The Reykjavik Dining Guide 2026: Best Restaurants, Neighbourhoods & Food Culture
Full dining guide · Reykjavik · 2026 edition
The notion that Reykjavik has no serious food culture is the most wrong thing a visitor can arrive with. The Icelandic capital holds the highest Michelin star-density per capita of any Nordic city outside Copenhagen, runs a wood-fire and fermentation-driven cooking school that has trained chefs now working in Tokyo and New York, and serves lamb that meaningfully outperforms anything available in mainland Europe. This guide covers what to eat, where to book, what to tip, and the four mistakes most diners make in the city.
How Reykjavik Eats
Reservation culture in Reykjavik runs early. The dinner service standard is 18:30 to 21:00 — Icelanders eat earlier than continental Europeans and most kitchens close their à la carte service by 22:00. The Michelin-starred rooms (DILL and ÓX) take bookings two to four weeks ahead on weekdays and six to eight weeks ahead for Saturday seatings; they release tables on a rolling 60-day window. Mid-tier rooms (Grill Market, Fish Market, Matur og Drykkur, Sumac) need one to two weeks for a weekend booking. The walk-in scene exists only at Hlemmur Mathöll, the city's food hall.
Tipping is the source of more diner confusion in Reykjavik than in any comparable European city. The Icelandic standard is no tip — service charge is included in every bill by law, and adding a tip is not expected. If the service was genuinely exceptional, a 5–10% addition is welcomed, but rounding the bill to the nearest 500 ISK is the more common gesture. Tipping at the American level (18–20%) reads as oddly aggressive.
Dress code is informal across the board. Even the two-Michelin-star DILL accepts smart-casual without question. Iceland does not run a jacket-required culture, and most kitchens prefer that the diner is comfortable rather than overdressed. Footwear should be weather-proof — Reykjavik's pavements are wet, frozen, or both for eight months of the year, and the walk to the restaurant from the hotel is a real part of the evening.
Currency, payment and language. Króna only, but every card works. English is universal across all the rooms below; Icelandic is welcomed but the staff will switch the moment they detect a non-native accent. Reservations should be made under a single name; Icelanders use first names in service, so book with a first name the staff can pronounce.
Four mistakes to avoid. One: skipping the lamb. Icelandic lamb is the single most distinct ingredient in the country's cooking; the sheep graze on wild herbs and the meat carries flavour no other European lamb can match. Two: ordering fermented shark (hákarl) on the first night — it is a curiosity, not a meal, and the smell will track the rest of the evening. Three: booking only in the harbour district. The city's best rooms (DILL, Matur og Drykkur, Sumac) are inland, on Hverfisgata and the Hlemmur stretch. Four: assuming the food halls are budget-only. SKÁL! at Hlemmur Mathöll cooks at a level most independent restaurants in the city cannot match.
Best Neighbourhoods for Dinner
101 Reykjavik (Downtown / Miðborg)
The city's dining heart. Laugavegur and Hverfisgata are the two main commercial spines, and most of the destination restaurants are within a ten-minute walk of either. DILL is on Hverfisgata, ÓX is tucked behind a bookstore on Laugavegur, Matur og Drykkur is on Grandagarður. This is also the bar district — Kaldi, Slippbarinn, Mikkeller & Friends — and the post-dinner walk between rooms is the standard Reykjavik dining evening.
Hlemmur
Hlemmur Mathöll is the city's primary food hall, opened 2017 in the old central bus terminal. Ten kiosks, communal seating, no reservations needed. The standout is SKÁL!, originally the chef's first venture and still under chef-led direction. Sumac is two minutes from Hlemmur on Laugavegur. This is the right neighbourhood for a solo dinner or an informal team meal that does not need a private room.
Grandi Harbour (Old West Harbour)
The reconverted harbour district hosts Matur og Drykkur, BrewDog Iceland, and a stretch of seafood-and-cocktail rooms oriented towards the new design quarter. The walk from downtown is fifteen minutes along the seafront. Best for a late-spring or summer evening when the long daylight makes the harbour aspect work; in deep winter the wind here is punitive.
