Soft, chewy, crisp, salty, and sweet, Icelandic candy reflects the country itself: bold, a little unexpected, and very easy to get attached to.
Icelandic sweets are known for creamy milk chocolate, crunchy candy bars, and a full-blown love affair with licorice (lakkrís), especially the salty salmiak style. Favorites like Nóa Kropp, Prince Polo, Lakkrísreimar, and Lindu Rís Buff are easy to spot across Iceland and make excellent road-trip snacks and gifts to bring home. Want to know which Icelandic candies are actually worth trying, what they taste like, where to buy them in Reykjavík or at Keflavík Airport, and how much they usually cost? You’re in the right place. Grab a snack and let’s get into it.
Icelandic supermarket shelves stock lakkrís, chocolate, and salmiak side by side. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
The defining flavor in Icelandic candy is lakkrís, or licorice. In Iceland, licorice is not a niche candy category. It appears across everyday sweets, from chewy ropes and pastilles to chocolate bars and chocolate-covered bites.
Another flavor to know is salmiak, a salty licorice style. It tastes sharper and more intense than sweet black licorice, which is why many first-time tasters find it surprising.
Alongside lakkrís, Icelandic shelves are full of creamy milk chocolate, crisp wafer bars, and snackable sweets from long-running brands such as Nói Síríus, Freyja, Góa, and Sambó.
Candy also has a visible place in everyday life. The tradition of Laugardagsnammi, or Saturday candy, reflects the long-standing habit of saving sweets for one day of the week, and sits alongside other staples of Icelandic food culture like skyr, rúgbrauð, and licorice-flavored drinks. If you visit a supermarket on a Saturday, you may find good pick-and-mix deals.
If you only try a handful of Icelandic sweets, start with a mix of classic chocolate, chocolate-and-licorice combinations, and a more traditional lakkrís candy. That gives you a good feel for what local candy does best: crisp and chewy textures and sweet-salty pairings. If you'd rather taste local flavors with a guide, our Reykjavík Food Walk covers Icelandic specialties alongside sweet treats.
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Quick Comparison Table |
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Candy |
Type |
Flavor and Texture |
Best For |
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Prince Polo |
Wafer chocolate bar |
Crisp and light |
Easy first pick |
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Nóa Kropp |
Chocolate-coated corn puffs |
Light, crispy, chocolatey |
Sharing, gifts, road trips |
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Draumur |
Milk chocolate with licorice center |
Sweet, salty, creamy, and chewy |
Trying licorice gently |
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Þristur |
Chewy chocolate and licorice candy |
Soft, chewy, sweet-salty |
Licorice skeptics |
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Lakkrísreimar |
Licorice laces |
Chewy, soft, flexible, sweet licorice |
A direct lakkrís try |
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Súkkulaðirúsínur |
Chocolate-covered raisins |
Sweet, simple, chewy in the center |
Hiking snacks, nostalgic pick |
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Hraunbitar |
Wafer bites coated with crispy corn puffs and milk chocolate |
Crispy, light, easy to snack on |
Coffee breaks, picnics |
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Lindu Rís Buff |
Chocolate-covered marshmallow candy with rice puffs |
Chewy, airy, crunchy, sweet |
People with a sweet tooth |
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Quick comparison of popular Icelandic candy, including type, flavor, texture, and what each sweet is best for.
There is no single official winner when it comes to the most popular candy in Iceland, but a few clear favorites stand out. Prince Polo is one of the best-known candy bars, alongside long-time staples like Nóa Kropp, Draumur, and Þristur. In general, the most popular Icelandic candies include wafer bars, crunchy chocolate treats, chocolate-covered licorice, and chewy licorice candy.
One of the most grabbed bars in Iceland, and you won't need to be brave to try it. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Prince Polo is not originally from Iceland. Hailing from Poland, it’s been part of Iceland’s snack scene for so long that it absolutely belongs in this guide. This chocolate-coated wafer bar, available in both milk and dark chocolate, is crisp, light, and familiar, which makes it one of the easiest sweets for visitors to start with.
