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Iceland Ring Road Self-Drive with Blue Lagoon - 8 Days

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8 days / 7 nights

Blue Lagoon, Waterfalls, Glaciers and Diamond Beach on Iceland's Ring Road

This 8-day self-drive takes you around Iceland's entire Ring Road, covering the country's main regions at a pace that lets you actually spend time at each stop. Blue Lagoon Comfort admission is included on arrival day, and the route runs clockwise from Reykjavík through north Iceland, the eastfjords, and back along the south coast via the Golden Circle.

Each night's accommodation is pre-booked, the rental car comes with unlimited mileage and in-car Wi-Fi, and a Reykjavík-based team is available on a 24/7 helpline throughout the trip. The structure handles the logistics; the daily decisions stay yours.

Travel styleSelf-drive
Trip length8 days / 7 nights
VibeDream trip
SeasonSummer
(1 Apr–31 Oct)
TransportRental car
Starts fromReykjavík
Tour codeSD01

On this tour you will...

  • Get behind the wheel and set your own pace

  • Follow Iceland’s legendary Ring Road route

  • Dive into the natural delights of North Iceland

  • Witness the power of majestic waterfalls

  • Walk to the edge of Europe’s largest glacier

  • Relax at the Blue Lagoon, included in your package

View the winter version of this trip

Top attractions

Hraunfossar and Barnafoss

Deildartunguhver

Akureyri

Goðafoss

Lake Mývatn

Dimmuborgir

Húsavík

Dettifoss

Ásbyrgi

Stuðlagil canyon

Höfn í Hornafirði

Jökulsárgljúfur

Djúpivogur

Skaftafell

Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon

Vatnajökull Glacier & National Park

Vík í Mýrdal

Gullfoss

Þingvellir National Park

Geysir and Strokkur

Downtown Reykjavík

Why book a self-drive trip with Iceland Tours?

  • Start your tour on the date that suits you

  • New rental cars with 2 drivers as standard

  • 24/7 emergency helpline in Iceland

  • Handpicked local accommodation options

  • Secure your booking with just a 5% deposit

  • Best Price Guarantee

Your 8-day Iceland self-drive itinerary

Staying inReykjavík
Driving distance50 km (31 mi)

Your Iceland trip starts at Keflavík Airport. After collecting your rental car from the arrivals hall, your first stop is the Blue Lagoon, around 20 minutes from the airport. Comfort admission covers access to the geothermal waters, a silica mud mask, towel rental, and one welcome drink. Your entry slot is confirmed in advance as part of your travel documents, so there is nothing to arrange on arrival.

 

Once you are ready to leave, the drive to Reykjavík takes around 50 minutes. Check into your accommodation and spend the evening at your own pace. The city centre, the waterfront, and Hallgrímskirkja are all within easy walking distance. It is a short driving day by design, so you arrive in the capital with time to settle in before the route begins properly tomorrow.

Highlights

Downtown Reykjavík

Hallgrimskirkja

Extra activities

Included

Blue Lagoon Comfort Admission

Extra

Sky Lagoon Saman Pass

Extra

FlyOver Iceland

Extra

Lava Show Reykjavík

Extra

Puffin Watching

Extra

Classic Whale Watching from Reykjavík

Extra

The Reykjavík Food Walk

Extra

Horse Riding from Reykjavík

Extra

Inside the Volcano tour from Bláfjöll

Staying inAkureyri area
Driving distance460 km (286 mi)

Leave Reykjavík and head north toward Akureyri, passing through the Borgarfjörður region on the way. This is a long driving day at 460 km, but the stops along the route give it shape.

 

Hraunfossar and Barnafoss are worth pulling over for. Hraunfossar filters through a lava field directly into the river below rather than falling from a cliff, creating an unusual series of cascades along a long stretch of the bank. Deildartunguhver, Europe's most powerful geothermal spring, produces 180 litres of boiling water per second and sits just off the main road.

