What makes a great solo dining restaurant in Reykjavik

Ranking restaurants for one person is a different exercise than ranking them for two. The selection above weights three things. Seat type (40%): a counter or bar seat beats a dining-room table every time for a solo diner, because it gives you something to watch and removes the empty-chair problem — this is why Óx, Skál!, and the Fish Market sushi bar rate so highly. Single-diner ease (30%): walk-in tolerance, by-the-piece or small-plate ordering, and a service charge that's already included all reduce the friction of eating alone; Reykjavik scores unusually well on all three. Worth-the-detour cooking (30%): a solo meal should still be a meal you'd cross town for, which is why two Michelin kitchens lead the list rather than a row of cheap-and-cheerful options.

Reykjavik's dining is tightly clustered in the 101 and 105 postcodes, walkable end to end in twenty minutes, with the harbour-side Grandi a short hop west. Kitchens run informal and late by European fine-dining standards, and the food halls (Hlemmur, Grandi) exist precisely for the kind of casual, solo, graze-and-go meal that's hard to find elsewhere. The one planning constraint: the two starred counters need booking ahead, while everything else rewards spontaneity.

Cross-reference this guide with the complete Reykjavik restaurant directory, the global solo-dining pillar, the Copenhagen solo-dining guide, and the Oslo solo-dining guide for the wider Nordic counter-dining axis.

How to book in Reykjavik

Óx and Dill take online reservations and should be booked one to several weeks ahead — Óx's eleven-seat counter is the hardest, so target a weeknight and book the moment your dates are firm. Everywhere else on this list is forgiving: Fish Market, Apótek, and Sushi Social take same-day reservations comfortably and keep bar seats for walk-ins, and Skál! in the Hlemmur food hall is walk-in by design. For a solo diner, the easiest strategy is to anchor the trip around one booked counter night and leave the rest to bar seats.

Two practical notes that matter more in Iceland than elsewhere. First, tipping is not expected — service is included by law, so a solo diner has no awkward end-of-meal math. Second, alcohol is heavily taxed and expensive; tap water is free and among the best you'll drink anywhere, and a single cocktail or glass of wine will often cost more than a small plate. Budget accordingly, lean on the by-the-glass and by-the-piece options, and you can eat very well alone here without the bill running away.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is the best place to eat alone in Reykjavik?

Óx is the standout for a solo diner who wants the full kitchen experience — Þráinn Freyr Vigfússon's Michelin-starred counter seats only eleven, all facing the cooking, which makes the format inherently single-diner friendly. For a more relaxed solo meal, the sushi bar at Fish Market or a counter seat at Skál! in the Hlemmur food hall both welcome one person without ceremony. Dill, Iceland's first Michelin-starred restaurant, also seats solo diners at its kitchen-facing positions.

Is it normal to dine alone in Reykjavik?

Yes. Reykjavik's dining culture is informal and counter-heavy, and the city's food halls, sushi bars, and chef's counters are all comfortable for one. Icelanders eat out casually and late, and no server will treat a single diner as an oddity. Bar and counter seating — at Apótek, Fish Market, Sushi Social, and Skál! — is the most natural format, letting you watch the room or the kitchen rather than face an empty chair.

How expensive is dining out in Reykjavik?

Reykjavik is one of Europe's priciest dining cities. A tasting menu at Óx runs around ISK 39,000 and Dill around ISK 18,000 to 23,000 before drinks. À la carte and counter spots are gentler: expect ISK 4,500 to 9,000 per plate at Fish Market and Sushi Social, and ISK 2,500 to 4,500 per small plate at Skál!. Tap water is free and excellent, alcohol is heavily taxed, and tipping is not expected — service is included by law.

Do I need to book ahead for a counter seat in Reykjavik?

For Óx and Dill, yes — both are small and book out weeks ahead, with Óx's eleven-seat counter the hardest table in the city. For everywhere else on this list, a solo diner can usually walk in and take a bar or counter seat, especially on weeknights and at the earlier dinner hour. Skál! in the Hlemmur food hall is walk-in by design. Sushi Social and Apótek take same-day reservations comfortably.

What Icelandic dishes should a solo diner try in Reykjavik?

Start with Arctic char and langoustine (humar), both Icelandic benchmarks done well at Fish Market. Matur og Drykkur revives old-Icelandic cooking — its cod's-head dish is a signature worth ordering once. New Nordic tasting menus at Dill and Óx lean on fermentation, lamb, and skyr. For a lighter solo meal, the small plates at Skál! and the nikkei-leaning sushi at Sushi Social both let you order two or three things rather than commit to a full table.

What is the best solo dining counter in Reykjavik for a special meal?

Óx, without close competition. The eleven-seat counter behind Súmac on Hverfisgata is run as a single nightly seating, so every guest, solo or not, is part of the same kitchen-led progression — the format erases the awkwardness of a table for one. It holds a Michelin star (awarded 2023) and is the city's most coveted reservation. Book the counter weeks ahead; for a less formal special meal, Dill is the alternative.