Part of Prince Polo’s appeal is its simplicity. There is no salty licorice surprise, no unexpected Nordic twist, just a reliable wafer bar that pairs nicely with coffee, milk, or an afternoon snack break on the road. If you want a safe first pick, Prince Polo is hard to beat.
Open a bag of Nóa Kropp and it won't last long, especially on a road trip. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Nóa Kropp is one of the easiest Icelandic candies to recommend. These light, crunchy corn puffs are coated in milk chocolate and have a texture that makes a bag disappear suspiciously fast once opened. They’re easy to share, easy to pack, and one of the safest candy gifts to bring home, because they tend to go down well with just about everyone.
For first-time visitors, Nóa Kropp is a smart pick because it delivers classic chocolate flavor with a familiar crisp rather than anything too unusual. It works especially well for self-drive road trips, hikes, and snack breaks during tours.
Try Draumur if you want your first taste of lakkrís wrapped in creamy milk chocolate. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Draumur combines milk chocolate with a licorice center, creating one of Iceland’s most recognizable sweet-salty candy experiences. The milk chocolate makes it approachable, while the center gives it the distinctly Nordic flavor profile many travelers want to try at least once.
Its name means “dream,” which feels fair enough if you already like black licorice. If you’re still undecided, it can also serve as a gentler introduction, as the chocolate softens the bolder side of the traditional candy inside. It makes a good option for packed lunches, movie snacks, and first experiments with Iceland’s chocolate-and-lakkrís habit.
Þristur is a small candy that tends to win over even the biggest licorice doubters. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Þristur is another classic local candy that brings together chocolate and licorice, but in a smaller, more snackable format than Draumur. It usually comes as individually wrapped pieces inside a larger bag, making it easy to carry, share, and keep on hand for later. Soft, smooth, and pleasantly chewy, it delivers Iceland’s signature chocolate-and-lakkrís pairing in a format that feels less intense than more traditional flavors. For travelers curious about licorice but not ready to dive straight into the deep end, Þristur is one of the most approachable places to start. It’s widely loved, easy to find, and often surprises people who are convinced black licorice is not for them.
No chocolate layer here: Lakkrísreimar is pure Icelandic licorice in its simplest form. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Lakkrísreimar, or licorice laces, are one of the most classic forms of Icelandic sweet lakkrís candy. They’re chewy, fun to eat, and often sold in several versions, including plain licorice, marzipan-filled styles, and stronger salmiak variations. If you’re curious to understand Icelandic candy culture beyond chocolate, this is one of the best sweets to try. Lakkrísreimar gives you a more direct taste of Iceland’s love for licorice and is better suited to adventurous snackers than to cautious first-timers. Because there is no chocolate to soften the profile, it gives you a more straightforward sense of how this flavor shows up in Icelandic sweets.
Simple, sweet, and loved across all ages in Iceland. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Súkkulaðirúsínur are chocolate-covered raisins, and while they may sound simple, they’re a real classic in Iceland. They have an old-school feel and taste like childhood to many locals. Easy to share and easy to like, they have the kind of broad appeal that works across age groups.
These are especially practical for a straightforward hiking snack. They also pair surprisingly well with salted peanuts for an easy trail mix with a little more energy and texture. You’ll usually find Súkkulaðirúsínur in both milk and dark chocolate versions, though the milk chocolate version is more popular. They may not be the boldest candy in Iceland, but they’re dependable, familiar, and pleasantly unfussy.
Hraunbitar tend to disappear fast during a long drive or an afternoon snack stop. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Hraunbitar, sometimes translated as “lava bites,” are bite-sized wafer treats covered with crispy corn puffs and two layers of milk chocolate. Their puffed coating gives them a slightly lava-like look, which makes the name feel especially well chosen in Iceland. These beloved treats are light, crunchy, and very snackable.
These are a good middle-ground choice if you want something chocolatey but not too sweet. The balance of wafer and chocolate keeps them crisp and not overly rich, which is part of why they pair so well with coffee. Hraunbitar is also the kind of candy that earns a permanent place in a picnic bag, the glove compartment, or a shared snack stash.
