Kirkjufell mountain on the Snæfellsnes peninsula, Iceland — where to watch the 2026 total solar eclipse

Eclipse solar total · 12 de agosto de 2026

Onde ver o eclipse solar total de 2026 na Islândia

Western Iceland gets a genuine total eclipse on 12 August 2026 — up to ~2m 13s on land, with the Sun a comfortable ~25° high in the west. The only real enemy is Iceland's famously fickle August cloud.

In the path of totality
Totality begins~17:47 GMTWest Iceland · 12 Aug 2026 (local time = GMT)
Durationup to ~2m 13s2m 18s just offshore · ~1 min in central Reykjavík
Sun altitude~25°low in the west, near sunset
Coverage100%total — corona visible
Clear-sky odds Variable · ≈40%Iceland's August skies are notoriously changeable — west-coast clear-sky odds hover around 40%. On the day, mobility beats any single fixed spot.
Counting down to totality
days hrs min sec

Iceland is the headline act of the 2026 eclipse. The Moon's shadow makes its big landfall over the west of the island, and the single longest moment of totality on the entire path happens just off its coast. With the Sun far higher in the sky than it will be in Spain hours later, Iceland offers the most 'classic' total-eclipse view in Europe — if the weather cooperates.

Below: where totality actually reaches, how long it lasts at the key spots, an honest look at the cloud odds, and a short field checklist.

The timeline

When the eclipse happens

~16:47Partial begins — first "bite" out of the Sun
~17:47 GMTTotality — up to ~2m 13s. Glasses off only if total.
~18:47Partial ends — the Sun is still ~20° up (sunset isn't until ~21:30)

Unlike mainland Spain, the Sun is a healthy ~25° up, so a low horizon matters less here. What matters is a clear west-southwest sightline — and a plan B you can drive to if cloud rolls in.

Where to set up

The best places to watch

Öndverðarnes & the Snæfellsnes tip

~2m 10s

Longest easy-access totality · open sea horizon

The western tip of the Snæfellsnes peninsula sits closest to the point of greatest duration, with a clear Atlantic horizon to the west-southwest. The strongest mainland-accessible spot — but exposed and windswept, so come prepared.

Kirkjufell, Grundarfjörður

~2m

Iconic foreground · Iceland's most-photographed mountain

Totality beside Kirkjufell is the photographer's dream — the famous peak framing a darkened sky. Expect crowds, and book accommodation in Grundarfjörður very early.

Stykkishólmur

~2m

Easiest base on the peninsula · hotels + harbour

A proper town with hotels, food and a harbour — the most comfortable base for the Snæfellsnes spots, with road options to chase clear sky on the day.

Látrabjarg, Westfjords

~2m 13s

Longest on land · remote sea cliffs

The famous bird cliffs at the far west of the Westfjords get the longest totality on land — but it's a long, slow drive on rough roads and the weather is wild. For the committed only; carry fuel and a fallback plan.

Reykjavík & the Reykjanes peninsula

~1 min

Easiest access · short totality near the edge

Central Reykjavík catches about a minute of totality near the southern edge of the path, and the Reykjanes peninsula by Keflavík airport is similar — handy for arrivals. Short, but the most convenient if you can't travel west.

Reykjavík and several West Iceland municipalities are planning official viewing events — check eclipse2026.is and visitreykjavik.is closer to the date.

The weather call

Will the sky be clear?

Make no mistake — weather is the whole game in Iceland. August is comparatively mild, but cloud is frequent and the west coast averages only around 40% clear skies on a given afternoon.

The one advantage over Spain: the eclipse is mid-afternoon with the Sun well up, so you're not also fighting horizon haze at the critical moment.

The winning strategy is mobility. The path is narrow and Iceland's micro-climates shift fast, so base yourself somewhere with road options — Snæfellsnes and the Reykjavík/Reykjanes area let you chase a hole in the cloud.

Watch the forecast hard in the final 24–48 hours and be willing to drive an hour for clear sky.

Plan the day

Your eclipse-day checklist

  • Certified ISO 12312-2 / CE eclipse glasses — one pair per person.
  • A mobility plan: a hire car and at least two candidate spots inside the path.
  • Layers and waterproofs — it's an Icelandic afternoon; the weather turns fast.
  • Arrive early — the good Snæfellsnes viewpoints will fill up.
  • A clear west-southwest sightline — scout it the day before at the same time.
  • For the partial phase, a solar filter on any camera or phone — off only at totality.
  • Don't spend totality on settings; you get up to ~2 minutes. Watch it.
  • Glasses back on the instant the Sun's edge returns — the diamond ring is the cue.

⚠ Never look without certified glasses

Every second of the partial phase is unsafe to view unprotected — only during totality itself is it safe to look unaided. Ordinary sunglasses do nothing.

Shop ISO 12312-2 eclipse glasses →

Quick answers

Iceland eclipse FAQ

Does Iceland see a total solar eclipse in 2026?
Yes — western Iceland is inside the path of totality on 12 August 2026. The Snæfellsnes peninsula and the Westfjords get the best of it, while Reykjavík sits near the southern edge with about a minute of totality.
What time is totality in Iceland?
Mid-afternoon — totality falls roughly between 17:43 and 17:50 local time (Iceland keeps GMT year-round), with the partial phase running from about 16:47 to 18:47.
How long does totality last in Iceland?
Up to about 2 minutes 13 seconds on land (Látrabjarg in the Westfjords), around 2m 10s at the western tip of Snæfellsnes, and about a minute in central Reykjavík. The very longest point — 2m 18s — is just offshore in Breiðafjörður Bay.
Where is the best place to watch in Iceland?
The Snæfellsnes peninsula is the best balance of long totality and access — especially its western tip and around Grundarfjörður and Kirkjufell. The Westfjords get slightly longer totality but are remote. Reykjavík and Reykjanes are convenient but shorter.
Will it be cloudy in Iceland for the eclipse?
Possibly — August skies in Iceland are changeable and the west coast averages only about 40% clear. You can't fix the weather, so the trick is mobility: base yourself where you can drive to a gap in the cloud, and watch the forecast hard in the final 48 hours.
Do I still need eclipse glasses in Iceland?
Absolutely. Every partial stage — the long build-up and wind-down on either side of totality — is unsafe to view unaided. Use certified ISO 12312-2 glasses, and only remove them during the brief total phase if you are inside the path.

Keep exploring the path

Nearby regions to watch from

Fontes: timeanddate.com · nationaleclipse.com · eclipsophile.com (meteorologia) · Gobierno de Aragón · BBC Sky at Night. Os horários são locais (CEST).