 

Continuing north, the Skagafjörður region is one of Iceland's main horse-breeding areas and you will likely see herds of Icelandic horses grazing alongside the road. Glaumbær turf farm is a well-preserved example of the traditional Icelandic farmhouse, with grass-covered roofs that provided insulation through the winter months. The road then winds through mountain passes and alongside fjords before arriving at Akureyri, which sits at the head of Eyjafjörður, Iceland's longest fjord. The Forest Lagoon geothermal spa is available as an optional add-on in the area. Spend the night in or near Akureyri.

Staying inMývatn area
Driving distance130 km (81 mi)

Start the day at Goðafoss, where the river drops around 12 metres across a broad curved face. The name, meaning Waterfall of the Gods, comes from an event in the year 1000 when a lawspeaker threw his Norse idols into the falls after Iceland adopted Christianity.

 

Continue to the Lake Mývatn area, one of the most geologically active regions in Iceland and worth a full afternoon of exploration. The lava formations at Dimmuborgir are the result of a lava flow that hardened around steam vents thousands of years ago, leaving a landscape of pillars, arches, and hollowed columns. The Krafla volcanic system nearby includes the Leirhnjúkur lava field, still warm underfoot in places, and the Viti crater lake. The Námaskarð geothermal area on the pass above the lake has steaming fumaroles and sulphur deposits in shades of yellow and orange.

 

The Earth Lagoon geothermal spa is available as an optional add-on, with views across the lake and the surrounding lava fields. Spend the night in the Mývatn area.

Staying inEgilsstaðir area
Driving distance330 km (205 mi)

Drive north from Mývatn to Húsavík, a fishing town on Skjálfandi Bay that is Iceland's best-known base for whale watching. The harbour is small and the setting attractive, with views across the bay toward the mountains on the far shore. Whale watching tours run from the harbour as an optional add-on.

 

From Húsavík, the route heads east toward Ásbyrgi, a horseshoe-shaped canyon at the northern end of the Jökulsárgljúfur canyon system. The near-vertical walls rise around 100 metres and the sheltered floor is densely wooded by Icelandic standards. Continue south to Dettifoss, the most powerful waterfall in Europe by volume, where the Jökulsá á Fjöllum river drops 44 metres into the canyon below. The force of the water, carrying glacial sediment, is immediately apparent from the viewing platforms on either bank.

 

From Dettifoss, continue east toward your accommodation in the Egilsstaðir area.

Staying inHöfn area
Driving distance260 km (162 mi)

The eastfjords are among the quieter parts of the Ring Road, with the road winding along the shoreline and lower slopes as it passes from one fjord to the next. The mountains here rise steeply from the water and each fjord has a slightly different character. Small fishing villages along the route, including Djúpivogur and Reyðarfjörður, give a sense of how much of coastal Iceland has looked for generations.

 

A World War II museum in Reyðarfjörður covers the Allied presence in Iceland during the war, when the east was used as a base for North Atlantic operations. Reindeer are found in this part of the country and occasionally cross the road in more remote stretches between the fjords, the only place in Iceland where they are found.

 

The drive through the Almannaskarð tunnel brings you out toward the Höfn area, with views of Vatnajökull's outlet glaciers as you approach the coast. Höfn is known for its langoustine, and there are several restaurants in town worth considering for dinner. Spend the night near Höfn.

Staying inVík/Skógar area
Driving distance300 km (186 mi)

Drive west along the south side of Vatnajökull, where a series of outlet glaciers descend from Europe's largest ice cap toward the black sand plains below. The scale of the glacier becomes clear from the road as each tongue comes into view.

 

Skaftafell, within Vatnajökull National Park, has well-marked trails through birch woodland and across the moraine to glacier viewpoints. The Blue Ice Experience glacier walk is available as an optional add-on and takes you onto the glacier surface with a guide and full equipment.

 

Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon sits a short drive further west, where icebergs calve from the Breiðamerkurjökull glacier and drift slowly toward the sea. Seals are regularly seen resting on the ice. Cross the road to Diamond Beach, where ice fragments wash up on black volcanic sand. Continue west through Kirkjubæjarklaustur and across the Eldhraun lava field, one of the largest lava flows in recorded history, now covered in a thick layer of moss. Spend the night in the Vík or Skógar area.

