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Mývatn Nature Baths is a geothermal spa on Jarðbaðshólar hill in North Iceland, about 90 km (56 miles) east of Akureyri. Rebranded as Earth Lagoon Mývatn in September 2025, the spa still uses its original Icelandic name, Jarðböðin. Its centerpiece is a milky-blue mineral lagoon heated to 36 to 40°C (97 to 104°F). The site is currently closed for renovation and is scheduled to reopen in early summer 2026. Travelers often call it the “Blue Lagoon of the North,” quieter and less expensive than its southwestern counterpart.

About Mývatn Nature Baths (Earth Lagoon Mývatn)

Bathers in the milky-blue lagoon at Mývatn Nature Baths, ringed by black volcanic rock.

Submerged wooden ledges around the rim let bathers sit chest-deep against the rock.

The spa first opened in 2004 and remains one of the largest bathing facilities in North Iceland. Around the main lagoon, the site has steam baths, a swim-up bar, and a bistro with views over Lake Mývatn. The whole complex sits among pseudocraters and lava fields that stretch across the Mývatn region.

Renovation Update: When Will Earth Lagoon Reopen?

Earth Lagoon Mývatn is closed from January 1, 2026, for the construction of a new on-site building, with reopening expected between late June and early July 2026. Anyone planning a 2026 trip should check the official Earth Lagoon site for the latest status before booking accommodation nearby.

The new building will expand the bathing area by around 35% and accommodate up to 580 guests at once, about a third more than the current facility. Additions include a rock steam room you can swim into, two new hot tubs, a waterfall, and a lava fissure passage into a more open section of the lagoon.

What Makes the Water Special

Three bathers in milky-blue water with black lava and distant mountains beyond.

The same minerals that cloud the water also keep it clean, which is why the lagoon needs no chlorine.

The water comes from the Bjarnarflag borehole, drawn from up to 2,500 meters (8,200 feet) underground. By the time it reaches the lagoon, it's cooled from around 130°C (266°F) to a comfortable 36 to 40°C (97 to 104°F). Alkaline, silica-rich, and high in sulfur, the mineral mix gives the pool its cloudy blue color. The same chemistry keeps it clean, so the lagoon uses no added chlorine. Visibility stays low because of the minerals, though the floor is gentle and walkable throughout.

Practical note: silver or copper jewelry tarnishes on contact with the sulfur, so it's best left in the locker. The minerals can also stiffen hair, so tie long hair up and condition before going in. You'll find conditioner in the showers, free to use.

Mývatn Nature Baths vs the Blue Lagoon

Woman sitting alone in milky-blue water with snow on black rock and mist over the surface.

Unlike the Blue Lagoon's seawater, Mývatn's lagoon is freshwater, so it feels softer and rinses off clean.

Mývatn Nature Baths is North Iceland's smaller, cheaper, and less-crowded answer to the Blue Lagoon: similar mineral water and steam facilities at lower entry prices, but a much longer drive from Reykjavík. Both spas are built around heated lagoons fed from deep underground, feature steam rooms and swim-up service, and have silica-rich water.

How Mývatn Nature Baths and the Blue Lagoon compare on the basics:

Feature

Mývatn Nature Baths 

Blue Lagoon

Location

North Iceland, 90 km (56 miles) east of Akureyri

Southwest Iceland, 22 km (14 miles) from Keflavík airport

Drive from Reykjavík

About 6 hours (474 km / 295 miles)

About 50 minutes (50 km / 31 miles)

Adult admission price

From 7,900 ISK (~$64 / €55)

From 11,990 ISK (~$97 / €84)

Crowd levels

Lower, rarely capacity-limited outside July and August

High year-round, advance booking required

Water source

Freshwater from a deep geothermal borehole

Geothermal seawater, byproduct of the Svartsengi power plant

The price gap is what catches most travelers' eye, but the six-hour drive from Reykjavík is the factor that actually decides it.

