Variable wind or seabreeze, but easterly wind 5-13 m/s by the southeast coast at first. Mostly sunny, but some fogbanks along the north coast. Changes of some showers in the afternoon tomorrow inland in the south part. Temperature 17 to 28 deg. C in most places, but cooler in the fog.
Forecast made 14.07.2025 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 |
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2.3 | 14 Jul 08:55:51 | Checked | 18.8 km E of Eldeyjarboði |
2.1 | 14 Jul 08:41:19 | Checked | 19.8 km E of Eldeyjarboði |
2.0 | 14 Jul 14:47:31 | Checked | 4.3 km E of Árnes |
1.8 | 13 Jul 00:30:10 | Checked | 4.8 km N of Hábunga |
1.7 | 14 Jul 09:04:35 | Checked | 16.2 km SW of Geirfugladrangur |
1.6 | 14 Jul 08:32:23 | Checked | 3.1 km E of Hamarinn |
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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The glacial outburst flood from Mýrdalsjökull glacier into the rivers Leirá Syðri and Skálm is now over.
Increased run-off from glaciers is expected today and in the coming days due to warm temperatures. Travelers are advised to show caution around glacial rivers and to keep in mind that fords and rivers can become impassable.
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 14 Jul 10:52 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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The flood is subsiding, and water level and conductivity are now approaching normal values in Skálm.
The flood reached its peak the night before last. IMO´s specialists continue to observe the area
Read moreUpdate 1. July
Uplift and earthquake activity are ongoing in the Svartsengi area, with stable activity levels in recent weeks. On average, about 10 micro-earthquakes are detected per day, most of them located north of Grindavík.
No substantial changes have been detected in measurements that would prompt a reassessment of the hazard level. However, continued magma accumulation could increase the likelihood of a magma intrusion or volcanic eruption in the coming autumn.
In May 2025, an unusually intense heatwave struck Iceland and eastern Greenland, breaking numerous temperature records. On 15 May, Iceland's national May temperature record was set at 26.6°C at Egilsstaðir Airport, with several locations recording temperatures up to 13°C above the monthly average.
A new international analysis by the World Weather Attribution group shows that human-induced climate change made this heatwave around 40 times more likely and, on average, three degrees Celsius hotter than it would have been without global warming. The study also suggests that if global temperatures rise by 2.6°C, such heatwaves could become at least twice as frequent and two degrees hotter.
Read moreTemperatures
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 moreUpdated 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 moreCatastrophic avalanches in the villages Súðavík, 16 January 1995, and Flateyri, October 1995, which killed 34 people and caused extensive economic damage, totally changed the view regarding avalanche safety in Iceland.