Staying inReykjavík
Driving distance300 km (186 mi)

Begin the day on the south coast with two of Iceland's most visited waterfalls. Skógafoss drops 60 metres and you can climb the staircase alongside it to look out over the coast and the plains stretching east. Seljalandsfoss is narrower but has a path that goes behind the curtain of water, which gives a different angle on the falls.

 

Drive inland to the Geysir geothermal area in the Haukadalur valley. Strokkur erupts every 6 to 10 minutes, sending water 20 to 40 metres into the air. The Great Geysir, which gave its name to all geysers, has been dormant since 2003. Continue to Gullfoss, where the Hvítá river drops in two stages into a canyon running at a right angle to the falls.

 

The final stop is Þingvellir National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates meet and Iceland's parliament, the Alþing, was established in 930 AD. The Almannagjá rift runs through the park and the site carries as much historical weight as geological interest. Return to Reykjavík for your final night.

Driving distance50 km (31 mi)

Depending on your flight time, you may have a few hours in Reykjavík before heading to the airport. The drive to Keflavík Airport takes around 50 minutes from the city centre. Return your rental car at the airport or, if you arranged city pickup, follow the drop-off instructions in your travel documents.

What’s included?

Detailed itinerary

Budget, Comfort, or Quality accommodation every night

Continental breakfast every day

Rental car of your choice for 7 days

2 authorized drivers as standard

Unlimited in-car Wi-Fi

Unlimited mileage

Collision damage waiver

24/7 emergency helpline when you’re in Iceland

Blue Lagoon Comfort admission (includes towel rental, silica mud mask, 1 drink) for post March 3,2026 bookings

Carbon offsetting of your tour

VAT, taxes & service fees (ex. Road Tax)

Flights to Iceland

Fuel & parking charges

Food & drink, unless otherwise stated

Attraction entrance fees, unless otherwise stated

Personal travel insurance

Iceland Road Tax

Customer reviews

Read what real customers had to say about Iceland Ring Road: Complete Self-Drive Adventure - 8 Days.

Overall rating for this trip
4.8
based on 189 reviews
Y
Yvonne, United Kingdom
October 30, 2025
Verified booking
Booking process was smooth. Itinerary and activity suggestions were great. Car rental was easy - helpful to have the in-car router supplied. Accommodations were good. Support in Iceland during bad weather was comforting to have.
J
Jason, United States
October 18, 2025
Verified booking
5*
M
Marie, United States
October 18, 2025
Verified booking
It was super easy to add on additional visits to thermal baths and cheaper than booking directly with the service provider. Iceland Tours was quick responding to my concerns about weather and my driver's license issue.

FAQs about our self-drive trips

On a self-drive trip with Iceland Tours, everything is pre-arranged before you arrive. Your rental car, accommodation, and any booked activities are confirmed in advance, so when you land at Keflíavík Airport you can collect your keys and get on the road without any logistics left to sort out. All you need to manage is your own time each day.

Every trip comes with a detailed day-by-day itinerary created by our Reykjavík-based travel team, giving you a clear route, suggested stops, and things to do and see at each stage. You can follow it closely or adapt it as you go. The important thing is staying within reasonable distance of your accommodation each night, which is already booked for you throughout the trip.

Every car also comes with a portable Wi-Fi device (Mi-Fi), so navigation and staying connected are both covered from day one. If anything comes up during your trip, a 24/7 emergency helpline staffed by our local Reykjavík team is available throughout your journey. You can explore our full range of Iceland self-drive tours to find the right length and route for your trip, or read more about how car rental in Iceland works before you book.

Booking at least a few weeks before your travel date gives us enough time to confirm your preferred accommodation and finalize your itinerary. We are unable to accept bookings with less than one week’s notice.

For summer travel between June and August, booking several months ahead is strongly recommended. Accommodation in rural areas fills up quickly during peak season, and popular activity add-ons like glacier walks and whale watching can sell out well in advance. Booking early also lets you lock in your preferred car type and accommodation tier before availability narrows.

