Kílómetragjald á Íslandi 2026: Hvað þýðir það fyrir leigubílinn þinn

Nýja kílómetragjaldsins útskýrt: gjaldskrá, innheimtuaðferðir, eldsneytislækkun og Hringvegskostnaðarsamanburður.

Sigríður BjörnsdóttirUppfært 11 mín lestímiCar Costs
Rental car driving on Icelandic road with mountain backdrop

The Biggest Change to Iceland Driving Costs in a Decade

On January 1, 2026, Iceland replaced its fuel-based road tax with a per-kilometer charge called kílómetragjald. If you rented a car in Iceland before 2026, your fuel price included a substantial road tax — roughly 75-95 ISK per litre for petrol. That tax no longer exists. Instead, every vehicle on Icelandic roads now pays based on distance driven.

For tourists renting a car, this changes the cost arithmetic of an Iceland road trip. Not dramatically — the government designed the system to be roughly revenue-neutral — but the way you pay has shifted, and understanding the new system prevents surprises on your rental bill.

Why Iceland Made This Change

The old system taxed fuel. Electric vehicles use no fuel. As EV adoption surged in Iceland — the country has one of the highest EV rates in Europe — the road maintenance budget shrank while road usage stayed constant. A Tesla Model Y driving the Ring Road causes the same wear on the pavement as a Hyundai Tucson, but contributed zero road tax under the old system.

The kilometer tax levels the playing field. Petrol, diesel, electric, hydrogen, hybrid — every vehicle pays based on how far it drives, regardless of what powers it. The base rate is 6.95 ISK per kilometer for passenger vehicles under 3,500 kg.

How Rental Companies Handle It

This is where it gets practical. Rental companies in Iceland have adopted two different approaches, and which one your company uses significantly affects your planning.

Per-Kilometer Billing

Companies like Hertz, Europcar, and some others record your odometer at pickup and return. The difference — your total kilometers driven — is multiplied by the per-km rate and added to your bill at return. If you drive the Ring Road (roughly 1,322 km), that is about 9,200 ISK (roughly €60) in kilometer tax.

The advantage: you only pay for what you drive. The disadvantage: you do not know your final cost until you return the car, which makes budgeting harder.

Fixed Daily Rate

Other companies, including Blue Car Rental and several smaller operators, charge a flat daily kilometer fee of approximately 1,550 ISK per day regardless of distance. Rent for 7 days and you pay 10,850 ISK total — whether you drive 200 km or 2,000 km.

The advantage: predictable cost from the moment you book. The disadvantage: if you are only staying in Reykjavík and driving 30 km per day, you overpay relative to per-km billing.

The Hidden Benefit: Lower Fuel Prices

The kilometer tax replaced the fuel tax — it did not add to it. That means fuel prices at Icelandic pumps dropped significantly on January 1, 2026. Petrol fell by approximately 95-105 ISK per litre, from around 380-400 ISK to roughly 280-310 ISK. Diesel dropped 80-88 ISK per litre.

For a typical Ring Road trip burning 100-120 litres of petrol, that saves you 10,000-12,000 ISK in fuel costs. The kilometer tax for the same trip adds about 9,200 ISK. The net difference is close to zero — which is exactly what the government intended.

For EV renters, the math is different. Previously, you paid zero road tax and only electricity costs. Now you pay the same 6.95 ISK/km as everyone else. Your total trip cost increased, though electricity for an EV Ring Road trip is still far cheaper than petrol.

Budget Breakdown: Ring Road Trip Under the New System

Here is a realistic cost comparison for a 7-day, 1,500 km Ring Road trip in a mid-size SUV (Hyundai Tucson or similar):

Before 2026 (fuel tax system):

  • Fuel: ~130 litres × 395 ISK = 51,350 ISK
  • Kilometer tax: 0 ISK
  • Total fuel + tax: 51,350 ISK (~€340)

After January 2026 (kilometer tax system):

  • Fuel: ~130 litres × 295 ISK = 38,350 ISK
  • Kilometer tax: 1,500 km × 6.95 ISK = 10,425 ISK
  • Total fuel + tax: 48,775 ISK (~€325)

The new system is actually marginally cheaper for this scenario. The savings from lower fuel prices slightly outweigh the new kilometer charge. Your mileage varies (literally) depending on vehicle efficiency and driving distance.

Tips to Optimise Your Costs

  • Ask your rental company which billing model they use before booking. If you plan a long road trip (Ring Road, highlands, Westfjords), per-km billing usually costs more than a fixed daily rate.
  • Plan your route before departure. The kilometer tax creates a small financial incentive to drive efficient routes rather than aimless detours. Not that you should skip attractions — but if two routes reach the same destination, the shorter one now saves you a tangible amount.
  • Consider an EV for short trips. If you are staying in southwest Iceland (Reykjavík, Golden Circle, South Coast), an EV rental eliminates fuel costs entirely. The kilometer tax applies equally, but your energy cost is roughly 4-5 ISK/km for electricity versus 13-15 ISK/km for petrol — still a significant saving.
  • Check if your rental price quote includes the kilometer tax. Some booking platforms show the base rental price without the kilometer fee. Others include it. Always ask at the desk what additional charges apply beyond the quoted price.

Common Questions

Do tourists pay the tax? Yes. Every vehicle on Icelandic roads is subject to the kilometer charge, regardless of registration country or rental status. Rental companies collect and remit the tax on your behalf.

Is the tax included in online rental quotes? Not always. Some platforms advertise the base rental rate; the kilometer fee appears as a surcharge at pickup or on your final invoice.

Can I avoid the tax by renting a specific type of vehicle? No. The rate applies to all passenger vehicles — petrol, diesel, electric, and hybrid alike.

Does the tax apply to campervans? Yes, though campervans over 3,500 kg have a higher per-km rate. Check with your rental company for the exact rate.

Will the rate change during 2026? The government set the 2026 rate at 6.95 ISK/km. It may adjust annually, but no mid-year changes are expected.

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