Golden Circle from Reykjavík: The Classic Day Tour, Done Right
Iceland's Golden Circle packs a continental rift, an erupting geyser and a two-tier glacial waterfall into one 300 km loop from Reykjavík. Here is how to plan the perfect Golden Circle day — Þingvellir, Geysir and Gullfoss, plus Secret Lagoon and Kerið add-ons — with the best-rated tours to book.
At a glance
- 1Þingvellir rift valley walk
- 2Strokkur eruption at Geysir
- 3Gullfoss waterfall viewpoints
- 4Secret Lagoon or Kerið crater
Þingvellir: walk between two continents
The first stop, about 45 minutes from Reykjavík, is Þingvellir National Park — a UNESCO site where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates pull apart a few centimetres each year. You walk through the Almannagjá gorge along the rift itself, past the site where Iceland's parliament, the Alþingi, was founded in 930 AD. Most tours allow 45–60 minutes here, enough for the gorge, the Öxarárfoss waterfall and the viewing platform over the rift valley.
Geysir and Gullfoss: the showstoppers
At the Geysir geothermal area, the star is Strokkur, which erupts every 5–10 minutes, hurling boiling water 15–20 metres into the air — keep your camera ready and stand upwind. Ten minutes up the road, Gullfoss drops 32 metres in two tiers into a glacial canyon; on sunny days the spray throws rainbows across the gorge. Both stops have free entry, paths that get icy in winter, and cafés for a hot-dog-and-soup lunch break.
Add-ons: Secret Lagoon and Kerið crater
Many tours extend the classic loop with a soak or a crater. The Secret Lagoon in Flúðir is Iceland's oldest swimming pool (1891), a steaming 38–40°C natural pool that costs around ISK 3,300 if visiting independently — combo tours bundle entry and save you the logistics. Kerið is a 3,000-year-old volcanic crater with a teal lake at the bottom; entry is about ISK 600 and the rim walk takes 20 minutes. Pick one — doing both makes for a rushed day.
Which tour to book
Classic coach tours run daily year-round, take 7–8 hours and start from around $65–$80 — the cheapest way to see all three sights. Small-group minibus tours (from roughly $120) move faster, skip the crowds at each stop and often add Kerið or a farm visit. Combos with the Secret Lagoon run closer to $150 including entry. In summer and around the winter holidays, book 3–5 days ahead — morning departures sell out first.
Book the experiences in this itinerary
Top-rated tours for exactly what this plan recommends in Reykjavik — prices per person.







