14 days in Iceland itinerary
Two weeks on Iceland’s Ring Road give you time to slow down. You see the famous waterfalls, black sand beaches, and glacier lagoons, but you also reach the small towns and quiet stretches that often get missed. Driving around the island in 14 days gives you enough time for exploration with rest, reaching remote corners as well as Iceland’s most famous sights.
Day 1: West Iceland & Borgarfjordur
Leaving Reykjavík, the road heads north into Borgarfjörður, where rivers cut through old lava fields. The first stop is Hraunfossar, where streams of clear water pour from beneath the rock into the Hvítá River. Just upstream, Barnafoss forces its way through a narrow gorge, the water frothing white against dark stone.
Steam hangs over Deildartunguhver, the most powerful hot spring in Europe, before the road continues into the valley around Reykholt. This small village was once home to Snorri Sturluson, the medieval scholar whose sagas are remembered at the Snorrastofa cultural center. Toward the end of the day, a trail climbs into the canyon of Glymur, Iceland’s second-highest waterfall at 650 feet (198 meters).
Day 2: Snaefellsnes Peninsula
From Borgarfjörður it is an easy drive west onto the Snæfellsnes Peninsula, a stretch often described as Iceland in miniature. The glacier-topped Snæfellsjökull volcano dominates the western horizon, its slopes once imagined by Jules Verne as the entry point to the center of the earth. Along the coast, Kirkjufell rises in a perfect cone, reflected in the small waterfalls at its base.
The road then winds to Djúpalónssandur, where black pebbles and shipwreck remains scatter the beach, before continuing to Arnarstapi and Hellnar, where basalt cliffs curve into arches carved by the sea. Further inland, the Berserkjahraun lava field spreads in frozen waves of stone, while the small black church at Búðir stands stark against the open fields.