Flight deals from Miami (MIA) to Reykjavik (KEF) — tracked by aifly.one with 16 tracked fares.
Reykjavik is the world’s northernmost capital — a small, walkable city of brightly painted houses and corrugated-iron facades, dominated by the rocket-like silhouette of Hallgrímskirkja and used by most travellers as the gateway to one of Europe’s most dramatic landscapes. The city itself rewards a day or two: harbour-front whale-watching, geothermal swimming pools that locals treat as social institutions, and a Nordic restaurant scene that has elevated lamb, langoustine, and skyr into a genuinely refined cuisine. Within a short drive lie the Golden Circle’s icons — Þingvellir’s continental rift, the Geysir hot springs, the Gullfoss waterfall — and beyond that the Ring Road opens onto glaciers, black-sand beaches, ice caves, and, from autumn through spring, some of the best aurora viewing on the planet.
Our average tracked fare is €582, with our best find at €517.
Price tracking data
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Fares tracked | 16 |
| Average tracked fare | €582 |
| Lowest fare seen | €517 on 2026-05-20 |
| Golden Filter threshold | €437 (25% below average) |
| Airlines we’ve tracked | Icelandair |
| Last fare tracked | 2026-06-01 |
Travel essentials — Reykjavik
| Topic | Info |
|---|---|
| Journey time | From London: 3 hours direct. From Amsterdam: 3 hours direct. From Frankfurt, Paris: 3.5 hours direct. From Copenhagen, Dublin: 2.5 hours direct. One of Europe’s shortest international flights — accessible as a long weekend from almost any European city. |
| Best season | June–August: midnight sun (20+ hours daylight), 10–16°C, accessible roads, waterfalls at full flow, puffin colonies (mid-May to mid-August) — the peak season. December–February: Northern Lights (darkest nights, cold -5°C to +3°C), snow landscapes, very few tourists, cheapest prices — extraordinary if you don’t mind cold and limited daylight. Shoulder: April–May and September–October excellent for fewer crowds and reasonable weather. |
| Daily budget | Budget: ISK 12,000–18,000/day (hostel dorm, supermarket meals, bus). Mid-range: ISK 35,000–55,000/day (guesthouse, restaurant meals). Iceland is extremely expensive by European standards — a pub meal costs ISK 3,500–5,000 (~€24–35). Self-catering from Bonus or Krónan supermarkets dramatically reduces costs. Approximate, April 2026. |
| Currency | Icelandic Króna (ISK). Almost entirely cashless — cards accepted literally everywhere including food trucks, street vendors, and church donation boxes. Contactless universally used. No need to carry ISK cash. |
| Timezone | GMT (UTC+0) year-round. Iceland does not observe daylight saving time. Same as London in winter; 1 hour behind UK in summer (CEST-2 relative to Central Europe in summer). |
| Visa (EU) | EU citizens: visa-free (Iceland is in the Schengen Area). Freedom of movement within EEA. |
| Safety | One of the safest countries on Earth. Iceland’s main hazards are natural — unpredictable weather (sudden storms on the Ring Road), dangerous waves at black sand beaches (Reynisfjara — stay well back from the water), and geothermal areas (never leave marked paths around hot springs or fumaroles). Dress in layers with waterproof shell. Emergency: 112. |
Getting around Reykjavik
Car hire is essentially mandatory for anything beyond Reykjavik city. Book well ahead in summer. 4WD required for F-roads (highland tracks) — F-roads are only open June–September. Strætó buses serve some attractions but are slow. Within Reykjavik city: walkable in 20 minutes from harbour to lake.
Highlights
Northern Lights (October–March on dark clear nights), midnight sun walks on Faxaflói bay (June), Golden Circle in one day (Geysir eruption every 8 minutes, Gullfoss two-tier falls, Þingvellir rift valley), Seljalandsfoss and Skógafoss waterfalls, the black sand beach at Reynisfjara (with extreme wave caution), Jökulsárlón glacier lagoon, and geothermal pools under the stars at Fontana or the Secret Lagoon (cheaper than Blue Lagoon).
Get alerts for this route
Reykjavik deals are seasonal and the cheapest fares book out within days. Follow aifly.one on Telegram so you don’t miss the next drop on this route.
How we track deals
Our automated pipeline monitors multiple flight deal sources for Miami to Reykjavik around the clock. Every price is verified before we publish. We only surface fares that pass our Golden Filter — priced 25% or more below the rolling average for this route.
What is the average fare from Miami to Reykjavik?
Based on 16 tracked fares, the average fare is €582. Our lowest fare seen was €517 on 2026-05-20.
How do I get alerts for cheap flights from Miami to Reykjavik?
Join our Telegram channel at t.me/aiflydeals. Our system publishes deals the moment this route drops 25% below its rolling average.
Which airlines have deals from Miami to Reykjavik?
Airlines from our tracked fares: Icelandair. Based on actual tracked fares — not a complete list of all operators.
When is the best time to visit Reykjavik?
June–August: midnight sun (20+ hours daylight), 10–16°C, accessible roads, waterfalls at full flow, puffin colonies (mid-May to mid-August) — the peak season. December–February: Northern Lights (darkest nights, cold -5°C to +3°C), snow landscapes, very few tourists, cheapest prices — extraordinary if you don’t mind cold and limited daylight. Shoulder: April–May and September–October excellent for fewer crowds and reasonable weather.
Do EU citizens need a visa for Reykjavik?
EU citizens: visa-free (Iceland is in the Schengen Area). Freedom of movement within EEA.
Is Reykjavik safe to visit?
One of the safest countries on Earth. Iceland’s main hazards are natural — unpredictable weather (sudden storms on the Ring Road), dangerous waves at black sand beaches (Reynisfjara — stay well back from the water), and geothermal areas (never leave marked paths around hot springs or fumaroles). Dress in layers with waterproof shell. Emergency: 112.
What is the currency in Reykjavik?
Icelandic Króna (ISK).
Travel info verified: 2026-04-02