You only need a 5% deposit to secure your trip, with the balance due closer to your departure date. This low-deposit model means you can confirm your plans early without a large upfront commitment. If your plans change, our cancellation policy offers up to a 95% refund up to five days before arrival, with the retained 5% converted into a long-valid travel credit you can use on a future booking. See our how to book with us page for full details.

Most international driving licenses are accepted in Iceland. You need to be at least 20 years old to rent a standard car, or 23 years old for larger vehicles like 4x4s and vans, and you must have held a valid license for at least one year. You will also need to present a credit card in the main renter’s name when collecting your vehicle.

An International Driving Permit is only required if your license is not in Latin script, for example if it is in Arabic or Chinese characters. If you are unsure whether your license qualifies, our team is happy to advise before you book.

Iceland drives on the right, with speed limits and distances in kilometers. Roundabouts are common, especially around towns, and in rural areas you may encounter single-lane bridges, gravel roads, and sheep on the road. Our detailed itinerary includes route guidance for each day, and the portable Wi-Fi device means you can use live navigation throughout the trip. For a full overview of what to expect behind the wheel, see our guide to driving in Iceland and our page on car rental in Iceland.

Yes. Every self-drive trip can be extended with additional nights in Reykjavík or elsewhere along the route. If you have a particular interest or a region you want to spend more time in, we recommend getting in touch with our travel team before you book. This way we can advise on what’s possible, flag any additional costs, and make sure your preferences are built into the booking from the start. This means a smoother process and no amendment fees down the line.

The itinerary itself provides a well-tested route and daily plan, but the self-drive format gives you genuine flexibility to adjust your pace, linger at stops you enjoy, or take side routes as conditions allow. The structure handles the logistics so the day-to-day decisions remain yours.

If you are looking at a range of itinerary lengths or want to compare what is covered across different trips, you can browse the full Iceland self-drive tour collection or get in touch with our Reykjavík-based team through the contact page to talk through your options.

Optional activities are available to add during the booking process, and you will be shown exactly what is on offer for each day of your trip at checkout. Popular additions include glacier walks, whale watching, ice cave tours, lava cave explorations, horseback riding, and geothermal spa visits.

Adding activities through Iceland Tours at the time of booking means everything is coordinated with your itinerary and accommodation in advance, rather than arranging things independently on arrival. This is particularly worth considering for activities that require guides or have limited availability, since spots can fill up during peak season.

If you would like more activities built directly into the itinerary rather than added as extras, our 10-Day Active Ring Road & Snæfellsnes Self-Drive is structured with more activity inclusions as standard. You can also read more about planning your trip on our Iceland travel guide.

Iceland drives on the right, with steering wheels on the left side of the car. Speed limits are posted in kilometers per hour. The rules of the road broadly follow European conventions, but there are a few things worth knowing before you set off.

Roundabouts are very common throughout Iceland, particularly in and around towns. Traffic already in the roundabout has right of way, and if you are in the inner lane of a multi-lane roundabout, you also have priority over vehicles in the outer lane. In rural areas, you may encounter one-lane bridges, blind hill crests, and gravel roads on some secondary routes.

During summer, sheep roam freely and often wander onto the road, so be prepared to slow down and give way when you encounter them. In East Iceland during winter, you may also encounter reindeer. Your trip comes with a portable Wi-Fi device for navigation, and our detailed itinerary notes specific things to watch for on each leg of the route.

If you are planning a winter trip, our local team monitors road and weather conditions and is reachable 24/7. For a comprehensive overview of driving conditions, road types, and seasonal considerations, see our guide to driving in Iceland.

Once you have paid your deposit, we begin finalizing your accommodation, rental car, and any booked activities. As soon as confirmation is received from all partners, we will email you to let you know your travel documents are ready to access in our booking portal.

We aim to have everything confirmed within a few weeks of receiving your booking. During busy periods this may take a little longer, but you will always receive your complete documents before your departure date. Your documents include your full day-by-day itinerary, accommodation details, rental car pickup information, and contact details for our 24/7 in-Iceland helpline.

