Southwest 8-13 m/s tomorrow and showers of rain or sleet, but mostly dry in the northeast. Lighter wind and a few showers in the afternoon, but becoming northeast 10-18 m/s with snow or sleet in the northern part of the Westfjords. Temperature 0 to 6 deg. C, but decreasing temperature in the evening.
Forecast made 09.03.2026 21:35
If the map and the text forecast differs, then the text forecast applies
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Preliminary results
| Size | Time | Quality | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.7 | 08 Mar 21:29:06 | Checked | 7.2 km WSW of Geirfugladrangur |
| 2.6 | 08 Mar 22:45:56 | Checked | 8.9 km WSW of Geirfugladrangur |
| 2.4 | 08 Mar 22:42:50 | Checked | 8.6 km SW of Geirfugladrangur |
Last night an earthquake swarm near Eldey on Reykjanes ridge began. Largest event of M2,7 was detected but others are smaller. Last time a swarm occurred in this area a month ago, February 8th. This area is seismically active located on the plate boundaries of the Atlantic ridge.
Written by a specialist at 09 Mar 06:09 GMT
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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Winter conditions are prevalent in many rivers, ice dams may form. There is an ice dam in Héraðsvötn and water has approached road 1, please proceed with caution.
Due to malfunction we have turned off the service publishing hydrological data on the map. Instead see the data using our Real-time monitoring system.
Written by a specialist at 08 Mar 05:13 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)
The report A Nordic Perspective on AMOC Tipping reviews the current state of science on the impacts of potential Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) collapse and provides recommendations for policy actions.
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 more
The implementation of SeisComP represents a major step forward in the development of the IMO's earthquake monitoring capabilities. Preparations have been underway for several years, and the system transition involves both technical and procedural changes aimed at improving analytical capability, data dissemination, and providing a more modern working environment for specialists.
Read more
Updated 5 August
The volcanic eruption that began on 16 July on the Sundhnúkur crater row is now officially over, and a new hazard map has been issued. Despite the end of the eruption, life-threatening conditions remain in the area due to unstable lava and the potential for gas pollution. Uplift has resumed, and magma continues to accumulate beneath Svartsengi.
Read moreBy 11:00, more than 450 lightning strikes had been recorded since the activity began.
Read more
Ice in the ocean around Iceland has mostly arrived from afar.
It comes here from the Denmark strait, which connects the Atlantic Ocean and the Arctic Ocean, between Iceland and Greenland. Sometimes the ice comes directly from north to the northeast corner of Iceland, but all the ice comes from the same source: the East-Greenland current which flows from the Arctic Ocean due south along the east coast of Greenland, passing northwest Iceland.
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