Food in Iceland: 9 Must-Try Foods During Your Iceland Trip (2025)

Travel Tips for Iceland


Food in Iceland: 9 Must-Try Foods During Your Iceland Trip (1)

No matter how you plan on travelling through Iceland, whether you’re renting a car or seeing the island by tour, if you’re a foodie, you have to try some traditional Icelandic food. Iceland's food is unlike any other kind of food you’ll find in the world — and is just as unique as the country itself.

In this article, we’re going to answer you’re most-asked questions about Iceland food, including:

  • What is Iceland’s traditional food and what traditional Icelandic food should you try during your trip in Iceland?
  • What’s the “weird” local Iceland food you can’t miss?
  • What snacks do Icelanders love the most?
  • And more!

Here are our top tips as Icelandic locals, as to what you need to taste and try while in Iceland. These are our favourite and most recommended nine Icelandic dishes, so you can eat like a local and embrace Icelandic culture during your trip.

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  1. 1. Icelanders’ Daily Meal: Fish
  2. 2. A Healthy Choice: Skyr
  3. 3. The Most Famous Icelandic Snack: Pylsa (Pulsa)
  4. 4. A Challenging Tradition: Hákarl, or Fermented Shark
  5. 5. A Meat Lover’s Favourite: Icelandic Lamb Dishes
  6. 6. Smoked Lamb: Hangikjöt
  7. 7. The Local All-Time Favourite: Icelandic Ice Cream
  8. 8. Baked by Hot Spring: Rúgbrauð, or Dark Rye Bread
  9. 9. Something Strong: Brennivin

1. Icelanders’ Daily Meal: Fish

Food in Iceland: 9 Must-Try Foods During Your Iceland Trip (2)

As you might’ve already guessed, Icelanders love fish. We are an island country after all, so fishing is a big industry and many of our villages are historically fishing villages. In fact, once upon a time, Icelanders used fish as bread. Really!

In the 1700s and before, it was difficult to find grain in Iceland, as it had to be imported from Denmark, making it incredibly expensive. Bread was a luxury, and so rather than eat bread with a meal, Icelanders would eat fish. Stockfish, or traditional Icelandic fish and the dish that would be used as bread in the 1700s, is made by cleaning and deboning the fish and then allowing it to dry for up to six weeks (historically, it only takes 48 hours today).

People don’t quite eat fish in that same way today, but we still love a good piece of fresh fish, whether that be haddock, cod or Atlantic wolffish. We Icelanders have made fish a daily dish as recently as the 1950s and 1960s, even eating fish for breakfast. Today, Icelanders eat fish, on average, about twice per week. Icelanders eat fish oil even more often, on average about four times per week.

Food in Iceland: 9 Must-Try Foods During Your Iceland Trip (3)

When you’re dining out during your trip to Iceland, look for Icelandic fresh fish on the menus. You can usually find fresh fish that was caught as recently as the same day. Popular types of Icelandic fish include wolffish (sometimes called the Atlantic catfish), cod, dealfish, the Greenland shark and three types of salmon species, including Arctic char, Atlantic salmon and brown trout (which, yes, is actually salmon).

For a fish-based snack to take on the go, try hardfiskur, which translates to “hard fish,” made from fish cured in the fresh air. You can eat it a little like you would beef jerky and you can find it at just about every supermarket.

2. A Healthy Choice: Skyr

Food in Iceland: 9 Must-Try Foods During Your Iceland Trip (4)

Credits: flickr/parcydarks/creative commons

You may already be familiar with skyr, or a type of Icelandic dairy product that’s a little bit like yoghurt and a little bit like cottage cheese, and even a little bit like Greek yoghurt or creme fraiche. You can find it in many supermarkets around the world. Often served with jam or sugar, it’s great with an accompaniment, but also delicious plain.

But while Greek yogurt is a bit of a newer fad among health food fans, skyr is a traditional Icelandic food that’s been around for a while. In fact, you can see historic skyr at the National Museum of Iceland, where the museum displays three jars of ancient skyr leftover from the earliest Icelanders! That ancient skyr dates back to more than a thousand years.

Pick up some skyr at an Icelandic supermarket as you stock up for anIcelandic camping trip or road trip, or see if you can find it in advance of your Iceland trip, at your home specialty foods store.

