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Golden Circle, Iceland
Golden Circle

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Golden Circle

Iceland's classic day trip from Reykjavik: the 230km loop past Thingvellir, Geysir and Gullfoss — whether to self-drive or take a coach, the winter-driving truth, and the Secret Lagoon finish.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

In short

Golden Circle at a glance

The Golden Circle is the day trip every first-time Iceland visitor does: a 230km loop east of Reykjavik linking Thingvellir's continental rift, the erupting Strokkur geyser and the two-tier Gullfoss waterfall. All three sights are free to enter and the roads are paved, so in summer it's an easy self-drive — about three hours of actual driving, six to eight with stops. In winter you want a 4x4 on studded tyres or, frankly, a coach. Tack on the Secret Lagoon at Fludir for a hot-spring soak before you head back.

The Golden Circle is the trip almost everyone does on their first day in Iceland, and for once the hype holds up. In a single 230km loop east of Reykjavik you stand in the Almannagja gorge where two continental plates are visibly tearing apart, watch the Strokkur geyser fire a column of boiling water 20 metres into the air every few minutes, and feel the spray off Gullfoss as it crashes into its canyon. All three are free to walk into — you pay only a few pounds to park — which makes this the rare headline experience that costs almost nothing once you’re there.

The real decision is how you do it. From roughly May to September the roads are paved and a normal 2WD handles the whole route, so self-driving is easy and lets you linger at Kerid crater or peel off to the Secret Lagoon at Fludir for a soak before heading home. Winter is a different animal: short daylight, ice, and roads that close in minutes when the wind gets up. If you’re a couple in February, the maths and the stress both point towards a coach tour at around £70–95 a head with hotel pickup. Either way, treat the loop as a full day out from Reykjavik rather than somewhere you stay — go anti-clockwise to reach Geysir before the mid-morning coaches do.

The route

A one-day anti-clockwise loop from Reykjavik that hits the three free headline sights plus an optional crater and hot-spring finish. Drive times are from the previous stop on paved Route 36/35; add your own stopping time on top.

  1. Stop 1

    Thingvellir National Park

    About 45 minutes / 45km northeast of Reykjavik on Route 36. Walk the Almannagja gorge where the North American and Eurasian plates pull apart — this is the rift you came for, plus the site of Iceland's old parliament. Allow 90 minutes; parking is about 1,000 ISK (£6) a car, paid at the machine or app.

  2. Stop 2

    Geysir & Strokkur

    Roughly an hour / 60km on from Thingvellir through the Haukadalur valley. Old Geysir mostly sleeps now, but Strokkur next to it blasts 15–20m every few minutes — stand upwind. Forty-five minutes covers it; parking is free but the cafe-side lot fills by 11am, so come early.

  3. Stop 3

    Gullfoss waterfall

    Just ten minutes / 10km further. A thunderous two-tier fall dropping into a canyon, with free parking and a viewing path that gets slick with spray — proper shoes. This is the turning point of the loop; from here you head back towards Reykjavik.

  4. Optional

    Kerid crater & Secret Lagoon

    On the way back, Kerid is a red-rock volcanic crater with a green lake for a 400 ISK (£2.50) entry — a 20-minute stop. Better still, soak at the Secret Lagoon in Fludir (about £26–30, towels £4 extra) before the final hour's drive home.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Reykjavik (101 / city centre)

£££ premium

The sensible base: the Golden Circle is a day trip, so sleep in the capital and drive out. The 101 postcode puts you near the harbour, restaurants and the BSI bus terminal where most coach tours pick up. Pricey but walkable.

Best for: Day-tripping the loop, nightlife, coach pickups

Browse hotels Loop start, 45 min to Thingvellir

Selfoss

££ mid-range

A workaday town on the southern edge of the loop, handy if you're combining the Golden Circle with the south coast next day. Cheaper rooms than Reykjavik and a 40-minute hop to Gullfoss, but little to do in the evening.

Best for: Combining with the south coast, cheaper beds

Browse hotels Southern edge, ~40 min to Gullfoss

Fludir / Laugarvatn

££ mid-range

Small geothermal villages inside the loop itself — stay here and you wake up beside the Secret Lagoon and the Fontana baths, with the geyser field on your doorstep. Limited choice and you'll need the car, but it's the most scenic, crowd-free option.

Best for: Hot springs, an unhurried loop, photographers

Browse hotels Inside the loop, ~30 min to Geysir

Getting around Golden Circle

A hire car is the most flexible way to do the loop and the roads are paved the whole way — a 2WD is fine from roughly May to September. In winter (November–March) book a 4x4 with studded tyres, check road.is before you set off, and be ready for sudden closures in wind or snow; if that sounds stressful, a guided coach is the smarter call and costs about 12,000–16,000 ISK (£70–95) per person with hotel pickup. Note Iceland's per-kilometre road-usage tax introduced in January 2026 (about 6.95 ISK/km for a normal car, though some firms bill it as a flat ~1,390 ISK/day), added on top of your rental — the loop's 230km works out around £9. There's no useful public-transport version of the route.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Car hire

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Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo
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Golden Circle FAQs

Should I self-drive the Golden Circle or take a tour?
In summer, self-drive: the roads are paved, a 2WD is fine and you set your own pace for about 230km / 3 hours' driving. For one or two people in winter, a coach tour (around £70–95 per person with pickup) usually beats hiring a 4x4 on studded tyres and driving icy roads in short daylight. Three or more people travelling in summer almost always save by hiring a car.
How long does the Golden Circle take?
It's a day trip, not an overnight. The loop is about 230km with roughly three hours of actual driving; with stops at Thingvellir, Geysir and Gullfoss you're looking at six to eight hours door to door from Reykjavik. Adding Kerid crater and the Secret Lagoon pushes it towards a full day.
Is the Golden Circle worth doing in winter?
Yes, with eyes open. The sights look dramatic under snow, crowds thin out and Thingvellir's dark, open horizon is a strong aurora spot in the evening. But daylight is short, roads ice over and closures happen — check road.is, drive slowly, and only stop where you can fully pull off the road. If in doubt, take the coach.
Do you have to pay to enter Thingvellir, Geysir and Gullfoss?
Entry to all three is free. You pay only for parking at Thingvellir and Geysir — about 1,000 ISK (£6) per car, paid at a machine or app — while Gullfoss parking is free. Optional add-ons cost extra: Kerid crater is 400 ISK (£2.50) and the Secret Lagoon is about £26–30.

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