Lindu Rís Buff is soft, crunchy, and sweet all at once. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Lindu Rís Buff is a sweeter, more indulgent take on crunchy chocolate candy. It combines milk chocolate, rice puffs, and a chewy marshmallow center. Because it’s softer and melts more easily than sturdier bars, this is not the most travel-proof local candy. It is, however, a strong choice for bus rides, sweet cravings, and anyone who likes their chocolate with both chew and crunch. If you need a quick sugar hit, this is one of the more direct routes.
Kúlusúkk is one of those Icelandic sweets that locals remember from childhood. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Kúlusúkk is a classic Icelandic treat made with soft licorice coated in chocolate. It’s simple, traditional, and exactly the kind of sweet that explains why Icelanders enjoy mixing chocolate with lakkrís so much. Compared with Draumur or Þristur, it leans more clearly toward lakkrís, which makes it a better fit for travelers who already know they’re interested in Iceland’s signature flavor combination. It also has a nostalgic reputation, the kind of candy that's been around long enough to earn real loyalty. Light and compact, it works well for hiking, sightseeing, or bringing home as a souvenir.
Grab a bag of Kúlur if chewy candy is your thing. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Kúlur are chewy toffees coated in chocolate and sold in a few varieties, including licorice-flavored ones. They’re rich, sticky, and satisfying, with a texture that feels more indulgent than crisp wafer bars or lighter puffed-rice sweets.
Kúlur is a good choice for movie snacks, an afternoon sugar break, or anyone who prefers chewy candy over crunchy bars. Just know that these are committed little toffees, not delicate sweets, so they deserve a bit of respect if you have tooth fillings. They also travel well as a souvenir, since their firmer texture makes them less prone to melting than softer chocolate sweets.
Lakkrís began as a medicinal ingredient before becoming one of Iceland's favorite flavors. Stock photo
Import restrictions played a big role: for many years, sweets sold in Iceland were produced mostly by local candy makers rather than international brands. This gave Icelandic confectionery companies greater influence over what people grew up eating and helped flavors like lakkrís become deeply rooted in everyday candy culture.
Licorice itself was better known as a medicinal ingredient before it became a sweet, long associated with cough remedies and traditional treatments. Over time, it moved into the candy world, and children helped make chocolate-and-lakkrís pairings especially popular. While lakkrís may feel unusual to many travelers, to many Icelanders, it's simply part of what candy tastes like.
Although lakkrís wasn’t always something we had at home when I was growing up, it definitely appeared on special occasions, especially during camping trips or at the cabin. My favorite was always Draumur, a chocolate-covered licorice candy, and I still really like it today.
- Sandra Kristin Alexandersdottir, a team member of Arctic Adventures
If you’re new to lakkrís, use this as a quick guide:
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Type |
What It Tastes Like |
What to Try |
Best For |
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Sweet licorice |
Mild, chewy, herbal |
Lakkrísreimar |
Easing into Icelandic licorice |
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Salted licorice (salmiak-style) |
Strong, salty |
Ópal, Djúpur Sterkur |
Adventurous snackers |
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Chocolate-covered licorice |
Sweet-salty and more balanced |
Draumur, Þristur, Kúlusúkk |
First-time tasters |
Sweet vs salted vs chocolate-covered licorice: taste, what to try, and who each type is best for
Tip: Start with chocolate-covered licorice and move on to stronger, saltier varieties later.
A full aisle of Icelandic chocolate is a common sight in local supermarkets. Photo: Agnieszka Niebylska
Icelandic chocolate tends to feel more milk-forward than the strongly bitter dark chocolate traditions elsewhere in Europe. That means many Icelandic sweets come across as creamy, smooth, and easy to like.
Another difference is how often chocolate is paired with licorice or incorporated into crisp candy bars rather than presented only as a stand-alone gourmet product. It’s often part of a broader candy culture rather than a separate category.
