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Snowmobiling in Iceland: A Complete Guide

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Reviewed by: Eva Sadler
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Published: May 12, 2026
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Think snowmobiling is only a winter activity? Not in Iceland. The glaciers remain snow-covered year-round, so tours run even in July.


Snowmobiling in Iceland is possible year-round on Langjökull and seasonally on Vatnajökull and Eyjafjallajökull. No prior experience is required, and the ride itself usually lasts about 1 hour, while the full experience takes about 3–4 hours for meet-on-location tours. Day tours with pickup from Reykjavík usually take 8–10 hours, depending on the route. 

A standard Langjökull snowmobiling tour starts from around 33,990 ISK (about $278/€237) per person for the meet-on-location option. Langjökull is a useful price reference because it’s Iceland’s main year-round snowmobiling glacier and the most popular place to ride. Our expert team brings decades of experience reading glacier conditions, so routes, safety calls, and gear choices reflect what actually works on Icelandic ice. The short video below shows what a tour day looks like.

Who Can Go Snowmobiling in Iceland?

Three travelers in winter gear with snowmobiles on a glacier in Iceland.

Tours run in single file behind a guide, which is why no riding experience is needed. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Iceland snowmobile tours are family-friendly and require no prior experience or special fitness. Drivers face a couple of extra requirements, which we've spelled out below.

  • Minimum age: The snowmobile age limit is 8 years old on most tours and 6 years on the Vatnajökull tour, with passengers accompanied by a parent or guardian.  
  • Minimum age as a driver: No separate minimum applies beyond the licensing age in your home country.
  • Driver's license: A valid driver's license is required. Motorcycle licenses aren't accepted.
  • Fitness level: Easy to moderate. Average physical condition is enough, and participants must fit into the snowmobile suit (sizes go up to 5XL).
  • Pregnancy and medical: We don't recommend the ride during pregnancy. If you're traveling with a group, the basecamp is a comfortable place to wait while they ride. Flag any heart, back, or mobility conditions when you book.
  • Sharing a snowmobile: Prices assume two people share each machine. Solo riders or odd-numbered groups can select the solo option for an additional fee (around 10,000 ISK/$79/€69).

Policies can change by season and by glacier, so check the specific tour page for current requirements before booking.

What To Wear for Snowmobiling in Iceland

Rider on a snowmobile in an orange suit on a snowy glacier in Iceland.

Dress in warm layers under your suit to stay comfortable on the glacier. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Dress in warm, non-bulky layers that fit under the gear we hand out at basecamp. The outer gear is insulated enough for glacier riding; your base layers handle the actual warmth. Keep the layers slim, or the suit won't zip.

Provided by the tour at basecamp:

  • One-piece insulated snowmobile suit (sizes go up to 5XL)
  • Helmet
  • Balaclava

  • Goggles
  • Gloves

What to bring yourself:

  • Thermal base layers, top and bottom, slim enough to fit under the suit
  • A wool or fleece mid-layer
  • A warm hat
  • A scarf or neck gaiter
  • Warm socks
  • Waterproof boots with grip
  • Sunglasses for the moments you're not on the snowmobile. Glare off ice and snow is strong even on cloudy days
  • Sunscreen for the UV reflecting off the glacier surface year-round.
  • Hand warmers if you get cold
  • For children, suit and helmet sizes are limited, so confirm fit with the tour before booking

For what to wear before and after the ride (at your hotel, around Reykjavík, or on the South Coast drive), see our full guide on what to wear in Iceland.

Is Snowmobiling in Iceland Safe?

A guide briefing a group of riders in orange suits standing around snowmobiles on a glacier.

Hand signals from the lead guide are how the group communicates once the engines start. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Yes, snowmobiling in Iceland is safe when you go on a guided tour with a certified operator. Safety rests on five pieces: the guides, the gear, the weather call, the route, and a practiced response if something goes wrong.