3. The Most Famous Icelandic Snack: Pylsa (Pulsa)

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Wondering what food to buy in Iceland? Whether you’re staying in a homestay, at a hotel, taking a road trip or going on an Iceland camping trip, you’re going to need to stock up on snacks and what better snack to enjoy than the most famous Icelandic snack of all — pylsa!

Pylsa, sometimes called pulsa, is most like an American hot dog and it’s one of the top things to eat in Iceland. They’re made from lamb, beef and pork and can be topped with a variety of yummy ingredients, such as onions, mustard, ketchup or even a remoulade sauce. You can find pylsa at stands and casual restaurants throughout Iceland, but you can also buy them in the grocery store.

The most famous pylsa stand in all of Iceland is Baejarins Beztu Pylsur, which you can find in Reykjavik. The popular pylsa stand has been serving up its signature hot dogs since 1937 and is open until the wee hours of the morning, until 1 a.m. Its convenient location in Reykjavik, near museums, also makes it an easy stop to add to your itinerary for a quick and affordable lunch.

4. A Challenging Tradition: Hákarl, or Fermented Shark

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Credits: flickr/moohaha/creative commons

If you’ve ever read an article on the “grossest” international foods, you probably ended up reading about "hakarl", or Iceland’s fermented shark. While we don’t necessarily think of the dish as gross, as Icelanders, it’s definitely not a pleasant dining experience, even if it is part of our culinary heritage. So what exactly is it?

Hakarl is made by using Greenland shark, a fish that’s poisonous when eaten fresh; however, the fermentation process makes it safe to eat. The shark is cured via a fermentation process and then hung to dry for up to five months. The result is a strong, distinctive, ammonia-like smell and taste. The food originated when Icelanders needed to be creative regarding their preserved foods, in order to make it through long, arduous winters (in fact, historically, hakarl was made by soaking the shark meat in pee and then burying it underground!).

Today, hakarl is more of a tourist novelty than a part of everyday Icelandic cuisine. You can find hakarl served in a few select places (such as in the restaurant Þrír Frakkar Baldursgata), where it’s served in small, portioned cubes — because that’s all you can really handle! — and served along with some strong alcohol to wash the taste down. So, if you’re an adventurous eater, give it a try!

5. A Meat Lover’s Favourite: Icelandic Lamb Dishes

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Just like fish has been a long-standing staple of traditional Icelandic food, sheep and lamb are also an important part of Iceland’s culinary heritage.

Sheep arrived in Iceland with the Vikings and the people here learned to use sheep for all kinds of things. In addition to using sheep for their wool (you’ll see many knitted and wool-based Icelandic products during your visit), we also use them for their meat. Still today, Icelandic farmers raise sheep for their meat, allowing them to roam freely during the spring and summer, looking for their own food (since grains are so difficult to come by in Iceland — remember, they have to be imported) and grazing on grass, berries and seaweed. This grazing process results in overall better meat. You’ll find the lamb dishes in Iceland are a little milder and more tender than the lamb that you might eat elsewhere.

One of the most popular lamb-based dishes in Iceland is hangikjot (which you’ll learn more about below), but you can also find smoked, grilled, broiled, slow-cooked, stir-fried, stewed and kebab lamb. Just about any way that you could cook lamb, you can find it here in Iceland.

6. Smoked Lamb: Hangikjöt

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Credits: flickr/masch/creative commons

If you want to get more specific, though, when searching for the perfect Icelandic lamb dish to try, we can’t recommend the smoked lamb, or hangikjot, enough.

Hangikjot is another one of those Icelandic dishes that came about because the earliest inhabitants here needed a way to keep their food safe to eat over the long winters, when food was scarce. Hangikjot was a smoked meat dish that literally translates to “hung meat.” Icelanders would hang the lamb onto rafters in a smoking shed and then they would either burn birch wood or dried sheep dung mixed with hay beneath it, to preserve the meat for long-term use (a similar process was used for smoking salmon, sausages and even beer).

Today, you can find hangikjot served either boiled or served cold and sliced. It’s a common Icelandic dish served around Christmas time, especially when accompanied by potatoes, peas, cabbage and Icelandic bread that translates to “leaf bread” or “snowflake bread.” The bread is very thin and fried, and decorated with leaf or snowflake-like patterns. About 90% of Icelanders eat hangikjot during the Christmas season.

