Do in Iceland exists for one reason: most Iceland advice online is written by people who copied it from other people who copied it from a press release.
Who runs this site
I’m Alex, and I built Do in Iceland after planning Iceland trips the hard way: cross-referencing outdated blog posts, guessing at driving times, and learning at the rental desk what “gravel protection” actually means. Every itinerary and map pin on this site comes from research I would stake my own vacation on, and I update pages when conditions, prices, or roads change.
What you get here
Itineraries you can actually drive. Every route lists real distances in miles, honest driving times, and where the days get too ambitious. No 14-stop days that only work in July with zero photo breaks.
A map built by hand. Every waypoint on the travel map was placed deliberately, with notes on season, road access, and whether the stop earns its detour. Nothing is scraped or auto-generated.
Numbers in dollars. This site is written for travelers flying in from the US. Costs appear in USD, distances in miles, and flight times from American airports.
What you will not get
No fake reviews. No “hidden gems” that have 400 tour buses a day. No recommendations paid for by tour companies without a clear label. When a link earns this site a commission, the page says so.
Get in touch
Spotted an error, a closed road, or a price that changed? Tell me at alex@doinicleand.com. Corrections make this site better for the next traveler.