Best Proposal Restaurants in Reykjavik: 2026 Guide
Proposal dining · Reykjavík · 2026 edition
Steam rises off the milky-blue water two metres from the window, the lava-rock wall behind your table is the colour of wet basalt, and the candle on the white tablecloth has been lit twenty minutes before service starts. The room is Moss, at the Blue Lagoon Retreat. It is the most dramatic proposal dining room in Iceland, and the most defended pick on this list. Below: seven Reykjavík restaurants where the proposal works — the lagoon room, the city's two starred kitchens, the harbour-grill the locals book first, and the glass dome above the city.
What Makes a Reykjavik Proposal Restaurant Work
Reykjavík rewards the proposal that uses the landscape rather than works around it. The dining rooms that win this list are the ones with lava-rock walls and lagoon glass (Moss), the rooms that sharpen the Icelandic ingredient palette into a serious Nordic register (Dill, ÓX), and the rooms whose physical setting is itself a proposal-worthy statement — the dome on Öskjuhlíð hill (Perlan), the 1917 Apotek pharmacy building, the harbour-front cellar grill at Grillmarkadurinn. The kitchen has to know its Arctic char, its Westfjords lamb, its skyr.
What to skip. The tourist seafood rooms on Geirsgata along the cruise-ship harbour are the wrong register. The Bæjarins Beztu Pylsur hot-dog stand is a Reykjavík institution but the wrong moment. The fast-casual restaurants on Laugavegur near the parliament read too casual. Importantly: the Blue Lagoon public bath restaurant — Lava — is not Moss. Moss is the smaller, twenty-eight-cover tasting room at the adjacent Retreat Hotel; this distinction matters when booking.
The Seven Picks
A Michelin Green Star tasting room built into the lava of the Blue Lagoon Retreat — fly in for it once and propose against the steam.
Moss is the small fine-dining room inside the Blue Lagoon Retreat Hotel, on the Reykjanes peninsula forty-five minutes from central Reykjavík. The dining room is cut into the 800-year-old lava flow that surrounds the lagoon — basalt walls on three sides, full-height glass facing the milky-blue geothermal water, and a single seating each evening for twenty-eight covers. Aggi Sverrisson runs the kitchen at a Michelin Green Star register (awarded 2022, retained every guide since) with a seven-course tasting that draws on Westfjords lamb, Arctic char from Selárdalur, and seaweed harvested by hand off the Reykjanes coast.
For a proposal, this is the editorial first pick in Iceland. The room is genuinely cinematic without being theatrical, the single-seating format means the meal will run three hours at the pace the couple sets, and the post-dinner Retreat lagoon (open to hotel guests until 22:00) is the proposal scene's natural second act. Book three months ahead for the high season (June–August) and six weeks for winter. Email the reservations desk and specify proposal — the team will pace the meal accordingly.
The seven-course tasting with wine pairing; the Arctic char on lava-warmed stone is the centrepiece.
Read the Moss verdict →
Iceland's first Michelin-starred kitchen on upper Laugavegur — reserve weeks ahead for a downtown proposal that wants the editorial Nordic statement.
Dill is the room that put Reykjavík on the Nordic fine-dining map. Gunnar Karl Gíslason opened the restaurant in 2009 on Hverfisgata, moved it to Laugavegur 59 in 2018, and earned Iceland's first Michelin star in 2017. The star was lost during the pandemic and reclaimed in the 2022 Nordic guide. Twenty-six seats across a long, low-lit room with white-oak walls and a quiet wood-burning hearth at the back. The eleven-course tasting menu changes every five to six weeks based on the Icelandic seasonal calendar.
For a downtown proposal that wants to read as a serious Nordic statement rather than a hotel-tasting-room statement, Dill is the answer. The dining room is genuinely intimate, the pacing of the eleven courses is the standard ninety-minute-to-two-hour Nordic register, and Gunnar Karl Gíslason's frozen skyr with sea-buckthorn and rye — on the menu since 2014 — is the dessert course on which the proposal lands. Book six weeks ahead on Resy; specify a window seat for the upper Laugavegur view.
The eleven-course tasting with the wine pairing; the frozen skyr with sea-buckthorn is the close.
Read the Dill verdict →
Þráinn Freyr Vigfússon's eleven-seat starred counter inside Súmac — book it once for a proposal that wants the chef-led table-of-honour register.
ÓX is the eleven-seat tasting counter built into the rear of Súmac on Laugavegur 28, run by Þráinn Freyr Vigfússon since 2017. The counter sits behind a discreet wooden door at the back of the larger Súmac dining room; the format is a single eighteen-course tasting at one seating per night, with the chef and three cooks plating directly in front of the diner. Earned Iceland's second Michelin star in 2023. Three hours; ISK 27,900 (€196) per person plus the wine pairing.
For a proposal that wants the chef-driven table-of-honour register — the kind where the chef will pause at the moment, pour Champagne and quietly recede — ÓX is the right room. The counter format means the proposing party will be visible to the cooks (and the other nine diners) but the warmth of the room makes the moment communal rather than performative. Book two months ahead via Súmac's Resy page; specify proposal in the notes. The end-seats are the best two on the counter.
The eighteen-course set tasting; the wine pairing if both diners are drinking.
Read the ÓX verdict →
A Beaux-Arts 1917 apothecary turned hotel dining room, the prettiest downtown proposal setting in the city — book it for a central, classical register.
Apotek occupies the ground floor of the Apotek Hotel on Austurstræti — the building was Iceland's first apothecary, opened in 1917 by the architect Guðjón Samúelsson, and the original Beaux-Arts plasterwork, marble counters and walnut cabinetry are still in place. The dining room seats sixty across a long room with the central pharmacy bar restored and operating as a cocktail station. Sigurður Helgason cooks a modern Icelandic menu (smoked Arctic char, lamb shank with crowberry, scallops from Húsavík) that the international hotel-restaurant register suits.
