Iceland's Ring Road in 7 Days: The Complete Route Guide
iliTrip · April 15, 2026
How to drive Iceland's famous Route 1 in a week — what to skip, what you can't miss, and the one thing every first-timer gets wrong.
Iceland's Ring Road runs 1,332 km around the entire island. In a week you can complete the circuit — if you're realistic about pace. Most first-timers over-schedule by 40%.
The First-Timer's Biggest Mistake
Renting a small car to save money, then getting stuck when a highland F-road appears. If you're going outside the Ring Road — rent at least a mid-size 4WD. The extra cost is worth every króna.
Day 1: Reykjavik to Vík
Golden Circle early: Þingvellir National Park at 7am, Geysir, Gullfoss. Then south: Seljalandsfoss (walk behind it), Skógafoss (climb the 527 steps), and Reynisfjara black beach. The waves are genuinely dangerous — stay back.
Day 2: Vík to Jökulsárlón
Stop at Fjaðrárgljúfur canyon, then Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon. Icebergs calve from the Vatnajökull glacier. Diamond Beach is a 3-minute walk. This is the best single stop on the Ring Road.
Day 3: East Fjords
The most underrated section. No famous landmarks — just one dramatic fjord after another, reindeer on the road, villages of 200 people. Don't rush this section.
Day 4: Lake Mývatn
Dettifoss — Europe's most powerful waterfall, 30km off the Ring Road. Non-negotiable. Then Námaskarð geothermal field and the Mývatn Nature Baths (significantly cheaper than the Blue Lagoon).
Days 5–7: North Iceland and Back
Akureyri for Icelandic charm. Husavik for whale watching. Return via the Snæfellsnes Peninsula if time allows — the glacier volcano and Kirkjufell mountain are extraordinary.
Practical Numbers
- Car rental: 35,000–55,000 ISK/week for a 4WD
- Fuel: 500–800 ISK/liter — fill up in every major town
- Best months: June–August for accessibility; Feb–March for Northern Lights