Certified guides. Every snowmobile tour has a specially trained and certified guide with firsthand experience of the glacier you're riding. Before the experience, the guide walks the group through controls, starting and stopping, how to follow the lead machine, and what to do if the snowmobile tips. Briefings happen at the activity starting point, with the machines in front of you, so nobody leaves with unanswered questions.

Required gear. Every rider wears the full kit provided at basecamp: insulated suit, helmet, balaclava, goggles, and gloves. The helmet and goggles are mandatory, not optional. Goggles handle the fine ice blown off the glacier at speed, which can sting or scratch the eyes. The suit cuts wind chill, which is the biggest cold-weather risk once you're moving.

Weather cancellations. Iceland's weather shifts fast, and a winter storm can ground a tour within an hour. If conditions turn unsafe, the guide cancels the ride, and our team handles rescheduling or refunds. Storms usually cluster in the deep winter months, so a flexible date is worth it if you're booking from November to February. 

Glacier crevasses. Guides know the glacier from riding it daily and stick to the sections with solid, well-tested ice. Riders stay in a single file behind the lead machine, following its exact track. Tour routes avoid the crevasse zones where the ice is cracked or moving. These are the same zones shown in the updated glacier crevasse maps published by Iceland's SafeTravel authority. 

If something goes wrong. Incidents on guided tours are rare, and the guide is trained to handle them when they happen. Snowmobiles have no cab or roll cage. The machines are open-saddle, so a tipped snowmobile won't trap a rider the way a car or ATV can. If you come off, stay put, keep clear of the machine, and wait for the guide to reach you.

Best Months for Snowmobiling in Iceland

The best months for snowmobiling in Iceland are November to February for winter scenery and Northern Lights, or May to August for long daylight and easier self-driving. Glacier snow and ice stay in place year-round, so timing is more about road access, daylight, and what you want to combine with the ride. Winter works best for ice caves and snowy landscapes, while summer is easier for travelers driving to glacier base camps. The table below compares each month by daylight, weather, road access, and the best tour combinations.

Month

Daylight

Temperature (Reykjavík)

Northern Lights probability

Glacier conditions

Best for

January

4–7 hours

-2–2°C/29–38°F

High

Peak snow; storms common

Aurora and glacier combos

February

7–10 hours

-2–3°C/29–38°F

High

Peak snow; storms common

Deep winter, fewer crowds

March

10–13 hours

-1–3°C/30–39°F

Good (until mid-March)

Stable winter snow

Longer days with aurora odds

April

13–16 hours

1–6°C/34–44°F

Low (early April only)

Snow holds, milder winds

Shoulder-season value

May

16–20 hours

4–9°C/39–49°F

None

Snow holds; lowlands thaw

Quieter glaciers, fewer crowds, near-midnight sun (late May)

June

20–21 hours

7–12°C/45–55°F

None

Snow holds

Midnight Sun rides

July

18–21 hours

9–14°C/49–58°F

None

Snow holds; roads open

Self-drive access to basecamp, midnight sun

August

15–18 hours

9–13°C/48–57°F

Very low (late Aug)

Snow holds; warm lowlands

Highland access before winter

September

12–15 hours

6–10°C/43–52°F

Returning

Fresh snow refreshes the glacier

Aurora return and autumn colors

October

8–12 hours

2–7°C/37–45°F

Good

Early winter snow

Variable weather, lower prices

November

5–8 hours

0–4°C/32–40°F

High

Full winter snow returns

Early aurora peak

December

4–5 hours

-2–3°C/29–38°F

High

Peak snow; storms common

Festive season and aurora

Temperatures reflect Reykjavík lowland averages, with glacier surfaces being 5–10°C (9–18°F) colder due to elevation and wind exposure.

Winter: November to February. Peak snow and the strongest Northern Lights odds align in these months. Daylight drops to 4 to 7 hours at the shortest, the glacier sits at its deepest cover, and snowmobiling slots easily into a wider stack of Iceland winter tours, including aurora hunts, ice caves, and the Golden Circle. Storms are the trade-off. They're more common in winter than at any other time, so build a buffer day if you can. Cost is the other factor. Shoulder-season rates are often lower than winter peaks, so your best time to visit Iceland depends as much on the budget as the forecast.