If you want a more classic tablet-style Icelandic chocolate, look for Nói Síríus chocolate bars in supermarkets. Their Traditional Icelandic Chocolate line is a tourist favorite. It includes milk, dark, caramel-and-salt, praline, and other flavor variations. For a more premium take, Omnom Chocolate offers small-batch bean-to-bar chocolate made in Reykjavík and is one of the country’s best-known specialty chocolate names.
Icelandic treats are easy to find across the country, but the best place to buy them depends on what matters most to you: value, convenience, or gift-ready presentation. For most travelers, supermarkets like Bónus, Krónan, and Nettó are the best place to start. Airport shops and souvenir stores are better for last-minute purchases and neatly packaged treats.
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Place |
Best for |
What to know |
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Supermarkets |
Best value and widest selection |
The best place to stock up on local chocolate bars, lakkrís, and mixed candy bags |
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Gas stations and convenience stores |
Road trips and quick snack stops |
Handy on the go, but usually more expensive |
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Souvenir shops |
Gift-ready packaging |
Better for presentation and convenience than bargain shopping |
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Keflavík Airport Duty Free |
Last-minute purchases before departure |
Useful for easy-to-carry gifts if you did not shop earlier |
Where to buy Icelandic sweets based on value, convenience, and purpose.
Candy in Iceland is usually affordable enough to buy casually, especially in supermarkets, but prices are typically higher at gas stations, souvenir shops, and the airport. In December, Iceland's Christmas markets are another good place to browse festive sweets and edible gifts. If you want a broader sense of what things cost during a trip, read our prices in Iceland guide. For more general buying tips, see our shopping in Iceland overview.
Icelandic candy makes a colorful, easy-to-share gift that fits in any suitcase. Stock photo
Candy is one of the easiest souvenirs to bring home from Iceland because it’s compact, shareable, and easy to pack. The best choice depends on whether you want a safe chocolate pick or something with Iceland's signature lakkrís flavor.
Prince Polo and Súkkulaðirúsínur are excellent choices if you’re bringing candy home for people who are new to Icelandic sweets or unlikely to enjoy lakkrís flavors. These chocolate-forward picks travel well, skip the licorice, and tend to be the safest options for gifting. If you’re buying for coworkers, relatives, or a group back home, Nóa Kropp and Hraunbitar are also easy to share and generally more crowd-pleasing than stronger licorice sweets.
For people who already like black licorice or want something more distinctly Icelandic, go for Draumur, Þristur, Kúlusúkk, or Lakkrísreimar. These bring out the sweet-salty lakkrís side of Icelandic candy more clearly than the safer chocolate picks.
To bring Icelandic candy home in good shape:
For more easy gift ideas, see our guide to the best Icelandic souvenirs.
You can buy Icelandic chocolate in supermarkets like Bónus, Krónan, and Nettó, as well as in convenience stores, gas stations, souvenir shops, and at Keflavík Airport. For most travelers, supermarkets are the best place to start because of their relatively low prices and wide selection. If you want something more premium, visit specialty shops in the capital, including Omnom Chocolate’s factory shop in the Grandi harbor area of downtown Reykjavík.
A standard candy bar, like Hraun, in Iceland usually costs around 250 to 550 ISK (about $2 to $4), depending on the brand, size, and where you buy it. Supermarkets usually offer the best prices, while gas stations, souvenir shops, and airport stores are often more expensive.
A standard chocolate bar, like Nói Síríus, in Iceland costs approximately 350 to 500 ISK (about $2.50 to $3.50) at budget supermarkets such as Bónus or Krónan. Specialty or premium bars, including brands like Omnom, often cost more and can easily go above 1,000 ISK (about $7 or more).
Some of the best Icelandic sweet souvenirs include Prince Polo, Nóa Kropp, Draumur, Þristur, Hraunbitar, and assorted candy bags. The best choice depends on whether you want safer chocolate picks or stronger licorice flavors.
Prince Polo is a chocolate-coated wafer bar. Although it originated in Poland, it has become so familiar in Iceland that it’s often treated as part of the country’s everyday candy scene. For visitors, it is one of the easiest and most recognizable sweets to try.