This is the index page to thermal bathing complexes and spas in Iceland. The following guides have been uploaded so far, but there are more to come.
- Sky Lagoon, Reykjavik: ticket prices, opening hours and visitor guide — a geothermal spa on the Reykjavik coastline, with an infinity edge overlooking the North Atlantic and a seven-step ritual experience, reviewed as the most atmospheric of the capital’s spa options.
- Secret Lagoon, Iceland: 2026 visitor guide with prices and hours — the oldest swimming pool in Iceland, in the Golden Circle village of Flúðir, offering a quieter and more authentic alternative to the Blue Lagoon at a fraction of the price.
- Laugardalslaug, Reykjavik: ticket prices, opening hours and visitor tips — Reykjavik’s largest geothermal swimming pool complex, used primarily by locals, with outdoor pools, hot pots of varying temperatures and a water slide, offering a genuinely local alternative to the tourist-focused spas.
- Hvammsvik Hot Springs, Hvalfjörður – A small cluster of oceanfront geothermal pools set into the shoreline of Hvalfjörður (Whale Fjord), approximately 1 hour north of Reykjavík. Open-air pools with fjord views; lower visitor numbers than the main Reykjavík-area spas.
- GeoSea geothermal sea baths, Húsavík: ticket prices, hours and visitor guide — infinity pools of geothermally heated seawater on the cliffs above Húsavík harbour, with views across Skjálfandi Bay toward the mountains of the Diamond Circle.
- Forest Lagoon, Akureyri: ticket prices, opening hours and practical visitor guide — a geothermal lagoon set in birch forest above Iceland’s second city, with fjord views from the pools and a design that integrates the surrounding landscape more naturally than most Icelandic spa developments.