Shoulder: March to April and September to October. The edge months between winter and summer trade some aurora odds for more daylight and milder weather. March is the last reliable month for Northern Lights combos; April adds sunshine, but the aurora window closes mid-month. September and October flip the equation: darkness returns, the first snow refreshes the glacier, and crowds thin out. We see steadier conditions and softer pricing in these months, especially for travelers who'd rather not book around a winter storm.

Summer: May to August. Riding in summer seems counterintuitive until you remember the glacier holds snow year-round. That said, conditions on the glacier differ: warmer months make the surface icier than in winter, which means you’ll ride at a slightly lower average speed. Daylight lasts 16 to 21 hours, the Midnight Sun peaks in June, and lowland roads open up, so travelers with rental cars can often drive straight to basecamp rather than joining a Reykjavík pickup. Even in July, the F-roads into the highlands can shift conditions within hours, so check the forecast before heading out. Our driving in Iceland guide covers what to expect on the routes.

3 Best Places to Snowmobile in Iceland

Beautiful sunny day at Langjokull Glacier, with bright blue cloudy sky

Iceland’s glacier routes range from accessible day trips to bigger South Coast outings. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Langjökull is usually the top choice for snowmobiling in Iceland because it has the most consistent tour availability and the widest range of guided options. Vatnajökull and Eyjafjallajökull are also strong options, especially for South Coast travelers, but they depend more on season, location, and specific tour availability.

Langjökull Glacier

Four riders on snowmobiles paused on Langjökull glacier with mountains in the distance.

Langjökull's high points give a clear view across to Eiríksjökull, Iceland's largest tuya. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Langjökull is the most accessible glacier for snowmobiling in Iceland and the easiest to pair with a Reykjavík day trip. The country's second-largest glacier covers roughly 950 km² (367 mi²) of wide snowfields, ice valleys, and volcanic craters, with views across to Eiríksjökull, Iceland's largest tuya (a flat-topped volcano formed under ice). Langjökull glacier snowmobile tour pairs well with the Golden Circle route or the Langjökull ice tunnel, so most travelers combine either of these into a single day. Tours are operated year-round, with pickup from Reykjavík or a meet-on-location option.

From November to mid-April, some Langjökull snowmobiling departures can also include a natural ice cave visit, making this glacier a strong choice if you want to add ice caving to your winter snowmobile tour.

Choose Langjökull if you're based in Reykjavík and want a half-day or day-trip option.

Vatnajökull Glacier

A line of snowmobiles riding across Vatnajökull glacier with ash-streaked snow and mountains.

The ash bands on Vatnajökull come from the volcanic systems sitting beneath the ice. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Vatnajökull is Europe's largest glacier by volume and covers about 8% of Iceland's total land area. It’s the heart of Vatnajökull National Park and conceals a buried network of volcanoes, rivers, and mountains, including Iceland's tallest peak, Hvannadalshnjúkur, at 2,110 m (6,923 ft). The ride here feels different from Langjökull: ash streaks across the snow, longer sightlines, and darker volcanic peaks on the horizon. Tours are bookable from March through October as a 3-hour ride, departing from Hotel Smyrlabjörg in the southeast, near Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon and Skaftafell.

Choose Vatnajökull if you're already exploring the South Coast or East Iceland and want the country's largest glacier underfoot.

Eyjafjallajökull Glacier

Snowmobile riders following a track across Eyjafjallajökull glacier in South Iceland.

You're riding directly over the Eyjafjallajökull vent that grounded 100,000 European flights in 2010.

You're riding on top of the volcano that halted European air travel in 2010. The Eyjafjallajökull eruption grounded more than 100,000 flights across Europe. The volcanic system underneath the ice is still active. The glacier itself covers about 78 km² (30 mi²), much smaller than Langjökull or Vatnajökull, and sits at a lower elevation. The ride is shorter on open ice, but the views do more work: south to the coast, east toward Mýrdalsjökull, and down onto the Fimmvörðuháls Pass between the two glaciers. Tours depart from Brú Base Camp and are available from November through June, so this isn't a summer option. For a wider context, see our guide to glaciers in Iceland.

