Northerly or variable wind 3-8 m/s. Partly or mostly cloudy and widely chances of rainshowers, especially in the afternoon. Temperature 7 to 16 deg. C, warmest in the south.
Westerly wind 3-10 tomorrow. Widespread intermittent rain, but dry in the east part until afternoon. Becoming slightly colder.
Forecast made 31.05.2025 15:17
If the map and the text forecast differs, then the text forecast applies
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Preliminary results
Size | Time | Quality | Location |
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2.7 | 31 May 07:46:27 | Checked | 3.6 km SW of Hrómundartindi |
2.4 | 30 May 22:19:53 | Checked | 3.2 km NW of Eldey |
2.2 | 30 May 12:11:14 | Checked | 9.4 km SW of Geirfugladrangur |
2.1 | 31 May 00:22:38 | 90.1 | 4.4 km NNE of Geirfuglasker |
2.0 | 30 May 05:21:07 | Checked | 18.6 km ESE of Grímsey |
1.9 | 31 May 00:38:25 | Checked | 2.9 km NW of Eldey |
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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Seismic tremor, which had been gradually increasing over the past few days at the Grímsfjall seismic station, has now subsided. This suggests that the glacial outburst flood (jökulhlaup) from Grímsvötn is waning. The last Grímsvötn flood occurred in January of this year, and previous events have typically occurred about a year apart. Since only a short time has passed since the last flood, the volume of water in the area was relatively small. No significant changes have been observed at the hydrological stations in Gígjukvísl. At this moment, this event poses no risk to people or infrastructure. The Icelandic Met Office continues to monitor the area.
Due to malfunction we have closed the service with the water stations on the map. In stead it is possible to see this in the link.
Rauntímavöktunarkerfi.
Written by a specialist at 31 May 11:40 GMT
The avalanche bulletin is at a regional scale. It does not necessarily represent avalanche danger in urban areas.
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Southwest corner
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Northern Westfjords
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Tröllaskagi
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Eyjafjörður (experimental)
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Eastfjords
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Southwest corner
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Northern Westfjords
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Tröllaskagi
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Eyjafjörður (experimental)
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Eastfjords
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Temperatures
reached or exceeded 20°C at several weather stations for 10 consecutive
days.
May temperature records were repeatedly broken at weather stations across the country.
A new national May temperature record of 26.6°C was set at Egilsstaðir Airport on May 15th.
Read moreUpdate 20. May
Continued uplift is being measured in Svartsengi, indicating ongoing magma accumulation in the area. If the rate of uplift continues at the same rate as recent days, it can be assumed that the likelihood of a magma intrusion or eruption will begin to increase as autumn progresses. However, changes in the rate of uplift—and therefore magma accumulation beneath Svartsengi—could affect this assessment.
Updated April 8, at 16:15 UTC
Deformation measurements clearly show that uplift beneath Svartsengi is ongoing. The current uplift rate is faster than that observed following previous eruptions. This may be explained by the large volume of magma — around 30 million cubic meters — that was released from the system during the most recent event.
However, it is still too early to predict how the rate of magma accumulation will develop. Past events have shown that accumulation rates typically decline as more time passes between eruptions. At least a week, and possibly several weeks, will need to pass before we can evaluate if — and how — the rate of accumulation will change.
Read moreUpdated 25. March at 15:00 UTC
GPS deformation data shows that magma continues to accumulate beneath Svartsengi, although the pace of land uplift has slightly decreased in recent weeks. Despite the slower uplift, experts still consider it likely that a magma intrusion and/or eruption will occur along the Sundhnúkur crater row.
Read moreAt around 14:30 yesterday (12 March 2025), a rather intense earthquake swarm began offshore Reykjanestá. The swarm was most intense at the beginning when about 50 – 60 earthquakes were recorded in the first few hours. As the day progressed, the activity decreased but then increased again shortly before midnight when an earthquake of magnitude 3.5 occurred. When the activity increased again in the evening, it shifted slightly westward as the image shows (blue circles indicate the location of earthquakes that occurred at the beginning of the swarm yesterday, while yellow and red ones show earthquakes from late last evening and night).
Read moreA southerly storm or violent storm is expected later today and tomorrow, with very strong wind gusts, widely 35 – 45 m/s and especially near mountains, but locally exceeding 50 m/s. Considerable or heavy rain is expected in the south and the west regions of the country. More details can be found here.
Read moreThe Icelandic Meteorological Office (IMO) is a public institution, historically based on the Icelandic Meteorological Office (1920) and the Icelandic Hydrological Survey (1948). The two institutions merged in 2009, with the responsibility of monitoring natural hazards in Iceland and conducting research in related fields, as well as participating in international monitoring and research. IMO has a staff of 130 people, of which 60 staff members work on research-related activities.
Read more