7. The Local All-Time Favourite: Icelandic Ice Cream

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Credits: isbudvesturbaejar

It doesn’t matter how cold it is outside. Icelanders are oblivious to the cold when it comes to chowing down on their favourite frozen treat: Icelandic ice cream. You can find ice cream parlours in just about every Icelandic village and they’re particularly popular for a visit after a dip in one of Iceland’s geothermal pools. Vanilla soft-serve ice cream is the most popular, especially when you dip it in chocolate and cover it in candy. You can also get the Icelandic version of a banana split — soft-serve vanilla ice cream topped with three types of candy or fruit.

8. Baked by Hot Spring: Rúgbrauð, or Dark Rye Bread

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Credits: ljufalif.com

Sure, we said that Icelanders, at least historically, liked to use fish as their daily bread, but that doesn’t mean that Iceland doesn’t have some bread to call its own. Iceland’s traditional bread is a dark rye bread called Rúgbrauð and it’s made in a very interesting way.

You put the raw bread into a pot and then you can either place it in the embers of a dying fire, cover it with turf and let it sit there overnight, or you can bury the pot near a hot spring. Whichever way you choose, the heat will bake the bread and, the next day, you’ll have dark rye bread, delicious and toasty. Today, bread isn’t typically made by burying a pot or placing it over a dying fire. Instead, it’s more often made in a square pan. If you want to make some of your own at home, trythis recipe.

The bread is often served with fish (of course!).

9. Something Strong: Brennivin

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Credits: flickr/jenniferboyer/creative commons

Every country has a national alcoholic beverage. For Iceland, that traditional beverage is brennivin, a type of akvavit, or a Scandinavian-flavoured spirit. The flavour in brennivin is cumin and caraway.

While brennivin was enjoyed in Iceland as early as the 1600s, the branded brennivin you see today came about in the early 20th century. When Icelandic prohibition ended in 1935, the government produced a schnapps flavoured with caraway that was nicknamed Black Death, for its high alcohol content, and featured “brennivin” on the label. The liquor is still popular today (in fact, it was the most popular drink in Iceland until the 1980s) and is produced by Egill Skallagrimsson Brewery.

If you bring a bottle of brennivin home from your Iceland trip, you can make some of the favourite brennivin cocktails, including the black rose cocktail, brennivin bouquet cocktail and even iced coffee with brennivin.Iceland Magazine has all the details and recipes.

Try Iceland’s Rich and Interesting Culinary History for Yourself

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Iceland’s culinary heritage is filled with historic dishes that reflect Iceland’s geography, harsh weather and long winters. The resourceful first Icelanders created bread, fish dishes and other foods with what little they had — and the results were scrumptious (and, in some cases, as with the fermented shark, a little odd).

Try Iceland’s best and most iconic foods for yourself, when you travel across the island on a road trip. For more information abouthow to plan an Icelandic road trip, as well astips on driving in Iceland, check out theLava Car Rental blog.

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Food in Iceland: 9 Must-Try Foods During Your Iceland Trip (2025)

FAQs

Food in Iceland: 9 Must-Try Foods During Your Iceland Trip? ›

Foods. Animal products of any kind generally must be boiled or canned for import to Iceland. Smoking, salting or drying without boiling is not sufficient. For example, import of bacon, hot dogs, salami and any type of smoked, uncooked sausages, pork loin, poultry, unpasteurised milk and uncooked eggs are not allowed.

What food Cannot bring to Iceland? ›

Foods. Animal products of any kind generally must be boiled or canned for import to Iceland. Smoking, salting or drying without boiling is not sufficient. For example, import of bacon, hot dogs, salami and any type of smoked, uncooked sausages, pork loin, poultry, unpasteurised milk and uncooked eggs are not allowed.

What is Iceland's main dish? ›

Hákarl (Fermented Shark)

Iceland's national dish is Hákarl, a fermented shark dish. The sharks are usually Greenland sharks, and their meat is poisonous unless it's been fermented. The whole fermentation process takes between 5 and 6 months and involves the shark meat hanging and curing.

What food should I bring to Iceland? ›

Pack your own food to bring.

For instance, Iceland does not allow any meat to come in, dry or otherwise. So, no beef jerky/meat sticks – something we usually travel with. We always bring things like trail mix, dried fruit, coffee, tea, crackers, dry pasta, granola/protein bars and chocolate.

