Iceland with kids,
the real way
How we actually do Iceland with the girls — pick a relaxed home base, keep the days flexible, and let the place come to you. Here’s the one-week plan, how to stretch it to two, and what it costs from Boston.
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Iceland with little kids works best when you slow down. Our approach: book a comfortable home base, plan one thing a day, and leave room for the rest. Here’s the whole plan — one week, how to stretch it to two, and the honest costs from Boston.
Reykjavík as your base — the wonders come to you
Honest framing up front: we did Iceland with a baby, so our take is geared to little ones — though we’ll flag the bits that get even better with older kids. The good news is Iceland is one of the easiest big trips you can do from Boston (a short overnight flight), and almost everything works as a day trip from one base.
For one week, base in or near Reykjavík. It’s walkable, easy with a stroller, has great food and warm pools, and puts the headline sights within a comfortable day’s drive. You rent a car, do one big outing a day, and come home to the same cozy base each night — ideal with a baby or toddler who needs naps and a reset.
- The Golden Circle — Gullfoss waterfall + the Geysir hot-spring field, an unforgettable day trip (see below)
- Þingvellir — walk between two tectonic plates; kids love that they’re “in two continents at once”
- Reykjavík’s geothermal pools — warm water in any weather; the city pools are cheap, local, and toddler-friendly
- The harbour — puffin and whale boat tours in summer, plus easy waterfront strolls
Book a family stay with a kitchen on Booking.com, or a full flat on Airbnb or VRBO.
If you do one thing from Reykjavík, make it this. Gullfoss is a massive two-tier waterfall that genuinely stops you in your tracks, and at Geysir the Strokkur geyser erupts every few minutes — kids will happily wait and cheer for the next blast. It’s an easy paved loop, doable with a stroller, and pairs perfectly with Þingvellir to make the classic Golden Circle day.
Add Vík and the south coast
With more time, add a second base down the south coast in Vík. The drive there is the scenery — waterfalls you can walk behind, the famous black-sand beach, and (for older kids) a guided glacier walk. Splitting your stay between Reykjavík and Vík means less daily driving and more time actually out exploring.
Pre-book glacier walks and any guided tours through GetYourGuide (we price-check the same tours on Viator). Glacier tours have minimum ages — check before you book.
The hot springs — what we’d do differently
Full transparency: our girls were too young for the famous geothermal spas when we went, so we skipped the Blue Lagoon and Sky Lagoon. Knowing them now, we’re certain they’d love it — warm, milky-blue water in the cold air is pure magic for kids. If yours are old enough to follow pool rules, we’d absolutely build one in (book ahead; they sell out). For babies and toddlers, the local Reykjavík city pools are a warmer, shallower, far cheaper alternative — and a lovely slice of everyday Icelandic life.
What landed — and what we’d skip
What the kids actually loved
Soaking in geothermal pools in any weather, the geyser erupting on cue, and waterfalls everywhere you turn.
What we’d skip or watch out for
Underestimating drive times on the Ring Road — keep daily distances short with kids. Reynisfjara’s waves are genuinely dangerous; stay well back. It’s expensive — a kitchen and packed lunches help a lot.
Everything we used for Iceland
Iceland with kids, roughly — from Boston
Rough ranges for a family of four (2 adults + 2 kids), flying from Logan and staying in a place with a kitchen. Estimates to plan around, not quotes — season and how far ahead you book swing them a lot.
Adding more kids? It’s mostly about the beds.
Kids don’t add cost evenly — lodging is the real lever. Two adults + 1–2 kids fit a studio or one-bedroom; a third or fourth usually bumps you to a two-bedroom, the biggest single jump in the budget.
Flights: a child under 2 flies as a lap infant for very little; every child 2 and over is essentially another full seat (~$450–$900 round-trip from Boston). Food rises gently; most attractions are cheap or free for young children.
Rule of thumb: +1 child ≈ one more flight seat + a step up in lodging size.
Flight figures reflect typical round-trip economy fares from Boston (about $450–$900 per seat depending on season). Swap the headline totals and line items for your own numbers once you’ve booked — real receipts beat estimates every time.
Iceland, at three feet tall
Iceland with kids: FAQ
How many days do you need in Iceland with kids?
About 6–7 days is plenty to base in Reykjavík and see the Golden Circle and south coast at a kid’s pace. With more time, add a second base in Vík so you’re not driving as far each day.
Where’s the best area to stay with a family?
Reykjavík is the easiest family base — walkable, stroller-friendly, with warm pools and everything in day-trip range. For a second base, Vík on the south coast puts you near the black-sand beach, waterfalls, and glacier tours.
Can you do Iceland with a baby?
Yes — we did. Most of the headline sights (Gullfoss, Geysir, the waterfalls, black-sand beaches) are short paved walks you can do with a stroller or carrier. The glacier walks and the famous geothermal lagoons have age limits, so save those for older kids; the local city pools are the warm-water option for little ones.
Is Iceland good for young kids and toddlers?
Yes — keep days short, base somewhere with green space or a beach, and lean on the simple joys. That’s the whole NOE approach.
Keep planning: Paris with kids · the gear we pack · how we book every trip · all destinations