For a downtown proposal that wants a genuinely classical historic-building setting without the tasting-menu pacing of Dill, Apotek is the answer. The grand-room scale gives the moment a stage; the central location works for the post-dinner Champagne walk to Reykjavík Cathedral or the Harpa concert hall. Book two weeks ahead for a window booth (the row along Austurstræti is the proposal pick); request the courtyard table for a private alternative.
The smoked Arctic char to open, the lamb shank with crowberry, the skyr crème brûlée.
Read the Apotek verdict →
Hrefna Sætran's basement grill is the proposal pick for the couple who reject the tasting-menu register — try it once for the room the locals actually book.
Grillmarkadurinn opened in 2009 in a basement on Lækjargata, two minutes from the old harbour and three minutes from Tjörnin pond. Hrefna Sætran — Iceland's most-decorated woman chef — runs the kitchen with her partner Guðlaugur Frímannsson. The dining room seats ninety across a low-ceilinged basement with whisky barrels along one wall, a long zinc bar, and the open Josper charcoal grill visible from the centre seats. Charcoal-grilled Westfjords lamb, dry-aged steaks from the Skagafjörður herd, langoustines from Höfn, the famous mini-burger flight.
For a proposal that wants warmth and character rather than chamber-music tasting-menu silence, Grillmarkadurinn is the answer. The basement format makes the room intimate; the wood-fire smoke from the grill is part of the atmosphere; the wine list runs surprisingly deep (450 references) and the sommelier will recommend Argentine Malbec for the lamb. Book three weeks ahead for the corner booth along the south wall.
The mini-burger flight to open, the dry-aged Skagafjörður rib-eye, a glass of Catena Zapata Malbec.
Read the Grillmarkadurinn verdict →
Reykjavík's glass-dome landmark restaurant with the city, the bay and the Esjan ridge at your feet — book it for a sunset proposal that uses the view as the room.
Perlan — the Pearl — is the glass-dome building on top of Öskjuhlíð hill on the southern edge of central Reykjavík. The structure is six water tanks from the 1939 geothermal system topped by a 1991 dome by Ingimundur Sveinsson. The top-floor restaurant rotates slowly through the dome, presenting a 360-degree view of the city, the bay, the Esjan ridge across Faxaflói, and Snæfellsjökull glacier ninety kilometres west on clear days. Kristján Halldórsson cooks a modern Icelandic menu suited to the panorama-first format.
For a sunset proposal between September and April — when the daylight sits at the right hour for a 19:30 booking — Perlan is the move. The view does much of the proposal-staging work; the rotating-dome format means the room will pass through every facet of the panorama over the three-hour meal. Less suitable in June and July, when the midnight sun flattens the lighting. Book three weeks ahead for a window-side table; specify proposal so the front-of-house can time the dessert course to the south-facing arc.
The Arctic char tartare to open, the lamb fillet, the chocolate-skyr dome (yes, dome-shaped).
Read the Perlan verdict →
Gústav Axel Gunnlaugsson's small seafood room on the road to the Hallgrímskirkja — try it once for a proposal that wants the city's strongest fish kitchen.
Sjávargrillið is a forty-seat seafood restaurant on Skólavörðustígur — the cobbled street that climbs from Laugavegur to the Hallgrímskirkja church on the hill. Gústav Axel Gunnlaugsson has run the kitchen since opening in 2010. The dining room is the city's most disciplined seafood-only kitchen, with two private corner booths along the back wall and a small bar that does the city's best skyr-based dessert flight.
For a proposal where the couple is committed to the Icelandic seafood register — Arctic char, langoustine, scallop, the lesser-known Hraðfrystihúsið cod — and wants the post-dinner walk to the Hallgrímskirkja to be the second act, Sjávargrillið is the room. The cooking is precise without being clinical, the wine list runs deep on Sancerre and German Riesling, and the booking is one of the easier weekend reservations on this list. Two to three weeks ahead is enough.
The Arctic char three ways, the langoustine bisque, the skyr dessert flight.
Read the Sjávargrillið verdict →
How to Stage a Reykjavik Proposal
Booking lead times in Reykjavík are longer than the city's size (135,000 residents) suggests. Moss is the hard one — three months ahead for high season, six weeks ahead for winter; book by email rather than the hotel website to flag proposal. Dill is six weeks on Resy. ÓX is two months via Súmac's booking system. Apotek, Grillmarkadurinn, Perlan and Sjávargrillið all run two to three weeks for a weekend.
Season matters more in Reykjavík than in any peer city. Late September through early November aligns the dining-room availability at Moss and Perlan with the early aurora-borealis viewing season; late February through March is the second window. June through August is high tourist season — book three months ahead — and the 22-hour summer daylight flattens the lighting at Perlan and reduces the night-scene impact at Moss. December has the shortest daylight (four hours) and the most cinematic candle-light register.
The post-proposal scene. Three Reykjavík post-dinner choreographies work well. At Moss, the Retreat lagoon stays open to hotel guests until 22:00 — book a room and the lagoon in advance. Downtown from Dill, ÓX or Apotek, the walk down Laugavegur to the harbour and the Harpa concert hall is the standard. From Perlan, the descent of Öskjuhlíð hill with the city lights below is the unrepeatable post-meal walk. Champagne service at the table can be arranged at all seven rooms — request when booking and ask for Krug Grand Cuvée (ISK 38,000) or Iceland's own Vatnsdæla berry sparkling wine for a local alternative.
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