If you have questions about your booking at any point before your trip, you can reach our Reykjavík-based team through the contact page. Iceland Tours has been organizing Iceland trips for over 40 years, and our local team is available to help with any questions about your itinerary or preparations.

Your rental car can be collected from the arrivals hall at Keflavík International Airport. Your travel documents will confirm the name of the car rental company and advise you to proceed to their service desk in the arrivals hall. Have your driver’s license and credit card in the main renter’s name ready when you arrive.

Rental car desks at Keflavík operate at different hours depending on the provider. If your flight arrives outside standard desk hours, the rental company will typically have made arrangements given your expected arrival time. Your travel documents will include a contact number if you need assistance on arrival.

Your car comes with unlimited mileage, collision damage waiver, and authorization for a second driver as standard, along with the portable Wi-Fi device included with every trip. If you are planning to spend extra days in Reykjavík before your self-drive begins, you also have the option to collect your car from the city rather than the airport. See question 9 for details.

Yes. If you prefer to pick up your rental car in Reykjavík rather than at Keflíavík Airport, simply let us know in the special requests field during checkout and we will arrange it for you.

This is a practical option if you are arriving early and want to spend time in the city before your self-drive itinerary begins. Reykjavík has a lot worth exploring, from the iconic Hallgrímskirkja church and the waterfront Harpa concert hall to the city’s well-regarded restaurant scene. Our downtown Reykjavík and Reykjavík attraction pages are a useful starting point for planning those extra days.

If you request different pick-up and drop-off locations, for example collecting in the city and returning at the airport or vice versa, a one-way fee of around ISK 7,900 (approximately EUR 60) applies. This is paid directly to the rental company when you collect the car.

Every Iceland Tours self-drive package includes the following as standard: a rental car of your choice with unlimited mileage, collision damage waiver, authorization for a second driver, and a portable Wi-Fi device. Accommodation at your chosen level is booked for every night of the trip, and continental breakfast is included daily. You also receive a detailed day-by-day itinerary built by our local travel experts, along with access to a 24/7 emergency helpline staffed by our Reykjavík-based team throughout your trip. Carbon offsetting of your tour is included, and all VAT, taxes, and service fees are covered.

What is not included: international flights, fuel and parking, personal travel insurance, the Iceland Road Tax (a small charge collected at pickup), food and drink beyond breakfast, and attraction entrance fees unless otherwise stated on your specific tour page.

Iceland Tours has been organizing self-drive trips in Iceland for over 40 years and is Travelife-certified for sustainable operations. When you book a package with us rather than piecing together a trip independently, every element of the logistics is handled in advance by people who know the country well, so you can focus on the trip itself. See our accommodation page and car rental page for more detail on what is available at each level, and visit our why book with us page for a full overview of what sets Iceland Tours apart.

When you book a self-drive package with Iceland Tours, you choose from three accommodation levels: Budget, Comfort, or Quality. All three include continental breakfast every day.

Budget accommodation is guesthouses and country hotels with shared bathrooms, a practical and affordable choice that still puts you in well-located, locally run properties.

Comfort moves to a selection of hotels, guesthouses, and country and farmhotels with private bathrooms, offering a comfortable step up in quality and facilities.

Quality represents the best available accommodation in each area from our selection. This typically means four-star hotels or superior rooms at three-star properties, though in more remote parts of Iceland, where the options are naturally more limited, it means the highest-quality property available in that location. Breakfast is included at all levels.

All accommodations are handpicked by our team and pre-booked before your trip begins. In rural Iceland, accommodation options are more limited than in the cities, which is one of the reasons booking ahead matters. Securing your places early as part of a package means you are not left searching for availability in remote areas during peak season. For travelers who prefer something closer to nature, we also offer Iceland self-drive camping tours. Read more about all accommodation options on our accommodation in Iceland page.

