Reykjavik Tours — Compare & Book Iceland Day Tours, Activities & Experiences
Iceland packs more geological drama into a smaller space than anywhere else on earth — glaciers covering 11% of the country, active volcanoes beneath ice caps, geysers erupting every five minutes, waterfalls dropping into basalt canyons, tectonic plates pulling apart at the surface, and the northern lights arcing across the winter sky.
Small Group Iceland Tours
Experience Iceland in small groups with more guide attention, flexible stops, and super jeep access to terrain the big buses cannot reach.
Private Iceland Tours
Customize your Iceland day with a dedicated guide and vehicle — the Golden Circle with hidden stops, the South Coast at your pace, or the northern lights chased wherever the forecast leads.
Golden Circle Tours
Visit Þingvellir (tectonic plates and the Viking-age parliament), Geysir (erupting every 5–10 minutes), and Gullfoss (a 32-metre two-tiered waterfall) on Iceland’s essential 300-kilometre day loop from Reykjavik.
South Coast Tours
Drive the dramatic south coast from Reykjavik past the waterfalls of Seljalandsfoss and Skógafoss, the black sand beach at Reynisfjara, and — on the full-day route — the Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon where icebergs wash onto Diamond Beach.
Northern Lights Tours
Chase the aurora borealis from Reykjavik between September and April — guided evening tours to dark-sky viewing sites with real-time forecast monitoring and free rebooking if no lights appear.
Reykjavik, the world’s northernmost capital, sits at the centre of it all, and virtually every major Icelandic attraction is accessible as a day trip from the city.
This site compares every Reykjavik-based tour and experience available through Viator — the Golden Circle, the South Coast, the glaciers, the northern lights, the Blue Lagoon, Silfra snorkelling, whale watching, horseback riding, ice caves, and more. Browse by destination or activity, compare prices and itineraries, read verified reviews, and book directly. Every tour departs from or returns to Reykjavik.
Iceland is a year-round destination with two distinct seasons. Summer (May–August) brings 20 or more hours of daylight, the warmest temperatures (10–15°C), the greenest landscape, and access to the highland interior. Winter (October–March) brings the northern lights, the crystal ice caves inside the glaciers, the frozen waterfalls, and the dramatic low-angle Arctic light that photographers travel the world to capture. The Golden Circle, the South Coast, the glaciers, the Blue Lagoon, and the whale watching operate in both seasons — the landscape transforms but the access remains.
Whether you have one day (the Golden Circle), three days (add the South Coast and the northern lights), or a week (add the glaciers, Snæfellsnes, Silfra, and the horseback riding), the tours below cover every combination. Compare them all and book the Iceland that fits your time, your season, and what moves you — a geyser erupting into the Arctic air, an iceberg on black sand, the aurora overhead, or the silence of standing on a glacier that has been here for a thousand years.