Aðalstræti & The Old Town
The oldest stretch of the city. Restaurant Reykjavík and a small cluster of traditional fish-and-lamb rooms anchor the area. This is the right zone for diners who want the Reykjavík of postcards and a meal that does not feel like a Nordic-modern statement piece.
The 2026 Top Picks
Gunnar Karl Gíslason's DILL is the only restaurant in Iceland to have held a Michelin star continuously since 2017 — reserve weeks ahead for the editorial first pick.
DILL became the first Icelandic restaurant to earn a Michelin star in 2017 and has retained it every year since. Gunnar Karl Gíslason founded the kitchen in 2009 — initially in the Nordic House, now on Hverfisgata 12 in central Reykjavik — and built the menu around fermentation, wild herbs from the Westfjords, and Icelandic ingredients used with the precision of a Copenhagen tasting kitchen. The room seats twenty-eight. Single tasting menu, six or eight courses, with wine pairings of Northern European producers the sommelier has worked with directly. The signature is the fermented-lamb course: cured belly with juniper, served with whey-pickled vegetables and a charred-bread crumb. Two seatings, 18:00 and 20:30; the early seating reads more relaxed.
Eleven seats at a single counter — Þráinn Freyr Vigfússon's tasting menu is the most singular dining experience in Iceland.
ÓX opened in 2018 behind a doorway shared with Sumac on Laugavegur 28; the eleven-seat counter is reached through the Sumac dining room and feels like a secret. Þráinn Freyr Vigfússon cooks the tasting menu on the counter in front of the guests over three hours. Sixteen to eighteen courses, no choices, all built around Icelandic primary ingredients — Arctic char from Lake Þingvallavatn, lamb from the Westfjords, dulse and söl seaweed harvested by the chef himself. Michelin awarded the star in 2022. The single seating is at 18:30; the meal ends at 21:30. Booking opens 60 days ahead and most weekends are gone within hours of release. Email the restaurant directly for cancellation lists.
Hrefna Sætran's wood-fire grill is the most reliable mid-tier dining room in the city — book it for a first-night dinner that establishes what Icelandic cooking actually tastes like.
Hrefna Sætran opened Grillmarkaðurinn in 2011 and the kitchen has not lost a beat. The wood-fire grill runs lamb chops, Arctic char, langoustines and reindeer (in winter); the tasting menu at ISK 17,900 is the right introduction to Icelandic ingredients for diners on a single Reykjavik evening. Eighty seats over two floors. Reservations are needed seven to ten days ahead for a weekend evening; weeknights can be picked up at 24 hours. The same group runs Fiskmarkaðurinn (Fish Market) two minutes away, which is the seafood-forward equivalent for diners who want the Japanese-Icelandic crossover (the kitchen runs a small sushi counter alongside the grill).
Traditional Icelandic dishes rebuilt for a modern dining room — book this for the diner who wants the country's actual food history.
Matur og Drykkur is named after the 1958 cookbook that documented traditional Icelandic dishes — many of which had fallen out of restaurant use by the late twentieth century. Gísli Matthías Auðunsson opened the restaurant in 2014 specifically to bring those dishes back into a modern kitchen. The signature is the cod head: slow-braised in a smoky broth, served with potatoes and butter. The lamb soup (kjötsúpa) is the city's best version. The dining room is in a converted fish-packing building at Grandagarður; bare brick walls, communal-style tables, sixty seats. Bib Gourmand listing in the Michelin Nordic guide. Book one to two weeks ahead for a weekend; the kitchen is responsive to dietary requirements if flagged at booking.
The food-hall counter the locals book at after a Saturday afternoon walk — try it once for a casual dinner that punches above its weight.
