The Golden Circle is a roughly 230–300 km loop from Reykjavik that links three of Iceland's most spectacular sights — Þingvellir National Park, the Geysir geothermal area, and Gullfoss waterfall — and it is the single most popular day trip in the country. This is the definitive guide to the route: what it is, the exact driving order and distances, every major and minor stop, how long it really takes, whether to self-drive or take a guided Golden Circle tour, and the practical details that make the difference between a rushed scramble and a perfect day.
The Golden Circle is a ~230–300 km loop from Reykjavik built around three free-to-enter headline stops — Þingvellir (UNESCO site and continental rift), the Geysir area (where Strokkur erupts every few minutes), and Gullfoss (a two-tier, 32-metre cascade). Pure driving time is about 3.5 hours; realistically budget 6–8 hours.
You can do a fast half-day version (the three core stops only) or a full-day version that adds Kerið crater, the Secret Lagoon, Friðheimar tomato farm, Faxi waterfall and more — turning the loop into an 8–10+ hour adventure.
Self-driving suits confident drivers in summer; guided tours win in winter and for first-timers. The route is fully paved and accessible year-round, but winter ice, wind and short daylight make a guided tour the safer, lower-stress choice for many visitors.
Prefer to skip the planning entirely? The route's #1 selling day trip covers all three core stops plus Kerið crater — a solid default while you read the full guide below.
Reykjavik: Golden Circle Full-Day Tour with Kerid Crater
The most-booked way to do the loop: Þingvellir, Geysir and Gullfoss plus Kerið crater, by air-conditioned bus from Reykjavik with hotel pickup and a local guide.
- Where the tectonic plates meet at Þingvellir
- Strokkur geyser and the Gullfoss waterfall
- The Kerið volcanic crater lake
What Is the Golden Circle? (And Why It's Iceland's Most Popular Route)
The Golden Circle (Icelandic: Gullni hringurinn) is a tourist route in southwest Iceland that loops from Reykjavik into the southern uplands and back, packaging the country's most accessible natural wonders into a single day trip. The "golden" element of the name comes from Gullfoss, "Golden Falls," the waterfall that anchors the eastern end of the loop.
What makes it Iceland's flagship excursion is simple geography: three of Iceland's best-known attractions sit within about a 100 km radius of the capital, connected by good paved roads. In a single day you can walk between two tectonic plates at the birthplace of the world's oldest surviving parliament, watch a geyser erupt on cue, and stand beside one of Iceland's most powerful waterfalls.
It's worth clearing up a common point of confusion: the Golden Circle is not the same as the Ring Road (Route 1), the highway that circles the entire island — at roughly 1,300 km, the longest ring road in Europe. The Golden Circle is a compact day loop; the Ring Road is a multi-day expedition. If you're weighing the two, see our Golden Circle vs Ring Road comparison.
The Golden Circle Route, Distance & Driving Time
The classic route from Reykjavik runs about 230 km (140 mi) for the three core stops and a direct return. Add the popular detour past Kerið crater and other extras, and the loop stretches to 250–300 km (155–185 mi).
Pure driving time — no stops — is about 3.5 hours. With time at the three main sights, realistic figures land at 6–8 hours; add extended stops like a hot-spring soak or a farm lunch and it becomes a full 8–10+ hour day. For the full picture, see our how long does the Golden Circle take guide.
Most travelers and most guided tours drive the loop clockwise, taking Þingvellir first, then Geysir, then Gullfoss, before returning south past Kerið. Some self-drivers run it counterclockwise specifically to be out of sync with the tour-bus rhythm, since major coach tours typically depart Reykjavik between 8 and 10 AM and converge on the same sites by mid-morning.
The Route Map in Words
The standard clockwise drive, turn by turn:
- Reykjavik → Þingvellir National Park: Head northeast on Route 1, then onto Route 36 (Þingvallavegur). About 45 km / 45–60 minutes.
- Þingvellir → Geysir: Continue on Route 36, connect to Route 365, then Route 37 through the Laugarvatn area to the Geysir geothermal area in Haukadalur valley. About 60 km / 50–60 minutes.
- Geysir → Gullfoss: Head north on Route 35 — just 10 km / 10 minutes.
- Gullfoss → Reykjavik: Return south on Route 35, passing Kerið crater and the town of Selfoss, then join Route 1 back to the capital. About 1.5 hours.
All of these roads are paved and well signposted, and the maximum speed limit on Icelandic highways is 90 km/h (56 mph). There are no gas stations directly at Þingvellir, so fuel up in Reykjavik; you'll find stations in Laugarvatn, near Geysir, around Selfoss and in Hveragerði along the way. For the optimal order and hidden gems, our stops in order route map goes deeper.
