Reykjavík
Reykjavík, Iceland
Live Conditions

Reykjavík
Photography Conditions

Sunset · Aurora & Night Sky · Drone Flight  ·  Pre-loaded for Reykjavík

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Sunset & Sunrise
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Aurora & Night Sky
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Drone Conditions
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Best Spots in Reykjavík
SunsetSunrise
Hallgrímskirkja
City Centre · 74.5 m tower · Observation deck

The landmark basalt-column church dominates the Reykjavík skyline. The observation deck at 74.5 m gives a 360° view over the colorful tin-roofed houses, the harbor, and Mount Esja across the bay. From the base of the church looking west, the tower frames the harbor and the Faxaflói bay beyond. Sunset from inside the tower is limited by small windows — head outside and use the church as foreground.

Check tonight's sunset →
AuroraSunset
Grótta Lighthouse
Seltjarnarnes · Western tip · Dark horizon

The darkest accessible location from the city. The small lighthouse sits at the western tip of the Seltjarnarnes peninsula with open Atlantic to the west, north, and south. For aurora photography this is the closest dark sky to central Reykjavík — the city light dome is behind you facing north. At golden hour the lighthouse and tidal flats face the open sky without obstruction. The area is accessible on foot or by bus; check tide tables as the path floods at high tide.

Check aurora conditions →
SunsetSunrise
Öskjuhlíð Hill & Perlan
Central Reykjavík · 61 m · Drive-up access

The wooded hill at the city's geographic centre is topped by the Perlan geothermal museum with a 360° viewing terrace. From the terrace you see the full city panorama: harbor to the north, Mount Esja across the bay, Reykjanes Peninsula to the south, and the interior mountains beyond. The winter sun barely clears the southern horizon from here — the entire day is a low-angle golden hour session in December.

Check Perlan forecast →
AuroraSunrise
Þingvellir National Park
50 km east · Bortle 3–4 · Rift valley

The geological rift between the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates, 50 km east of the city. Þingvellir's Öxará river and Almannagjá gorge are among the most dramatic natural foregrounds in Iceland for aurora photography. The park is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and Iceland's most visited inland destination — arrive well before dark to stake a position. Bortle 3–4 skies make it viable for northern lights when KP index is 3+.

Check Þingvellir tonight →
Aurora Season in Reykjavík
Dark enough for aurora
JanFebMar AprMay JunJulAug Sep OctNovDec
Midnight sun May–Jul eliminates dark sky entirely · Drive 50 km to Þingvellir for darker horizons
Dark Sky & Aurora Sites Near Reykjavík
LocationDistanceBortleBest for
Grótta Lighthouse5 km west6–7Nearest dark horizon, aurora with city glowStarcast →
Þingvellir National Park50 km east3–4Aurora over rift valley, UNESCO landscapeStarcast →
Snæfellsnes Peninsula150 km north2–3Aurora over glacier volcano, ocean foregroundStarcast →
Reykjanes Peninsula50 km southwest3–4Volcanic lava fields, geothermal steam, oceanStarcast →
Reykjavík by Season
Winter · Nov–Feb
Aurora season. Extreme golden hours.
  • The sun rises around 11:30 AM and sets around 3:30 PM in December — the whole day is golden hour
  • Aurora is visible on clear nights with KP 2+ — the dark window runs from roughly 4 PM to 10 AM
  • Weather is stormy and unpredictable: when a clear window opens, move immediately
  • Snow on the colorful Reykjavík rooftops and harbor is one of Iceland's most intimate photography scenes
Spring · Mar–Apr
Last aurora window. Snow still possible.
  • March equinox often produces elevated geomagnetic activity — higher KP events are more common
  • Dark window shortens rapidly through April: the last viable aurora nights are in early April
  • Spring landscapes are stark and dramatic: black lava, snow patches, and clear skies after fronts
  • Golden hour timing becomes more conventional and manageable in March and April
Summer · May–Aug
Midnight sun. No aurora. Endless light.
  • The sun never fully sets near the June solstice — astronomical twilight persists all night
  • Golden hour is effectively permanent from late evening through early morning
  • No aurora photography possible: sky never gets dark enough from mid-May through late July
  • Lupine fields in June and July add vivid purple foreground to the lava and mountains
Autumn · Sep–Oct
Best all-round season. First aurora.
  • September brings the first aurora-capable dark nights after summer — the season's most anticipated window
  • Autumn color in the highland birch scrub and mossy lava fields peaks in late September
  • Weather is unsettled but fronts clear rapidly — patience pays off with extraordinary light
  • October is statistically one of the best aurora months: dark nights, manageable weather, and fewer tourists than summer
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Frequently Asked

Frequently Asked Questions — Reykjavík Photography

Iceland's subarctic weather changes fast — clear to stormy in under an hour. Goldcast reads live cloud cover, aerosol levels, and horizon data on a 0–100 scale. Even a marginal score at Reykjavík's latitude can produce extraordinary light quality: the northern sun barely clears the horizon in winter and every hour is golden. Check tonight's score →
At 64° north, golden hour is extreme. Near the December solstice the sun rises at 11:30 AM and sets at 3:30 PM — the entire day is golden hour. Near the June solstice, the sun doesn't set at all. In spring and autumn golden hour timing is more conventional (morning and evening), but the light quality is still dramatically low-angle. Goldcast calculates today's exact window. Get today's golden hour →
Yes, but city light limits the experience. Drive 5 km west to Grótta Lighthouse for the darkest near-city horizon, or 50 km east to Þingvellir for Bortle 3–4 skies. Aurora requires clear skies and KP index of 3+ for good visibility near the city. Starcast's cloud score tells you if tonight is worth going out — cloud is the primary enemy. Check tonight's sky score →
The dark sky window for aurora runs roughly September through April. The midnight sun from mid-May through late July makes aurora impossible. January and February have the longest dark windows. March equinox is statistically active for geomagnetic events. October and November offer a good balance of darkness and manageable weather before deep winter storms. Check aurora sky score →
EASA regulations apply. Reykjavík airport and Keflavík International create controlled airspace zones. Wind is the primary practical restriction: Reykjavík regularly sees 30–50 km/h sustained gusts. Most drone models are grounded above 35–40 km/h. Dronecast gives live wind speed data so you know before going out. Check Reykjavík wind conditions →
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