The Hot Springs Map
From world famous lagoons to warm rivers you hike to. Browse by region, then book the ones worth planning around, enquire by email while online booking is being set up.
Colour shows the region; a solid pin is a developed, ticketed spa or pool and a ring is a natural or free bath. Tap any pin to open it. Pins show approximate locations.
Closest to the city and the airport, the easiest soaks to add to any trip.
Ocean edge infinity lagoon and seven step ritual.
The iconic milky blue water in a black lava field.
Natural tidal pools on a quiet fjord, an hour from town.
A scenic hike to a warm river you bathe in.
Reykjavik's largest geothermal pool, loved by locals.
A warm lagoon meets the cool sea on a city beach.
Pair a soak with Iceland's most famous sights and the black sand coast.
Iceland's oldest pool, beside little geysers at Flúðir.
Historic mountainside pool reached by a gentle walk.
A small, rustic natural spring full of character.
A geothermal lagoon near the Golden Circle.
New hot springs in Reykjadalur, opening 2026.
Steam vents, trails and the warm river above Hveragerði.
Lakeside baths and natural steam over a hot spring.
Quiet and scenic, fed by Europe's most powerful hot spring.
Spa baths blending Deildartunguhver's water with glacial melt.
A small reconstructed saga age pool in the Dales.
A naturally carbonated, green tinted mineral pool on Snæfellsnes.
A tiny wild hot pot for two on the Snæfellsnes peninsula.
A small, guided soak in a quiet canyon near Húsafell.
Iceland's quietest corner, read the Westfjords pools guide.
A warm pool and a wild hot pot above Arnarfjörður.
A natural pool in the rocks right beside the sea.
A pool on a wild beach at the edge of the Arctic.
Warm pots above Tálknafjörður, a free local favourite.
Three free warm pots at the sea's edge on the Strandir coast.
Bigger skies, fewer crowds, read the north guide.
The calmer northern lagoon over a volcanic landscape.
Warm water among birch trees above Akureyri's fjord.
Geothermal sea baths above a whale watching bay.
Playful warm beer baths and fjord hot tubs near Akureyri.
The quiet side, read the east guide.
Iceland's only certified natural geothermal baths, floating on Lake Urriðavatn.
A hot waterfall and wild pools in the eastern highlands, a true reward to reach.