Choose Eyjafjallajökull if you want the 2010 eruption story and you're already driving the South Coast between Seljalandsfoss and Skógafoss or further east to Vík.

Which glacier should you pick?

Glacier

Region

Typical tour length

Combines well with

Best for

Langjökull

West

3–4 hours (or 8–10 hours full-day)

Golden Circle, ice tunnel

Reykjavík-based travelers, half-day trips

Vatnajökull

Southeast

3 hours

Jökulsárlón, Skaftafell

Travelers covering the southeast or East Iceland on a longer trip

Eyjafjallajökull

South

2–3 hours (or 6–7 hours full-day)

Seljalandsfoss, Skógafoss, Vík

2010 volcano story, South Coast road trips

Glacier choice usually comes down to where you're already going.

Snowmobiling vs. Other Iceland Glacier Experiences

Two people in orange suits inside a blue ice cave in Iceland.

Pairing a snowmobile ride with an ice cave visit is one of the most popular glacier combos. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Snowmobiling is one of several tours to experience a glacier in Iceland, and each format trades pace, effort, and how much of the glacier you actually see. Some put you on the ice for hours; others get you in and out fast. The table below sets the four most common options side by side.

Activity

Pace

Effort level

Duration on ice

Best for

Example tour

Snowmobiling

Fast

Easy

1 hour riding inside a 3-4 or 8-10 hour tour

Distance, scale, and speed

Glacier hiking

Slow

Moderate

3–4 hours walking inside a 5-hour tour

Crampons-on, hands-on glacier contact

Ice caving

Mixed

Easy

1–2 hours inside an ice cave

Comfort, families, mixed mobility

Ice climbing

Slow

Moderate to Challenging

About 1–2 hours on the wall inside a 4.5-hour tour

A vertical, adrenaline-driven glacier experience

Snowmobiling covers the most ground, while ice climbing can be the most challenging.

Choose glacier snowmobiling in Iceland if you want to cover ground fast, see a wide stretch of the ice cap, and skip the gear-up of crampons and harnesses. Pick a glacier hike for direct contact with the ice, crampons underfoot, moving slow enough to take it all in. Ice caving is for travelers drawn by what's hidden inside. The blue interior of a glacier is unlike anything on the surface, and it rewards the wait. Ice climbing is the only one of the four where you go vertical, swinging an axe into a frozen wall.

Snowmobiling Tours in Iceland

Two riders on one snowmobile paused on a glacier in Iceland with mountains in the distance.

Pick the glacier that fits your route, since the riding format is similar on all four tours. Photo: Gunnar Gaukur

Arctic Adventures operates snowmobiling tours on Langjökull glacier, Iceland’s main year-round snowmobiling location. Vatnajökull and Eyjafjallajökull also have seasonal snowmobiling tours, but Langjökull is usually the best choice for travelers staying in Reykjavík or visiting the Golden Circle because it has daily departures, easier access, and strong combo-tour options.

Snowmobiling and Ice Caving

Ride across Langjökull on a snowmobile, then enter the Neptune Ice Cave hidden inside the same glacier. Few places in Iceland combine a glacier ride and a natural ice cave in one day, and Langjökull lets you do both. The tour is available from November to April, when winter conditions make the cave safe to enter. It lasts 4–5 hours from the Geysir Center parking or 8–10 hours with Reykjavík pickup. Level is moderate, with a 1:6 guide-to-snowmobile ratio. This is a safety requirement, not a group size limit. Larger groups have additional guides to maintain the ratio. If you'd rather not split the trip across two bookings, the snowmobile and Neptune Ice Cave combo handles both in a single day. See the snowmobile and ice cave tour.

