Driving in Iceland's Midnight Sun: Fatigue, Safety Tips & Best Experiences
The midnight sun is one of Iceland's wonders — but it causes fatigue without warning, sun glare, and time confusion. Here's what you need to know.
Iceland's roads are unlike anywhere else. From sudden weather changes to one-lane bridges, here's what you need to know before driving here.
Every year, thousands of tourists and new residents are surprised by Icelandic roads. The scenery is extraordinary, the roads often look perfectly reasonable, and in good weather the driving seems easy. Then conditions change. A bridge appears with no warning signs a foreign driver understands. Gravel suddenly replaces tarmac at 90 km/h. A blizzard rolls in within ten minutes of clear sunshine. Understanding Icelandic roads — their quirks, their dangers, and their rules — is not optional. It is the difference between a safe journey and a serious incident.
Iceland has hundreds of single-lane bridges on roads that otherwise appear to be full two-lane roads. They appear suddenly, often with minimal advance warning. The rules are simple but must be learned:
Iceland's terrain means roads frequently pass over hills, through lava fields, and around mountain spurs with very limited visibility ahead. The correct approach:
Iceland's weather is governed by the meeting of cold Arctic air masses and warmer Atlantic systems, producing conditions that can change more rapidly than almost anywhere else on Earth. It is entirely possible — and not unusual — to depart Reykjavík in bright sunshine, encounter a complete whiteout over Hellisheiðavegur (Route 1 south), and emerge into sunshine again in Selfoss. This is not a rare occurrence. It is routine.
Before every journey outside the capital area, check:
Icelandic wind deserves its own section because it kills vehicles and people in ways that drivers from calm-weather climates cannot anticipate. Iceland regularly experiences wind gusts exceeding 25 m/s (90 km/h), and on exposed coastal and highland roads, gusts above 30 m/s are enough to overturn high-sided vehicles including SUVs and campervans.
Iceland's highland interior is accessed by a network of F-roads (routes designated with the letter F, such as F35 Kjölur or F26 Sprengisandur). These are unpaved tracks that cross lava fields, rivers, and glacial terrain. They are strictly prohibited for standard 2WD vehicles and most front-wheel-drive vehicles. The rules are not suggestions:
Download the 112 Iceland app before driving outside the capital. In an emergency, it sends your precise GPS coordinates to the emergency services with a single tap. In areas with no mobile signal, the app stores the last known GPS fix and will send it when signal is restored.
Register travel plans on safetravel.is for any journey into remote areas. Icelandic Search and Rescue (Björgunarsveit) has highly developed capabilities but needs to know where to look. Registration is free, takes two minutes, and has saved lives.
These roads are known to local authorities and rescue services as particularly demanding:
The midnight sun is one of Iceland's wonders — but it causes fatigue without warning, sun glare, and time confusion. Here's what you need to know.
The East Fjords, Egilsstaðir, Jökulsárlón and Diamond Beach. Everything you need to know about driving East Iceland.
Everything about driving North Iceland: the Diamond Circle, Mývatn, Goðafoss, Dettifoss, petrol stations, and road conditions by season.