Iceland’s weather can change quickly regardless of the time of year, so packing for multiple conditions is the right approach even in summer. The essentials are: waterproof walking boots, waterproof trousers, thermal underlayers, fleeces or warm sweaters, a waterproof rain jacket, a warm outer jacket, and a hat, scarf, and gloves. Sunglasses are useful year-round. Swimwear is worth packing since hot springs and geothermal pools appear throughout the country, and lip balm and moisturizer will be appreciated given the wind.

For practical self-drive needs, your car comes with a portable Wi-Fi device so a phone mount for navigation is useful. A portable power bank is handy for longer days out. If you are visiting in winter, ice scrapers are typically provided with the car, but dressing in proper thermal layers for time spent outside makes a real difference.

For a full seasonal packing guide covering everything from summer hiking to winter driving, see our Iceland packing list. The Iceland in winter guide and our Iceland winter weather and packing article are also useful if you are traveling in the colder months.

Carbon offsetting is already included as standard with every Iceland Tours package. We have partnered with an environmental fund in Iceland to cover the carbon footprint of the tour itself, so there is nothing extra you need to do or pay.

Iceland Tours is Travelife-certified, meaning our operations are independently assessed against sustainability standards covering environmental, social, and supply chain criteria. This certification reflects a commitment to responsible travel that goes beyond carbon offsetting, including how we select local accommodation and activity partners.

Carbon offsetting for international flights to and from Iceland is not included in the tour package, but your airline may offer offset options at the time of booking, or you can arrange this through a local or national environmental fund. For more on how we approach sustainable travel, see our sustainability policy and our article on responsible and sustainable travel in Iceland.

Eight days is a practical and well-tested timeframe for completing Iceland's Ring Road. The full loop covers around 1,332 km, and this 8-day Ring Road self-drive itinerary is structured so that each day's driving is manageable while still covering the major highlights across every region of the country.

Traveling clockwise from Reykjavík, you move through the Borgarfjörður region toward Akureyri and the Diamond Circle in the north, then continue through the eastern fjords to Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon before finishing along the south coast. You will not have time for every side road or highland detour, but you will come away with a thorough and coherent experience of Iceland's core landscapes. Travelers who want more flexibility in each region may want to consider the 10-day Ring Road and Snæfellsnes self-drive, which adds two extra days and includes the Snæfellsnes Peninsula.

Yes, Blue Lagoon Comfort admission is included in your package across all accommodation tiers. You do not need to book it separately or pay anything extra on arrival. Comfort admission covers access to the geothermal waters, a silica mud mask, towel rental, and one welcome drink. Your entry slot is confirmed along with the rest of your travel documents before you depart, so everything is arranged in advance. If you would like to upgrade to a higher admission level directly with the Blue Lagoon, you can arrange that once your documents arrive, but it is not required.

The Blue Lagoon visit is built into Day 1 of your itinerary, on the way from Keflavík Airport to Reykjavík. The lagoon sits about 20 minutes from the airport and around 50 minutes from central Reykjavík, making it a natural first stop before you reach the capital. Visiting on arrival day means you get one of Iceland's most iconic experiences right away, without it taking time away from a full touring day later in the trip. It is also a relaxed way to unwind from a long flight before the adventure starts properly.

This 8-day Ring Road itinerary travels clockwise, heading north from Reykjavík through the Borgarfjörður region toward Akureyri before continuing east and then south. This sequence means you experience the quieter northern and eastern regions early in the trip, then build toward the south coast's more widely known attractions near the end.

Practically, the clockwise direction also puts you on the more scenic side of the road for many of the best viewpoints and pull-offs, and finishing on the south coast means your final days include some of Iceland's most dramatic landscapes. For many travelers it feels like a natural progression, arriving at places like Jökulsárlón and the south coast waterfalls with the context of having already seen the rest of the country.

Most days on this 8-day Iceland self-drive involve around 3 to 5 hours of actual driving time, broken up with stops throughout the day. The longest driving day is the northward leg from Reykjavík toward Akureyri through Borgarfjörður, covering around 390 km. Most other days sit between 150 and 250 km.

