Northerly winds, wiedly 3-10 m/s and light snow showers in the north and east parts, but generally clear elesewhere.
Light variable winds and mainly fair tomorrow morning, but the odd snow shower in the north and east. Slowly increasing east winds and cloudy during the afternoon, 5-13 m/s by evening, but 13-18 m/s and light sleet or snow along the southern coast.
Frost mostly 0 to 5 degrees C during daytime.
Forecast made 20.02.2026 18:14
If the map and the text forecast differs, then the text forecast applies
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Preliminary results
| Size | Time | Quality | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.4 | 19 Feb 10:29:16 | Checked | 4.4 km NNW of Hábunga |
| 2.0 | 18 Feb 23:55:14 | Checked | 24.4 km E of Grímsey |
| 1.5 | 20 Feb 17:19:02 | 50.0 | 17.4 km SE of Heimaklettur |
| 1.4 | 20 Feb 04:37:21 | Checked | 9.1 km NW of Kirkjubæjarklaustur |
| 1.3 | 18 Feb 23:27:57 | Checked | 29.2 km N of Borgarnes |
| 1.2 | 19 Feb 21:43:49 | Checked | 0.8 km WSW of Raufarhólshellir |
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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A slush flood was reporeted in Vestari Jökulsá in north Iceland around 13:30 today. The flood occurred when an ice dam broke. The maximum water flow was similar to a high summer flow.
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 19 Feb 15:34 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)
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The 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.
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