Hverir Geothermal Field
Iceland's most dramatic geothermal field: hissing fumaroles and boiling mud pots colour a sulfurous, Mars-like plateau near Mývatn.
About this spectacle
Hverir is a surreal geothermal landscape on Iceland's northeastern plateau, near Lake Mývatn. Visitors walk among vigorously bubbling mud pools that gurgle and plop with thick grey-brown slurry, while fumaroles hiss jets of sulfurous steam skyward. The ground is painted in vivid ochres, burnt oranges, and pale yellows from mineral deposits, creating a landscape that feels volcanic and otherworldly. The smell of hydrogen sulfide is sharp and pervasive. Steam clouds drift across a barren, rust-coloured terrain backed by the rhyolite ridges of Námafjall. On calm days the spectacle is intimate and immediate; on windy days steam swirls dramatically across the hillside. The constant sound of the earth exhaling — hissing, bubbling, and rumbling — gives the site a visceral, alive quality unlike almost anywhere else on the planet.
When to go
May — Sep, peak Jun — Aug
Getting there
Nearest airport: AEY. Nearest city: Akureyri.
Booking options
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