The Three Core Golden Circle Stops
These three sights are the non-negotiable heart of every Golden Circle itinerary. All three are free to enter.
1. Þingvellir National Park (suggested time: 1–2 hours)
About 45 km northeast of Reykjavik, Þingvellir is Iceland's first national park and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, sitting directly in the rift valley between the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates. It's the founding site of the Alþingi, the world's oldest surviving parliament, established here in 930 AD. You can walk through the dramatic Almannagjá gorge, see Öxarárfoss waterfall, and view Þingvallavatn, Iceland's largest natural lake. The Silfra fissure is one of the world's top snorkeling and diving sites, with visibility exceeding 100 metres. Parking is paid (around 1,000 ISK); entry is free. Read our full Þingvellir National Park guide.
2. Geysir Geothermal Area (suggested time: 45 minutes–1 hour)
About 60 km on from Þingvellir, the Geysir field in the Haukadalur valley gave the world the word "geyser." The Great Geysir itself has been largely dormant since the early 20th century, but its neighbour Strokkur erupts reliably every 6 to 10 minutes, sending boiling water 15–20 metres into the air. The wider field includes colourful hot springs, fumaroles and bubbling mud pots. Visiting is free; parking is paid (around 1,000 ISK). See our Geysir geothermal area guide.
3. Gullfoss Waterfall (suggested time: 45 minutes–1 hour)
Just 10 km north of Geysir, Gullfoss — the "Golden Falls" — plunges roughly 32 metres in two tiers into a rugged glacial canyon fed by the Hvítá river. In the early 20th century, local farmer's daughter Sigríður Tómasdóttir fought to prevent the waterfall from being dammed, earning her recognition as Iceland's first environmentalist. Gullfoss has an upper viewpoint, open year-round and fully accessible, and a lower path, often closed in winter due to ice. Both entry and parking are free. Read our complete Gullfoss waterfall guide.
Golden Circle Stops at a Glance
| Stop | Type | Distance from previous | Suggested time | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Þingvellir National Park | UNESCO site / tectonic rift / parliament | ~45 km from Reykjavik | 1–2 hrs | Free entry; parking ~1,000 ISK |
| Geysir / Haukadalur | Geothermal area, Strokkur geyser | ~60 km | 45–60 min | Free entry; parking ~1,000 ISK |
| Gullfoss | Two-tier waterfall | ~10 km | 45–60 min | Free entry; free parking |
| Kerið crater (optional) | Volcanic crater lake | ~60 km toward Reykjavik | 30–60 min | Small entry fee; free parking |
| Secret Lagoon (optional) | Geothermal bathing | Detour off Route 35/30 | 1–2 hrs | Paid admission |
| Friðheimar (optional) | Tomato farm restaurant | Off Route 35 | 1–1.5 hrs | À la carte; reserve ahead |
Prefer a Smaller Group? A Top-Rated Small-Group Tour
If you'd rather not share a full coach, this top-rated small-group tour covers the same three core stops plus Kerið crater with fewer fellow travellers and more time with your guide — a relaxed alternative to the big buses:
Golden Circle and Kerið Crater Small Group Tour
A more personal take on the loop, with a smaller vehicle and a guide who has time for questions — covering all the headline sights at an unhurried pace.
- Geysir and the erupting Strokkur
- Þingvellir, site of the old Icelandic parliament
- The Gullfoss waterfall and Kerið crater
Popular Extra Stops to Extend the Golden Circle
- Kerið crater: A 3,000–6,500-year-old volcanic crater lake on Route 35, with vivid red-orange walls and a turquoise lake. The rim loop takes 15–20 minutes. Small entrance fee.
- Faxi (Vatnsleysufoss): A wide, gentle waterfall on the Tungufljót River just off Route 35, often called "little Gullfoss" — a quiet, quick stop with a picnic area.
- Secret Lagoon (Gamla Laugin): Iceland's oldest swimming pool, in use since 1891, in Flúðir. A rustic, authentic alternative to the Blue Lagoon; book ahead in peak season.
- Friðheimar: A family-run geothermal tomato greenhouse and restaurant in Reykholt, famous for all-you-can-eat tomato soup served among the vines. Reservations essential.
- Laugarvatn Fontana: A lakeside geothermal spa known for mineral pools and a geothermal bakery tour where rye bread is baked in hot black sand.