Golden Circle and Snowmobiling

This Iceland snowmobile tour stitches the country's classic sightseeing route (Þingvellir, Geysir, and Gullfoss) onto a single ride on Langjökull. Most travelers do these separately and use up two days; this combo merges them. The full day will take around 10–12 hours from Reykjavík, year-round, at an easy level of difficulty. The trade-off is pace. You're moving most of the day, with slightly shorter stops at each Golden Circle site than you'd get on a standalone tour. Travelers tight on time can book the Golden Circle and snowmobiling day tour and clear two icons in one shot.

Snowmobiling on a Volcano

The 2–3 hour ride on Eyjafjallajökull is the shortest snowmobile tour in our lineup, with a 6–7 hour full-day extension that includes the drive in from Reykjavík. Group sizes stay small, so booking ahead matters more than for the year-round Langjökull tours. If you're road-tripping through the south, the Eyjafjallajökull snowmobile tour fits the route between Selfoss and Vík towns.

Vatnajökull Snowmobiling Tours

Tours on Vatnajökull are organized from March to October, the only glacier in our lineup without winter operation, and there's no Reykjavík pickup option. You meet at Hotel Smyrlabjörg, which is a 5–6-hour drive east of Reykjavík, so this tour fits travelers already passing through southeast Iceland on a longer trip. The 3-hour outing keeps the on-ice time tight. On a longer Iceland trip, the Vatnajökull snowmobile tour folds neatly into a Ring Road or East Iceland route. 

The right Iceland snowmobile tour usually comes down to where you're already going. Reykjavík-based travelers default to Langjökull; South Coast itineraries match Eyjafjallajökull; East-route trips match Vatnajökull.

What to Expect on a Snowmobile Tour

Two travelers picking out insulated suits and gloves from racks inside a gear fitting room.

The full kit is included, so you don't need to bring outdoor clothing beyond a base layer. Photo: Bessi Friðþjófsson

Most Iceland snowmobiling tours have a similar timeline. Here's what a typical day looks like, from pickup to return.

  1. Pickup or meet-on-location. Tours from Reykjavík include a hotel pickup. Be ready outside at the start of the scheduled pickup time, since the guide's route depends on the day's bookings and can take up to 30 minutes. If you've selected meet-on-location instead, the tour starts when you arrive at the basecamp. 
  2. Transfer to glacier basecamp. From the meet-on-location, you ride in a Super Jeep or Monster Truck up to the basecamp at the edge of the glacier. The drive itself is part of the experience. You're climbing onto a glacier in a vehicle built for the surface, on roads ordinary cars can't take.
  3. Gear fitting and safety briefing. At basecamp, you're handed an insulated suit, helmet, balaclava, goggles, and gloves. Your guide walks the group through how to operate the machine, hand signals once engines are running, and what to do if a snowmobile tips. 
  4. The ride across the glacier. Riders go in single file behind the lead guide, who sets the route and the pace. There's no off-piste exploring, and speeds stay moderate. This is a guided group ride, not an open-throttle session.   
  5. Heading back. After the ride, the day reverses: gear back at basecamp, then transport back down off the glacier. Reykjavík pickups return you to your starting point. 

A typical 3-hour Iceland snowmobile tour from Reykjavík includes about 1 hour of actual riding, with the rest split between transfer, briefing, and basecamp time. That isn't lost time. It's the cost of being on a glacier in the first place, and it's worth knowing before you book, especially if you're choosing between tour lengths. The video below shows what each stage looks like.

How Much Does Snowmobiling in Iceland Cost?

Snowmobile tours in Iceland start from around 33,990 ISK (about $278/€237) per person for a Langjökull half-day (as of early 2026). Combo tours are priced from 36,900 ISK ($300/€257), with most travelers paying somewhere in the middle. Options include snowmobiling paired with the Golden Circle, an ice cave, or the Silver Circle route combined with the Into the Glacier tunnel experience.