Choose Mývatn if you're already in North Iceland or traveling the Ring Road. The Blue Lagoon is better for travelers based around Reykjavík who want full spa amenities without the long drive north.

Pricing and Admission

Adult admission to Earth Lagoon Mývatn starts at 7,900 ISK (~$64 / €55) for the Earth Essential tier, which covers the lagoon, hot tub, cold tub, and steam baths. Two higher tiers go up from there. Earth Signature, from 9,900 ISK (~$80 / €69), adds a towel, a drink, and a bistro discount. Earth Exclusive, from 52,000 ISK (~$423 / €363), adds a private lagoon area, private changing rooms, bathrobes, and complimentary drinks.

Children five and under enter free with an adult. Swimsuit rental costs 1,100 ISK (~$9 / €8), and towel rental is 1,200 ISK (~$10 / €8). Opening hours run from 12 PM to 10 PM daily once the spa reopens. Prices shift with the time of day and demand, so confirm the current rates on the official pricing page before booking.

How to Get to Mývatn Nature Baths

Aerial of Mývatn Nature Baths lagoon and spa building in a lava field, with a mountain behind.

The steam beside the spa rises off Bjarnarflag, the same geothermal field that feeds the lagoon.

Earth Lagoon Mývatn sits at Jarðbaðshólar, 660 Mývatn, just off Iceland's Ring Road (Route 1) in the north of the country. The most common way to reach the spa is by car. Driving from Akureyri, the capital of North Iceland, takes about 1 hour over 90 km (56 km), with the route passing through the wooded Fnjóskadalur valley and the Goðafoss waterfall on the way.

From Egilsstaðir, the largest town in the Eastfjords, it's a 2-hour, 164 km (102 miles) drive past Lake Lagarfljót and the turnoff for Dettifoss, Selfoss waterfall, and Ásbyrgi Canyon.

Driving straight from Reykjavík takes around 6 hours over 474 km (295 miles) and isn't recommended as a single-day trip, since there's too much worth stopping for. Sights along the way include Borgarfjörður and the Glaumbær turf farm.

What to Expect on a Visit

Woman in the lagoon holding a drink at the swim-up bar window at Mývatn Nature Baths.

The bar window opens onto the lagoon, so a drink never means drying off and walking to a counter.

Most visitors spend about 90 minutes at Mývatn Nature Baths, enough to soak in the lagoon, use the steam baths, and stop at the swim-up bar without rushing. Arrival starts at reception, where staff can sort out any towel, swimsuit, or bathrobe rentals you haven't pre-booked. The bar serves both alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks, payable in advance at the desk or on the spot with a phone, watch, or card.

Icelandic pool etiquette is mandatory: shower thoroughly without swimwear before entering the water. Showers are in the changing rooms, and staff may remind first-time visitors. The rule is standard across Iceland and keeps the mineral water clean for everyone.

Yes, the water has a mild sulfur scent, strongest near the steam baths and barely noticeable once you're in the lagoon. They sit directly over geothermal vents and run at roughly 45°C (113℉) with very high humidity. Hydrate well before going in, and don't stay longer than feels comfortable.

Health and Skin Benefits

The silica and sulfur in the water are the minerals most associated with its skin benefits. Spa water of this kind has a long-standing reputation for easing skin conditions like psoriasis and eczema. Iceland's silica-rich lagoons are widely used by people managing these conditions, though formal medical programs vary by site. Any specific benefit is best discussed with a doctor rather than treated as a guaranteed outcome.

With no added chlorine, the water is also gentler on sensitive skin and eyes than a chlorinated pool.

Visiting in Winter

Green Northern Lights over the lit Mývatn Nature Baths building and lagoon at night.

Cloud can hide the aurora for hours, but here you wait for a clear break from warm water instead of the cold.

A winter visit is all about the contrast: 38°C (100℉) water, snow-covered lava, and a black sky. From September through March, the area is dark enough most evenings to catch the Northern Lights when conditions cooperate.