What do Icelandic people eat for breakfast? ›

The main components of a typical Icelandic breakfast include eggs, bacon, sausages, and skyr. Skyr is a traditional Icelandic yogurt that is high in protein and low in fat. It is often served with brown sugar, berries, or cream. Another popular dish is oatmeal or hafragrautur, which is made with rolled oats and milk.

What is Iceland's favorite snack? ›

The Most Famous Icelandic Snack: Pylsa (Pulsa)

They're made from lamb, beef and pork and can be topped with a variety of yummy ingredients, such as onions, mustard, ketchup or even a remoulade sauce. You can find pylsa at stands and casual restaurants throughout Iceland, but you can also buy them in the grocery store.

Are jeans OK for Iceland? ›

Can you wear jeans in Iceland? Yes, you can wear jeans in Iceland. The summer and shoulder seasons are especially good times to travel in your most comfortable pair. If you plan to go on an adventurous excursion, we recommend wearing the appropriate, activewear clothing.

Are you allowed to take food in your suitcase to Iceland? ›

Travellers may import duty-free up to 10 kg of food, including candy, not exceeding the value of ISK 25,000. Travellers are not allowed to import meat and dairy products from outside the European Economic Area to Iceland. See the Icelandic Food and Veterinary Authority's website for further information.

What popular item was banned in Iceland? ›

This small island was actually the first country in Europe to bring in prohibition, and it was one of the longest periods of the law in history. In fact, beer was prohibited for some 75 years!

What do Icelanders eat for lunch? ›

What Do They Eat in Iceland? The most typical Icelandic food is fish, lamb, or Icelandic skyr. These have been the main elements of the Icelandic diet for over a thousand years. Icelandic meals are commonly meat-based due to the lack of farmable lands in the past.

What meat do they eat in Iceland? ›

The cuisine of Iceland has a long history. Important parts of Icelandic cuisine are lamb, dairy, and fish, the latter due to the fact that Iceland has traditionally been inhabited only near its coastline. Popular foods in Iceland include skyr, hangikjöt (smoked lamb), kleinur, laufabrauð, and bollur.

Is food expensive in Iceland? ›

Updated in May 2024 to reflect food prices in Iceland in 2024. Iceland is considered expensive in international comparison, not least in terms of food. There are many factors at play to explain this, such as the size of the market, large share of imported food and oligopoly.

What not to bring to Iceland? ›

The following items may not be imported: toxic and hazardous substances; narcotics; chewing tobacco and finely powdered snuff; uncooked meat products; certain foodstuffs (meat products may be imported if they have been boiled or canned); weapons; and knives with blades exceeding 12 cm.

How do I pack for Reykjavik? ›

Here's a sample packing list of items you should bring with you regardless of the time of year you're travelling:
  1. Fleece jacket/lightweight wool sweater.
  2. Rainproof/windproof jacket.
  3. Rain pants.
  4. Sturdy walking shoes with a good tread/grip.
  5. Gloves.
  6. Scarves.
  7. Hat (toque/beanie)
  8. Swimsuit.

Can I take food through airport security Iceland? ›

Food in solid form (such as leg of lamb, fish and smoked pork) is permitted in carry-on luggage. If you are carrying a significant volume of food, it would be easiest to take some of the food out of the bag before the bag goes through the x-ray machine.

What is the most popular drink in Iceland? ›

Brennivín (a.k.a the black death), a clear and unsweetened Icelandic schnapps with a 37.5% alcohol content, is considered the national drink of Iceland. The very name "Brennivín" translates to "burning wine," and it is typically served cold as a shot, alongside a beer, or as a base for various cocktails.

Is Iceland cheap food? ›

Is the food in Iceland expensive? Eating and drinking out in Iceland certainly isn't cheap, and in fact, is an activity that locals often enjoy as a treat. However, sit-down meals in Icelandic restaurants certainly aren't incomparable to prices you may pay in other European cities such as London or Copenhagen.

How do people dress in Iceland? ›

A note on Icelandic fashion

They tend to dress smartly as people do in any cosmopolitan city, though with a stylish Nordic twist. If you aim to blend in, do as the locals do and swap your brightly coloured weather-proof jacket and hiking boots for a nice pair of jeans, a smart jacket and sneakers or other city shoes.

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