Current Time in Reykjavík, Iceland

Reykjavík
Iceland · GMT
Reykjavík Standard TimeGMT +00Mon, Apr 6
12AM3AM6AM9AM12PM3PM6PM9PM
UTC
UTC · UTC
Coordinated Universal TimeGMT +00Mon, Apr 6
12AM3AM6AM9AM12PM3PM6PM9PM

How to Check Current Time in Reykjavík, Iceland

  1. Open the Reykjavík time converter page: Go to https://www.xconvert.com/time-converter/iceland/reykjavik. The page loads with Reykjavík pre-selected on the comparison grid, which is useful if you are planning a call with an Icelandic tourism operator, checking office hours for a shipping contact near Faxaflói Bay, or confirming local time before a flight connection through Keflavík International Airport.

  2. Add comparison cities relevant to your schedule: Click + Add City and search for cities such as New York, London, and Dubai. These are practical comparisons because Reykjavík often coordinates with North American travelers, UK-based finance and media contacts, and Gulf-region trade or logistics partners, and the grid lets you see all three against Reykjavík on the same 24-hour timeline.

  3. Select a meeting window on the visual grid: Click Select to enter selection mode, then drag across Reykjavík’s row from 9:00 AM to 11:00 AM to highlight that time range in purple. On a standard date, that shows 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM in London, 5:00 AM to 7:00 AM in New York during Eastern Standard Time or 4:00 AM to 6:00 AM during Eastern Daylight Time, helping you quickly see whether a morning meeting in Iceland works for US or UK participants.

  4. Export and share the chosen time range: After selecting the range, use the export options shown on the page: ICS download, Google Calendar, Gmail, Copy to clipboard, or Share link. This is especially useful for sending a confirmed Reykjavík meeting slot to a remote team, adding a supplier call to your calendar with the correct local offsets, or sharing a link so everyone sees the same cross-time-zone schedule without manual conversion.

About Reykjavík Time Zone

Reykjavík uses the IANA time zone Atlantic/Reykjavik, which stays on UTC+0 throughout the year. Unlike most of Europe, Iceland does not switch between standard time and daylight saving time, so the local clock in Reykjavík remains fixed at UTC year-round. That makes Reykjavík one of the more predictable time zones for recurring international scheduling.

Reykjavík is the capital of Iceland and the country’s main administrative, commercial, and cultural center. In practical terms, its time is aligned with Greenwich Mean Time year-round, but it differs seasonally from nearby European business hubs because cities such as London, Dublin, Paris, and Copenhagen may move their clocks forward in summer while Reykjavík does not. This means Reykjavík matches London in winter, but in summer Reykjavík is 1 hour behind London when the UK is on British Summer Time.

Geographically, Iceland sits in the North Atlantic between North America and Europe, which makes Reykjavík a useful reference point for transatlantic coordination. For aviation, tourism, marine services, software teams, and support operations, this fixed UTC+0 position simplifies planning because there is no local DST transition to track in Iceland itself; only the other city’s seasonal clock changes affect the time difference.

Reykjavík City Details

Reykjavík has a population of 118,918, making it the largest city in Iceland and the center of most of the country’s government, business, education, and tourism activity. It is located at 64.13548° N, -21.89541° W, on the southwestern coast of Iceland, and serves as the main urban hub for domestic transport and international business coordination.

The local currency is the Icelandic króna (ISK), which is used for hotels, restaurants, tours, transport, and business transactions across the city. The country dialing code is +354, so international callers reaching Reykjavík numbers should use +354 followed by the local number, with no separate city code required for domestic Icelandic numbering.

Time Differences from Reykjavík

Reykjavík stays on UTC+0 all year, so time differences depend heavily on whether the other city is observing daylight saving time.

  • New York: Reykjavík is usually 4 or 5 hours ahead of New York, depending on the US season. When it is 9:00 AM in Reykjavík, it is 4:00 AM in New York during Eastern Standard Time (UTC-5) and 5:00 AM in New York during Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4).
  • London: Reykjavík is the same time as London in winter and 1 hour behind London in summer. When it is 9:00 AM in Reykjavík, it is 9:00 AM in London during GMT, but 10:00 AM in London during British Summer Time.
  • Tokyo: Tokyo is 9 hours ahead of Reykjavík year-round because Japan does not observe DST. When it is 9:00 AM in Reykjavík, it is 6:00 PM in Tokyo, which often makes Reykjavík mornings suitable for late-day coordination with Japan.
  • Sydney: Sydney is usually 10 or 11 hours ahead of Reykjavík, depending on Australian daylight saving time in New South Wales. When it is 9:00 AM in Reykjavík, it is typically 7:00 PM in Sydney during Australian Eastern Standard Time and 8:00 PM in Sydney during Australian Eastern Daylight Time.
  • Dubai: Dubai is 4 hours ahead of Reykjavík all year because the UAE stays on UTC+4 without DST. When it is 9:00 AM in Reykjavík, it is 1:00 PM in Dubai, which is often convenient for same-day business calls between Iceland and the Gulf region.

For recurring meetings, Reykjavík is especially convenient for UK and Western Europe in the morning, North America in the early Icelandic afternoon, and East Asia or Australia in the early Icelandic morning or late evening abroad. Because Iceland does not change clocks, the main scheduling risk comes from DST changes in the US, UK, Europe, and Australia, which can temporarily shift the overlap window by one hour.

Frequently Asked Questions

What time zone is Reykjavík in?

Reykjavík is in the Atlantic/Reykjavik time zone. Its standard offset is UTC+0, and the city keeps that same offset throughout the entire year, which makes it easy to compare with GMT-based schedules.

Does Reykjavík observe daylight saving time?

No, Reykjavík does not observe daylight saving time. Iceland keeps the same clock year-round, so there is no spring-forward or fall-back change in Reykjavík; only the other location’s DST rules affect the time difference.

What is the time difference between Reykjavík and New York?

The time difference between Reykjavík and New York is usually 4 hours in summer and 5 hours in winter, because New York changes between Eastern Daylight Time and Eastern Standard Time while Reykjavík stays on UTC+0. For example, 9:00 AM in Reykjavík is 5:00 AM in New York during EDT and 4:00 AM in New York during EST.

What is the best time to call Reykjavík from the US or UK?

From the UK, Reykjavík is easiest to call during shared office hours, especially 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM Reykjavík time, which is the same as London in winter and one hour earlier than London in summer. From the US East Coast, a practical overlap is often 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM in Reykjavík, which is 8:00 AM to 12:00 PM in New York during EST or 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM during EDT, making early US business hours the best fit.

What is the UTC offset for Reykjavík?

The UTC offset for Reykjavík is UTC+0 all year. There is no seasonal change, so if you are scheduling flights, remote meetings, or support coverage, you can treat Reykjavík as fixed on UTC with no local DST adjustment.

What currency does Reykjavík use?

Reykjavík uses the Icelandic króna, abbreviated ISK. If you are budgeting for hotels, tours, meals, taxis, or business expenses in the city, prices are quoted in ISK rather than euros or pounds.

Is Reykjavík the same time as London?

Reykjavík is the same time as London only during the UK winter, when London is on GMT. During the UK summer, London moves to British Summer Time (UTC+1), so Reykjavík becomes 1 hour behind London until the UK returns to standard time.

Why does Reykjavík stay on the same time all year?

Iceland has chosen not to use daylight saving time, so Reykjavík remains on UTC+0 year-round for consistency. This is useful for international coordination because meetings with Iceland do not shift due to local clock changes, although partners in the US, UK, and mainland Europe still need to account for their own DST transitions.