Increasing south- and southwesterly wind in the evening, 5-13 m/s over night and tomorrow, but 10-18 in the northwest part. Intermittent drizzle in South- and West-Iceland and temperature 10 to 15 deg. C. Mostly fair in the northeast and east parts with temperature 18 to 25 deg. C.
Forecast made 10.07.2026 18:20
South and southwest gale locally in the northwest part over night and early on tomorrow, e.g. on the northern part of Snæfellsnes peninsula and in the Strandir area. Can be hazardous for vehichles that are sensitive to wind. Looks like stronger winds in the northwest again on Sunday.
Prepared by the meteorologist on duty 10.07.2026 18:20
If the map and the text forecast differs, then the text forecast applies
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Preliminary results
| Size | Time | Quality | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.5 | 10 Jul 02:13:33 | Checked | 587.7 km NNE of Fontur |
| 2.5 | 10 Jul 17:57:39 | 50.0 | 81.0 km W of Eldeyjarboði |
| 2.3 | 08 Jul 21:56:09 | Checked | 10.4 km SSW of Eldeyjarboði |
| 2.2 | 09 Jul 07:22:59 | Checked | 6.5 km NNE of Hábunga |
| 2.1 | 08 Jul 21:39:21 | Checked | 2.6 km ENE of Bárðarbunga |
| 1.9 | 09 Jul 07:29:36 | Checked | 6.9 km N of Hábunga |
Earthquake activity throughout the country is described in a weekly summary that is written by a Natural Hazard Specialist. The weekly summary is published on the web every Tuesday. It covers the activity of the previous week in all seismic areas and volcanic systems in the country. If earthquake swarms are ongoing or significant events such as larger earthquakes have occurred during the week, they are specifically discussed. More
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Along with increasing temperatures in the eastern part of the country this weekend, water levels can be expected to rise in glacial rivers due to melting.
Due to malfunction we have turned off the service publishing hydrological data on the map. Instead see the data using our Rauntímavöktunarkerfi.
Written by a specialist at 10 Jul 18:21 GMT
Avalanche forecasts are now published on Icelandic Met Office’s new website:
New avalanche pages on gottvedur.is/en
News from the Icelandic Met Office’s landslide monitoring service will continue to be published on vedur.is (in Icelandic)
Magma accumulation and ground uplift continue beneath Svartsengi. The average rate of magma accumulation over the past few weeks has remained steady.
The most likely scenario remains continued slow magma accumulation, eventually leading to a new dike intrusion and possibly a volcanic eruption.
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In October 2025, the Icelandic Meteorological Office (IMO) received a grant of ISK 147 million from the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) for four new development projects in the fields of volcanic hazards and aviation safety. The projects involve, among other things, the development of new measurement methods, automatic analysis of eruption plumes, coordination of responses among European volcano observatories, and research into the effects of sulphur dioxide (SO₂) on aviation.
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Read moreThe year 2025 was the warmest year in Iceland since measurements began. The national average temperature was 5.2 °C, which is 1.1 °C above the average for the years 1991–2020 and the highest ever recorded. Temperatures were well above average for almost every month of the year. The spring weather was exceptionally favourable; it was the warmest spring ever recorded nationwide, and May was by far the warmest May on record. In mid-May, a 10-day heatwave occurred across the entire country. It was the most significant heatwave known in Iceland for the month of May. Overall, the weather in 2025 was unusually calm, with few stormy days and generally favourable conditions. It was relatively wet at the beginning of the year but dry toward the end. Snow cover was light across the entire country.
Read moreThis has been a period of a general rise in temperatures, interrupted by two cold periods. The late 19th century cold period was colder than a corresponding period in mid to late 20th century.
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