Reykjavík

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Introducing Reykjavík

The world’s most northerly capital combines colourful buildings, quirky people, a wild nightlife and a capricious soul to devastating effect. Most visitors fall helplessly in love, returning home already saving to come back.

The city’s charm lies in its many peculiar contrasts, which, like tectonic plates clashing against one another, create an earthquake of energy. Reykjavík offers a bewitching combination of village innocence and big-city zeal. It’s populated by darkly cynical citizens who are nevertheless filled with unstoppable creativity and enthusiasm. In summer the streets are washed by 22 hours of daylight; in winter they’re scoured by blizzards and doused in never-ending night. Reykjavík is a city that treasures its Viking past but wants the future – the very best of it – NOW!

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Fjords seen from Reykjavik.
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Fjords seen from Reykjavik.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Merten Snijders
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • People enjoying silica mud treatment, Blue Lagoon geothermal complex.
  • Children feeding birds at Tjorn.
  • Frida Fraenka antique shop, housed in an old wooden building on Vesturgata.
  • Frida Fraenka antique shop, housed in an old wooden building on Vesturgata.
  • Hot dogs with bread, mustard, ketchup and onion is Iceland's most popular fast food.
  • Overhead of woman being massaged in water, Blue Lagoon, Reykjanes peninsula.
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