Time Zones in Iceland

View Iceland’s current local time, UTC offset, DST status, and compare Reykjavik with other time zones worldwide.

Reykjavík
Iceland · GMT
Reykjavík Standard TimeGMT +00Mon, Apr 6
12AM3AM6AM9AM12PM3PM6PM9PM
UTC
UTC · UTC
Coordinated Universal TimeGMT +00Mon, Apr 6
12AM3AM6AM9AM12PM3PM6PM9PM
Reykjavík
Pop. 118,918
Kópavogur
Pop. 31,719
Hafnarfjörður
Pop. 26,808
Akureyri
Pop. 17,693
Garðabær
Pop. 11,421
Mosfellsbær
Pop. 8,651
Akranes
Pop. 7,411
Selfoss
Pop. 6,510
Seltjarnarnes
Pop. 4,726
Vestmannaeyjar
Pop. 4,219
Grindavík
Pop. 2,856
Ísafjörður
Pop. 2,624
Sauðárkrókur
Pop. 2,575
Álftanes
Pop. 2,392
Egilsstaðir
Pop. 2,303
Hveragerði
Pop. 2,288
Norðurþing
Pop. 2,228
Reykjanesbær
Pop. 2,013
Borgarnes
Pop. 1,759
Höfn
Pop. 1,690
Þorlákshöfn
Pop. 1,651
Sandgerði
Pop. 1,546
Neskaupstaður
Pop. 1,481
Garður
Pop. 1,429
Dalvík
Pop. 1,359
Siglufjörður
Pop. 1,190
Reyðarfjörður
Pop. 1,152
Stykkishólmur
Pop. 1,108
Hvolsvöllur
Pop. 1,036
Vogar
Pop. 1,029
Eskifjörður
Pop. 1,014
Ólafsvík
Pop. 1,010
Laugar
Pop. 1,001
Keflavík
Pop. 0

How to Check Time in Iceland

  1. Open the Iceland time converter page: Go to https://www.xconvert.com/time-converter/iceland to load Iceland with Reykjavík pre-selected on the comparison grid. This is useful when you are planning a call with a tourism operator in Reykjavík, checking support coverage for a European remote team, or confirming meeting times for flights connecting through Keflavík International Airport.

  2. Add comparison cities: Click + Add City and search for cities such as London, New York, and Copenhagen to compare Iceland with major business and travel hubs. London is relevant for finance and aviation links, New York is useful for North Atlantic business coordination, and Copenhagen matters because of Nordic business relationships and regional travel planning.

  3. Select a working time window: Click Select to enter selection mode, then drag across Reykjavík’s row on the 24-hour grid to highlight a time range in purple, such as 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM in Iceland. That lets you instantly see that the same slot is 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM in London during UK standard time and 5:00 AM to 7:00 AM in New York during Eastern Standard Time, helping you judge whether a morning meeting in Iceland is practical for teams in Europe or North America.

  4. Export or share the result: After selecting a range, use the export options shown on the page: ICS download, Google Calendar, Gmail, Copy to clipboard, or Share link. This is especially useful if you are sending a confirmed meeting slot to a distributed team, adding a Reykjavík supplier call to your calendar, or sharing a travel-ready schedule where everyone sees the appointment in their own local time automatically.

Time Zones in Iceland

Iceland uses one time zone across the entire country: Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which is the same as UTC+0 all year. Unlike countries such as the United States or Russia, Iceland does not split into multiple time zones despite its North Atlantic location and long east-west geography.

A notable feature of Iceland is that it stays on UTC+0 year-round and does not switch to summer time. That makes Iceland different from most of continental Europe, where clocks typically move forward by one hour in late March and back in late October. It also means Iceland avoids unusual offsets such as India’s UTC+5:30 or Newfoundland’s UTC-3:30, keeping scheduling simpler for international coordination.

For practical comparison, Iceland is 1 hour behind Central European Time (CET) in winter, so when it is 9:00 AM in Reykjavík, it is 10:00 AM in Berlin, Paris, or Madrid. During summer, when much of Europe moves to daylight saving time, Reykjavík becomes 2 hours behind Central European Summer Time (CEST), so 9:00 AM in Iceland equals 11:00 AM in Berlin.

Iceland Country Details

Iceland is a Nordic island country in the North Atlantic, located between Greenland and mainland Europe, and its capital is Reykjavík, the country’s political, cultural, and economic center. Reykjavík is also the main hub for government, tourism, technology startups, fisheries administration, and international air traffic through nearby Keflavík International Airport.

The country has a population of 353,574 and a land area of 103,000 km², making it one of Europe’s most sparsely populated countries. This low population density matters for travel and scheduling because most business activity, government services, and international meetings are concentrated in the Reykjavík metropolitan area rather than spread across many large cities.

Iceland’s official currency is the Icelandic króna (ISK), which is used for everyday purchases, hotel bookings, transport, and local business transactions. The international dialing code is +354, and commonly used languages include Icelandic (is) as the national language, along with English (en), German (de), Danish (da), Swedish (sv), and Norwegian (no) in tourism, trade, and cross-Nordic communication contexts.

Daylight Saving Time in Iceland

Iceland does not currently observe daylight saving time, so clocks do not change in spring or autumn. The country remains on UTC+0 throughout the entire year, which gives it a stable time standard for airlines, tourism operators, software teams, and international businesses scheduling recurring meetings.

Because there is no DST, there are no annual clock change dates in Iceland such as the last Sunday in March or the last Sunday in October, which are common elsewhere in Europe. This consistency is useful for recurring coordination with partners abroad, but users still need to watch seasonal changes in other countries because Iceland’s time difference with London, Berlin, or New York changes when those places enter or leave daylight saving time.

In recent years, Iceland has periodically discussed time policy in public and political debate, including whether the country’s legal time should better reflect solar time or social habits, but no recent national change has been implemented. All regions of Iceland follow the same national standard, so there are no internal regional differences between Reykjavík, Akureyri, Ísafjörður, Egilsstaðir, or other towns.

Frequently Asked Questions

how many time zones does Iceland have?

Iceland has one time zone for the entire country. The whole nation, including Reykjavík and all other towns and regions, uses GMT / UTC+0 with no internal time-zone split.

does Iceland use daylight saving time?

No, Iceland does not use daylight saving time. Clocks stay on UTC+0 all year, so there is no spring-forward or fall-back clock change anywhere in the country.

what is the time difference between Iceland and UTC?

Iceland is on UTC+0, so there is no time difference between Iceland and Coordinated Universal Time. When it is 12:00 UTC, it is also 12:00 in Reykjavík.

what currency does Iceland use?

Iceland uses the Icelandic króna, abbreviated as ISK. This is the national currency used for accommodation, food, transport, domestic services, and most commercial transactions across the country.

what is the dialing code for Iceland?

The international dialing code for Iceland is +354. If you are calling Iceland from abroad, you enter your international access prefix first, then 354, followed by the local number.

is Reykjavík in a different time zone from the rest of Iceland?

No, Reykjavík is in the same time zone as the rest of Iceland. The entire country follows UTC+0, which makes national scheduling straightforward for domestic travel, business operations, and public services.

why does Iceland stay on UTC+0 all year?

Iceland keeps UTC+0 year-round as a national standard and does not switch clocks seasonally. This simplifies scheduling, aviation planning, and recurring international meetings, although the time gap with Europe and North America still changes seasonally when those regions apply daylight saving time.