- Efstidalur: A working dairy farm on Route 37 near Laugarvatn with a much-loved ice cream barn.
- Skálholt: A historic church site about five minutes off Route 35, a centre of Icelandic religion and education for roughly 700 years.
The most popular extended itineraries fold the Secret Lagoon and Kerið crater into one long day. If that's the trip you have in mind, this top-rated full-day tour bundles exactly that combination:
From Reykjavik: Golden Circle, Kerid, & Secret Lagoon Tour
The classic three stops plus Kerið crater and a soak in the Secret Lagoon — the full-day version of the loop for travellers who want a little more than the highlights.
- Bathe in the Secret Lagoon, Iceland's oldest pool
- Gullfoss waterfall and the Geysir area
- Þingvellir National Park and Kerið crater
Self-Drive vs. Guided Golden Circle Tour
Choose self-drive if: you're a confident driver, visiting in late spring through early autumn, and travelling as a couple, family or small group. Self-driving gives you total control over pace and timing, and for 2–4 people sharing a car it's often cheaper per person. The roads are paved and well signed, and a standard 2WD car is sufficient in summer.
Choose a guided tour if: you're visiting in winter, you're a first-timer or solo traveller, or you simply don't want to navigate unfamiliar roads. Iceland's winter brings ice, snow, strong crosswinds and only 4–6 hours of daylight — conditions where a professional driver who knows the route is genuinely safer. A guide also brings the sites' history and geology to life. Guided bus tours from Reykjavik typically run roughly 10,000–25,000 ISK per person depending on group size, season and inclusions.
A sensible hybrid many travellers use: self-drive on a clear summer day, but book a guided tour for winter visits and specialised activities like glacier hikes or Silfra snorkelling. Read our full tour vs self-drive comparison.
Practical Tips for the Golden Circle
- Beat the crowds: Congestion at the main stops peaks roughly 9 AM–7 PM. Depart Reykjavik by 7–8 AM, or — in summer's long daylight — visit in the evening instead.
- Entrance fees and parking: All three core sights are free to enter. Þingvellir and Geysir charge for parking (around 1,000 ISK each, payable via the Parka app or on-site machines); Gullfoss parking is free. See our parking fees guide.
- Facilities: Þingvellir, Geysir and Gullfoss all have visitor centres with restrooms, cafés and gift shops.
- What to wear and bring: Warm layers with a genuinely waterproof, windproof jacket and sturdy footwear with good grip — you'll get sprayed at both Strokkur and Gullfoss. In winter, add traction cleats. See our what to wear packing list.
- Mobile signal and safety: Coverage is generally good, but download an offline map as a backup. Always check road.is and vedur.is before setting out, especially in winter.
Is the Golden Circle Open Year-Round?
Yes — the Golden Circle is accessible year-round, on paved, maintained roads at every core stop. Summer brings long daylight and green landscapes; winter delivers snow, ice-edged waterfalls, far fewer crowds and the chance of northern lights on the drive home — though some paths, like Gullfoss's lower viewpoint, may close in icy conditions. For a full month-by-month breakdown, see our guide to the best time to visit Iceland.
Frequently Asked Questions
Pure driving time is about 3.5 hours, but realistically budget 6–8 hours to enjoy the three core stops. Adding a hot-spring soak, a farm lunch or Kerið crater turns it into a full 8–10+ hour day.
No. The Golden Circle is a compact ~230 km day loop from Reykjavik. The Ring Road (Route 1) circles the entire island at roughly 1,300 km and is a multi-day expedition.
No — the whole route is paved, so a standard 2WD car is fine in summer. In winter, a 4x4 adds peace of mind, but many visitors simply book a guided tour to skip winter driving altogether.
Guided bus tours from Reykjavik typically run roughly 10,000–25,000 ISK (about $80–$130) per person depending on group size, season and inclusions like Kerið crater, the Secret Lagoon or a Blue Lagoon add-on.
Most tours go clockwise (Þingvellir → Geysir → Gullfoss → Kerið). Self-drivers sometimes go counterclockwise to be out of sync with the coach tours that converge on the sites mid-morning.
Worth Adding to Your Itinerary
The Golden Circle pairs beautifully with the rest of southwest Iceland. Many travellers extend the classic loop with a soak at the Blue Lagoon or Sky Lagoon, snorkelling between tectonic plates at Silfra in Þingvellir, a South Coast day trip to its waterfalls and black-sand beaches, glacier snowmobiling on Langjökull, or a winter Northern Lights hunt from Reykjavik. Browse top-rated experiences that fit naturally around a Golden Circle day: