland F-roads and most of the Westfjords. Plan it as a circle of the perimeter, not "all of Iceland".
Days
| 7 days (minimum) | 9–10 days (comfortable) | 12–14 days (slow) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Choose this if | Repeat visitor, summer only, fine driving 5–7 hours most days | Most first-time Ring Road trips, photography, Snæfellsnes detour | You want the Westfjords add-on or slow North + East |
| Not ideal if | First-time visitor, families, winter | Tight budget on accommodation | Short PTO budget or first-timers who want highlights |
| What to book first | Every rural overnight; rental car with one-way option | Vík, Höfn, Mývatn, Akureyri overnights | Westfjords ferry or extra night blocks |
| Car needed? | Yes — 2WD summer, never attempted reliably in winter | Yes — 4WD recommended; winter tires Nov–Apr | Yes — 4WD essential off Route 1 |
| Best season | Mid Jun – early Sep | Late May – mid Sep | Jul – early Sep for the Westfjords |
| Mistake to avoid | Skipping a buffer day for weather | Booking too late — small-town rooms sell out months ahead | Treating extra days as 'just more driving' |
Route

Start / End
Most loops start and end here, or at Keflavík (KEF). Pick up the rental car and spend Night 0 in the city.

~190 km
Waterfalls, Reynisfjara black beach and Vík. A natural Night 1 stop counter-clockwise.

~460 km
Glacier lagoon and Diamond Beach. Höfn is the gateway to the East. Plan Night 2 here.

~620 km
Quiet fjord roads and small fishing villages (Djúpivogur, Seyðisfjörður). Drive slowly — distances feel longer than they look.

~870 km
Geothermal area near the 'capital of the north'. Two nights here is comfortable — Mývatn nature baths, Goðafoss, whale watching from Húsavík.

Detour
A peninsula often called 'Iceland in miniature'. Adds 1–2 days on the return leg toward Reykjavík.
Direction
Both directions work, and locals genuinely disagree about which is better. Counter-clockwise (South Coast first) is the popular choice — it front-loads the most famous landscapes and lets you settle into the rhythm before the longer driving days through the East. Clockwise (West and North first) is usually quieter, and it saves the South Coast — typically the busiest section — for the end of the trip when you're more used to Icelandic distances.
The practical answer: look at the weather forecast the morning you leave Reykjavík. Start whichever direction has the better window — Route 1 is symmetric enough that it doesn't really matter.
Season
Car
Most of Route 1 is paved and a standard 2WD is usually adequate in normal summer conditions, though a 4x4 adds margin for wind, weather or unsealed detours. In winter, a 4x4 with studded tyres gives a much wider safety margin. Always check insurance, deposit, mileage, gravel / sand / ash protection, second-driver fees, vehicle suitability for your route and season, and pickup details on the partner site before booking, and confirm current road conditions on road.is. One-way drop-off (KEF → Akureyri or vice versa) can cut driving days but typically costs extra — worth it for a 5–6 day "half ring" plan.
Why this link appears here: Useful after deciding to self-drive. Always check insurance, deposit, F-road terms, winter tires and pickup details on the partner site.
Useful starting points
Partner links may appear in this section.
Stays
Why this link appears here: Useful after deciding where to overnight. Always check exact location, cancellation window and total at checkout on the partner site.
Useful starting points
Partner links may appear in this section.
Safety
The single biggest cause of trouble on the Ring Road is treating Icelandic weather like European weather. A clear morning in Vík can become a closed road by lunchtime. Build in a buffer, and never plan a day that depends on perfect conditions.
Ready to compare?
A realistic Ring Road booking order, in the order that usually works.
Scenario: Confirm 9–10+ days before locking the loop. Hold countryside stays. Compare car rental. Add activities later.
Best first click: Hold a countryside hotel chain (or two) you can cancel, so dates feel real.
Compare next: Local Iceland car rental once your direction and dates are clear.
Keep flexible: Activities and tours — book after stays and car are locked.
Before you book, check:
Check insurance and gravel/F-road terms on the rental, and cancellation windows on countryside hotels — weather changes plans.
Paid partner links — IcelandStart may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Affiliate Disclosure.
FAQ
Best next step
Why this link appears here: Useful after deciding to self-drive. Always check insurance, deposit, F-road terms, winter tires and pickup details on the partner site.
The Ring Road comparison module above is the main booking step for this page. Not sure your dates work? Run the Iceland trip planner, or continue on the Planning guides or the South Coast guide.
Next decisions
Next decisions
Use these next if you are still choosing your route, season, car decision, or booking order.
Official Iceland resources · Non-affiliate
These official resource links are included for safety and planning. They are not paid partner links.

Official Iceland travel information — destination inspiration, things to do, accommodation information, and general travel guidance.
Visit official site
Official safe-travel information for Iceland. Useful for travel conditions, safety guidance, and preparation before outdoor or road-trip travel.
Check SafeTravel
Road condition information for Iceland (Vegagerðin / Umferðin). Useful before driving — especially in winter, high winds, snow, or changing conditions.
Check road conditions
Official Icelandic weather forecasts (Veðurstofa Íslands). Useful before driving, outdoor activities, or winter travel.
Check weatherThese are official, non-affiliate links — provided for traveler safety and planning. Always check the most recent information on the official site before you travel.
IcelandStart helps you decide what to book first. Booking happens on the partner site — verify total cost, taxes, fees and cancellation terms there before confirming. Some links may earn us a commission at no extra cost to you.