SKÁL! is the standout kiosk at Hlemmur Mathöll, the central food hall opened in 2017. Þráinn Freyr Vigfússon (who now runs the one-Michelin-star ÓX) founded it in 2017 and the kitchen still operates with the same group culinary direction. Small-plates format, no reservations, communal seating at the food hall tables. The standouts are the smoked lamb tartare, the cured trout with rye, and the langoustine on rye crisps. A full dinner for two runs ISK 16,000–24,000 — meaningfully below DILL or ÓX but with the same chef pedigree. Arrive before 19:00 on weekend evenings or after 21:00 to avoid the wait.
The Levantine grill the same chef runs alongside ÓX — pencil it in for a younger group dinner that does not want the formality of a tasting menu.
Sumac shares an entrance with ÓX on Laugavegur 28 but cooks an entirely separate menu: Levantine-Mediterranean, wood-fire driven, designed for sharing. Þráinn Freyr Vigfússon set the culinary direction in 2018 when the restaurant opened, and the rotating head-chef format works because the kitchen plays to a tight repertoire of mezze, charred breads, grilled meat and vegetables. The dining room seats fifty across two levels. Reservations are needed for weekend evenings (one week ahead) but weeknights can be walked. Best for a group of four to eight that wants the same chef lineage as ÓX at one-third of the per-head spend.
Hrefna Sætran's seafood-and-sushi counter — book it for a first-time Reykjavik diner who wants the city's North Atlantic catch alongside genuine Japanese technique.
Fiskmarkaðurinn opened in 2007 — predating the Grill Market and run by the same Sætran kitchen team. The format is dual: a main dining room with à la carte seafood (Icelandic monkfish, Arctic char, langoustine, scallop), plus a small sushi counter where the rolls and nigiri use locally caught fish prepared with Japanese technique. The fish-of-the-day plate is the editorial order. Eighty seats. Located in the oldest part of Reykjavik — Aðalstræti 12 sits where the city's first wooden buildings were built — the room itself is in a heritage timber structure with stone floors. Reservations are needed five to seven days ahead for weekend evenings.
By Occasion
Best for First Date
Sumac on Laugavegur is the city's first-date room of record — the Levantine sharing format keeps conversation moving, the lighting is low, and the noise level lets the table hear itself across the two seats. Backup: Matur og Drykkur in Grandi for a slightly more serious second date.
Best for Birthday
DILL or ÓX for a milestone (40th, 50th) — both kitchens will plate a discreet candle on the pre-dessert if flagged at booking. For a younger birthday with a group of six to ten, Grill Market's upstairs section is the right call.
Best for Anniversary
ÓX is the editorial first pick: the eleven-seat counter creates the most private dining experience available in the city, and the three-hour tasting menu is the right length for an anniversary evening. DILL is the runner-up.
Best for Closing Deals
Grill Market's private dining room (upstairs, seats up to 18) is the city's best business-dinner space — quiet acoustics, the city view from the windows, and the wood-fire kitchen makes the meal announce itself. Book direct through Hrefna Sætran's office, not the website.
Best for Solo Dining
SKÁL! at Hlemmur Mathöll is the solo-dinner standard. Counter seating, no reservation, food-hall energy that does not isolate the solo diner. The sushi counter at Fiskmarkaðurinn is the more serious solo option.
Best for Group Dinner / Team Dinner
Grill Market's upstairs private room takes up to 18; Matur og Drykkur's long communal table works for 10–14; for a larger party, the full restaurant buyout at Sumac is the only option above 25 covers. Sumac's mezze format is also the smoothest set menu for a corporate group.
Best for Impressing Out-of-Towners
DILL for the Michelin pedigree, ÓX for the singular eleven-seat counter, Matur og Drykkur for the cultural depth (the kitchen reads as a primer on Icelandic food history). Pick one — the visitor will not get to all three in a single trip.
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Editorial only. Visit dates noted on each detail page. Affiliate disclosure: reservation links may earn RFK a referral fee at no cost to the diner. Read our methodology.