The Ring Road is well maintained throughout its length and the scenery is consistently engaging, so the driving itself tends to be one of the more enjoyable parts of the trip rather than something to get through. The daily structure gives you enough time between drives to explore waterfalls, walk on glaciers, soak in hot springs, and take photos without feeling like you are constantly moving.

The April to October window offers consistently better driving conditions than winter, with more predictable weather, temperatures around 10 to 15°C, and minimal risk of road closures from snow or ice. Daylight during peak summer runs 15 to 19 hours per day, which means you can visit attractions in the early morning and late evening without losing the light.

Summer also brings lupine flowers across the countryside and active puffin colonies along the coastal areas, typically between May and August. The extended daylight creates good photography conditions throughout the day rather than being limited to a narrow window. If Northern Lights viewing is your priority, Iceland Tours also offers a dedicated 8-day Ring Road and Northern Lights self-drive designed specifically for winter travel and aurora hunting conditions.

This 8-day Ring Road self-drive operates during the April to October season, which is Iceland's most stable weather period. Road closures are uncommon compared to winter months, and most weather conditions you encounter will be manageable rather than disruptive.

Because this is a self-drive format, you have genuine flexibility to adjust the order or timing of your sightseeing within each day. Your accommodation is arranged when you book, so you have confirmed places to stay each night, while still having the freedom to respond to conditions on the road. Iceland Tours provides weather resources and driving condition updates to help you make informed decisions as you go.

Arriving at Jökulsárlón on day 6 of a clockwise route means you have already traveled through the northern and eastern regions of Iceland before reaching it. That context matters. After the open farmland of Borgarfjörður, the volcanic character of the Diamond Circle, and the remote beauty of the eastern fjords, the sight of massive icebergs drifting across the lagoon carries a different weight than it might on a shorter trip.

You will have time to explore both the lagoon itself and Diamond Beach just across the road, where ice formations wash up against black volcanic sand. Seals are often visible resting on the bergs. The day 6 placement positions Jökulsárlón as a transition point before the south coast stretch that closes out the itinerary.

The Borgarfjörður region is often covered quickly by travelers focused on reaching the north, but it rewards attention. The area has deep roots in Icelandic saga history, and the landscape shifts from coastal farmland to dramatic river valleys as you move inland.

Two natural highlights stand out in particular. Deildartunguhver is Europe's most powerful geothermal spring, producing 180 litres of boiling water per second and giving a vivid demonstration of Iceland's volcanic energy. Nearby, Hraunfossar and Barnafoss are waterfalls with a character unlike most others in Iceland: Hraunfossar filters through lava rock rather than plunging from a cliff, creating a long, unusual cascade. Passing through Borgarfjörður gives the northward drive genuine substance rather than just being a transit leg.

There are strong optional add-ons available at several points along this 8-day Iceland self-drive itinerary. The Blue Ice Experience glacier walk at Skaftafell is one of the most popular, taking you onto Vatnajökull, Europe's largest glacier, with a guide and full equipment provided.

Whale watching is available from several coastal towns along the route, and ice caves can be accessible depending on the time of season. Horseback riding on Icelandic horses and visits to local hot springs like the Secret Lagoon are also worth considering. Your accommodations are arranged when you book, giving you a confirmed structure to work around while you add activities that suit your interests and travel dates. If you are looking for a trip where more activities are pre-built into the itinerary, the 10-day Active Ring Road and Snæfellsnes self-drive is worth comparing.

The daily structure on this 8-day clockwise Ring Road tour keeps driving to around 3 to 5 hours, with the rest of each day available for sightseeing and activities. The route begins with the historic Borgarfjörður region, moves through Akureyri and the Diamond Circle, then continues through the eastern fjords before arriving at Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon and the south coast.

Traveling clockwise means you encounter the less visited northern and eastern regions while you are still fully energized, and close the trip on the south coast's iconic waterfalls and black sand beaches. Your accommodation is placed in the right locations each night so you are never backtracking unnecessarily. Travelers who want a similar structure with more time per region should also look at the 10-day Ring Road and Snæfellsnes self-drive or, for a guided version of the full Ring Road, the 10-day Iceland Ring Road guided group tour.

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