Driving needs more care once the snow sets in. Check road conditions and the weather forecast before starting your drive, since closures and storms can move in quickly in the north. Winter tires are required by law from November 1 to April 15, and rental cars come fitted with them. Studded tires and a 4WD both help on the icy rural roads around Mývatn.

Things to Do Near Mývatn Nature Baths

Person on wooden steps looking over the milky-blue Mývatn Nature Baths lagoon and lava field.

From the entrance deck you can read the whole lagoon and pick a spot before you get in.

The lagoon sits in the middle of one of Iceland's densest volcanic landscapes. Most of the sights below are a short drive away, with a couple worth a longer trip:

  • Lake Mývatn, the shallow lake the spa is named for, formed by an eruption roughly 2,300 years ago, and is now one of Iceland's richest spots for birdlife.
  • Námaskarð, also called Hverir, is a field of boiling mud pots and steaming vents, a 10-minute drive east.
  • Grjótagjá, a small lava cave with vivid blue water a few minutes away, was once a local bathing spot but is now too hot to enter and a filming location for Game of Thrones.
  • Mt. Hverfjall, a tephra ring crater 1 km (0.6 miles) wide that takes about an hour to walk around, is just east of the lake.
  • Dimmuborgir, a maze of towering lava pillars with marked trails, on the lake's east side.
  • Skútustaðagígar, a cluster of pseudocraters on the lake's southern shore.
  • Krafla, the volcanic system whose 1975 to 1984 eruptions reshaped the area, a short drive north.
  • Goðafoss, the "waterfall of the gods," is about 50 km (31 miles) west on the way to Akureyri.
  • Askja and Víti, a highland caldera and crater lake, are reached only by 4WD or guided tour, a full-day trip.

Tours That Visit Mývatn Nature Baths

Most travelers reach Earth Lagoon Mývatn on a multi-day Ring Road tour from Reykjavík or a day trip from Akureyri. During the closure, the optional lagoon stop on Arctic Adventures tours is replaced with Forest Lagoon near Akureyri. Earth Lagoon returns once the new building opens. The full list of tours that visit Mývatn Nature Baths and the surrounding region is below.

FAQs

No, the lagoon is fully closed from January 1, 2026, for its rebuild, with reopening expected in late June or early July 2026, though the operator hasn't confirmed a firm date. If your trip lands near the edges of that window, treat the opening as provisional and keep a backup plan in mind. Once it reopens, the new facility will be larger than before, with more to it than the old building.

Adult admission starts at 7,900 ISK (about $64 / €55), roughly a third less than the Blue Lagoon's entry price. The 9,900 ISK (~$80 / €69) Earth Signature tier is the value pick for most visitors, since it adds a towel and a drink you would otherwise pay for separately. Children five and under are free with an adult. The top Earth Exclusive tier (52,000 ISK / ~$423 / €363) is a private-area splurge most travelers can skip.

About 90 km (56 miles) east along Route 1, or roughly an hour by car. The drive passes Goðafoss waterfall around the halfway point, so it folds into the trip rather than being a separate outing. There's no practical public transport to the spa, so plan on a rental car or a guided day tour from Akureyri.

About 90 minutes is the typical visit, the figure the lagoon suggests. There's no enforced time limit, though, so you can stay through opening hours if you want a slower soak. Going earlier in the day or midweek usually means fewer people in the water. Build in about 15 minutes on each end for the mandatory shower and changing.

Yes, faintly. The smell is hydrogen sulfide, the same harmless compound behind the eggy note across Iceland's geothermal areas. It fades within minutes as your nose adjusts, and unlike chlorine, it doesn't cling to skin or swimwear afterward. The lack of added chlorine is why the air smells more of earth than of a treated pool.

It depends on where you're based. Mývatn suits travelers already in North Iceland or driving the Ring Road, since it's quieter, cheaper, and rarely needs advance booking. The Blue Lagoon suits Reykjavík-based travelers who want more amenities and can't spare the long drive north. As a rule, pick the one that fits your route rather than the one with the better photos.

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