Tour type

Glacier

Price from (late April 2026)

Half-day glacier ride

Langjökull

33,990 ISK ($276/€237)

Snowmobile + Neptune Ice Cave combo

Langjökull

38,990 ISK ($317/€272)

Golden Circle + snowmobiling combo

Langjökull

38,242 ISK ($312/€266)

Vatnajökull snowmobiling

Vatnajökull

31,500 ISK ($256/€220)

Eyjafjallajökull snowmobiling

Eyjafjallajökull

29,990 ISK ($245/€209)

Snowmobile prices in Iceland reflect the day length and the tour format, not the glacier alone.

What's typically included. Every snowmobile tour covers your guided ride, the snowmobile itself, the full kit at basecamp (suit, helmet, balaclava, goggles, gloves), and the transfer to the basecamp from the meeting point. Tours with the pickup option include round-trip transport from designated pickup points in downtown Reykjavík. 

What to budget extra for. Snowmobile tours assume two riders share each machine, so solo riders or odd-numbered groups pay an additional fee (10,000 ISK/$82/€70). Photos taken by your guide aren't included on most tours. Food isn't included on tours. Most of them are short enough that travelers don't need a meal; on the longer combos, plan to bring a packed lunch. 

Rates can shift with the season and currency, so the live tour page carries the price you'll actually pay.

FAQs

How much does snowmobiling in Iceland cost?

As of early 2026, snowmobiling on Langjökull, Iceland’s main and most popular snowmobiling glacier, starts from around 33,990 ISK (about $278/€237) per person for a standard meet-on-location tour. Tours cost more when they include Reykjavík pickup, Golden Circle sightseeing, ice tunnel access, or a seasonal natural ice cave. Discounts are often available, with selected snowmobiling tours sometimes reduced by around 15% during seasonal promotions. The price typically includes the guided ride, snowmobile gear, and the glacier transfer by Super Jeep or Monster Truck.

How long is a snowmobile tour in Iceland?

Most Iceland snowmobile tours last roughly 3 hours, with about 1 hour of actual riding on the glacier. The remaining time covers pickup, the transfer to basecamp, gear fitting, and the safety briefing. Tours that add Reykjavík pickup typically last from 8 to 10 hours.

Can you drive a snowmobile in Iceland, or do you need a guide?

You can drive the snowmobile yourself on guided tours, but a guide always leads the group. Independent snowmobiling on Icelandic glaciers isn't permitted for safety reasons. Crevasses, fast-changing weather, and route conditions all need professional judgment, which is why every glacier tour includes a guided group.

What's the minimum age for snowmobiling in Iceland?

Children from age 8 can ride as passengers on most snowmobile tours, with the Vatnajökull tour allowing passengers from age 6. Drivers must hold a valid driver's license, so the practical minimum age for driving matches the licensing age in your home country. Specific limits vary by glacier and tour, so check the tour page before booking.

Is snowmobiling in Iceland dangerous?

No, guided snowmobiling in Iceland is generally safe when you go with a certified operator and follow your guide’s instructions. Glacier guides plan the route, check weather and ice conditions, provide safety gear, and cancel or adjust departures when conditions are not suitable. Like any glacier activity, snowmobiling is not risk-free, but a guided tour is designed to reduce those risks and keep the experience controlled.

How fast do snowmobiles go in Iceland?

Snowmobiles on guided Iceland tours can reach speeds over 70 km/h (44 mph), though the lead guide sets the actual pace based on conditions, visibility, and group experience. Riders follow the lead machine in a single file and slow down in areas with crevasses or low visibility.

Do you need a driver's license to snowmobile in Iceland?

Yes. Anyone driving a snowmobile on a guided tour in Iceland must hold a valid driver's license from any country. Passengers don't need one, so if you're sharing a snowmobile, one license between two people is enough. If neither you nor your travel partner has a license, you can book a certified driver-guide to operate the snowmobile for you (around 60,000–70,000 ISK/$474–$573/€414–€489). Motorcycle licenses aren't accepted.

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Copywriter at Arctic Adventures
Neda Klasinskaitė is a copywriter at Arctic Adventures with a degree in English Philology and Written Translation. She writes Iceland travel guides and articles shaped by curiosity and cultural depth. She inspires her readers to explore with intention, awareness, and respect for local cultures.

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