Northern Europe

Djupavik Cruise Port Guide: Things to Do & Practical Tips

Iceland

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Arrival
Anchorage
City centre
220 km from Reykjavik
Best season
June – September
Best for
Arctic Wildlife Viewing, Fishing Villages, Northern Lights, Remote Hiking

Small settlement with tender access only; limited infrastructure.

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Choose the Right Port Day

Only 3-4 Hours

Land, walk the 30–45 min trail to the abandoned Djúpavík Herring Factory, explore the buildings and cove, return to tender. Minimal planning needed.
Best Beach

Not applicable. Fjord terrain is rocky and dramatic; swimming rare due to cold water and exposure.
With Kids

Short fjord walk (1–2 hours) to see the factory and cove; older kids will enjoy the eerie industrial ruins and bird colonies. Supervise terrain.
Cheapest Option

Walk ashore for free; no entry fee to the factory site. Pack snacks from ship.
Best Overall

Hike to the Herring Factory and explore the ruins and surrounding fjord. This is why you stop here; it's remote, photogenic, and authentic.
What To Avoid

Expecting WiFi, hot food, or services. Do not arrive unprepared for sudden weather or rocky terrain.

Quick Take

Port Type
Remote expedition fjord stop
Best For
Nature-focused cruisers, photography, solitude, hikers comfortable with minimal infrastructure
Avoid If
You need shops, restaurants, or structured shore excursions; mobility issues or bad weather anxiety
Walkability
Trails and fjord access are good; village itself is tiny and requires tenacity
Budget Fit
Very low-cost; no entry fees, minimal dining
Good For Short Calls?
Yes—4 hours is realistic for fjord walk and factory exploration

Port Overview

Djupavik is a ghost-town settlement in the Westfjords of northwestern Iceland, reachable only by ship. Ships anchor offshore; Zodiac tenders ferry cruisers to a small beach landing. The village consists of a handful of structures, dominated by the atmospheric ruins of a 1920s–30s herring processing factory—a landmark visible from the water and worth the visit alone. There is no road access, no shops, no restaurants, and almost no year-round residents. This is a pure expedition stop: rewarding for those seeking isolation, photography, or a glimpse of Iceland's industrial past, but frustrating for those expecting amenities. Most cruisers spend 3–5 hours ashore exploring the factory, walking fjord trails, and soaking in the desolation.

Is It Safe?

Djupavik is remote and wild, not inherently dangerous but demands common sense. Terrain is uneven, boggy, and exposed to wind and sudden weather. The water is cold (40–50°F year-round); do not wade or swim without a wetsuit. No cell service, no emergency facilities on land; your ship is your safety net. Weather can change fast; pack waterproof layers regardless of forecast. Stay on obvious paths to avoid peat bogs. In summer (June–August) midges are occasionally fierce; bring insect repellent. Do not approach seabird cliffs or nests. Overall, Djupavik is safe for alert, prepared cruisers; it is not safe for the unprepared or mobile-impaired.

Accessibility & Walkability

Djupavik is not wheelchair accessible. The tender landing is a rocky beach requiring hop-off; the trail to the factory is uneven, boggy, and has no handrails or assistance. Those with mobility issues, balance concerns, or difficulty with unpaved terrain should skip this stop. If you do go, a companion and sturdy footwear are essential.

Outside the Terminal

There is no terminal. You exit the tender onto a small pebble and sand beach in a sheltered cove. Immediately you see the red corrugated-metal roofs of the factory complex rising on a slope 200–300 meters away. The foreground is sparse—low Arctic scrub, moss, and boggy ground. A worn trail heads inland and upslope toward the ruins. The air is fresh and often windy; the light is clear and dramatic. There are no people, no amenities, no noise except wind and water. It feels like arrival on another planet.

Beaches Near the Port

Djupavik Landing Cove

Not a beach in the resort sense—a small rocky and pebbly cove sheltered by fjord cliffs. Water is pristine but cold (40–50°F). No swimming unless wetsuited. The cove is the starting point for all land exploration and is scenic but austere.

Distance
Tender landing
Cost
Free
Best for
Photography and picnicking; not recreation or swimming

Local Food & Drink

There are no restaurants, cafés, or shops in Djupavik. No food can be purchased ashore. You must bring provisions from the ship: snacks, lunch, water, and hot drinks in a thermos. Most expedition cruises offer packed lunches for remote stops; confirm when booking. Bring high-energy snacks (bars, nuts, chocolate) and water. Some cruisers picnic at the cove or factory site—absolutely fine, but pack out all trash. Do not rely on foraging; Arctic plants are sparse and mostly inedible.

Shopping

There is no shopping in Djupavik. No stores, no souvenir vendors, no ATMs. This is not a commercial port. If you want Icelandic wool or crafts, buy them in Reykjavik or onboard the ship. Djupavik offers only the factory ruins and fjord as 'souvenirs'—bring a camera.

Money & Currency

Currency
Icelandic króna (ISK)
USD Accepted?
No
Card Payments
Not applicable; no vendors
ATMs
None in Djupavik
Tipping
Not applicable
Notes
Djupavik has no commercial infrastructure. All expenses are aboard the ship. USD and euros can be exchanged in Reykjavik or larger towns before embarkation.

Weather & Best Time

Best months
June–August (midnight sun, mildest, lowest wind; 45–55°F)
Avoid
November–February (darkness, storms, ice hazard, cold below freezing)
Temperature
May–September: 40–55°F; July warmest and brightest
Notes
Djupavik is windy and exposed year-round. Fog and mist are common in summer. Sudden weather changes are the norm; always carry waterproof layers regardless of forecast. May and September are shoulder season with fewer cruise visits but can be dramatic and cold. Winter (Oct–April) is mostly dark and storm-prone; adventure and specialty lines only.

Airport Information

Airport
Keflavik International Airport (KEF)
Distance
~200 miles (320 km) south of Djupavik; no direct transport
Getting there
Fly into Reykjavik; embark from Reykjavik port (roughly 3–4 hour drive north to Djupavik anchorage). Cruise itineraries usually depart from Reykjavik or smaller Westfjords ports like Ísafjörður.
Notes
Djupavik is not an embarkation port. Ships anchor here mid-itinerary. Plan arrival in Iceland 1–2 days before cruise departure if pre-cruise stay desired.

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Hurtigruten, Lindblad Expeditions, Ponant & more sail to Djupavik.

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Getting Around from the Port

Tender (Zodiac)

Ship-operated rubber boats ferry passengers from anchorage to beach landing. Weather-dependent; may be cancelled in rough seas.

Cost: Included with cruise Time: 10–15 min one way
Walking

All exploration from landing beach is on foot. Trail to factory is obvious but unmaintained; rocky terrain, boggy sections, and exposure to wind.

Cost: Free Time: 30–45 min to factory; 1–2 hours to explore surrounds
Guided shore excursion

Most expedition lines offer optional naturalist-led walks. Highly recommended for first-timers or those wanting geology and history context.

Cost: $50–80 USD Time: 3–4 hours

Top Things To Do

1

Djúpavík Herring Factory

Explore the remarkably preserved ruins of a 1920s herring-processing plant. Roofed buildings are unstable but viewable from outside; exteriors show corrugated metal, industrial machinery, and ghostly scale. The site is a haunting monument to Iceland's fishing boom and decline. Interior access may be restricted; check with guides or locals.

1.5–2 hours Free (no admission fee)
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2

Fjord Walks and Bird Colonies

Hike beyond the factory to higher slopes overlooking the fjord. Trails are unmaintained but trackable. Look for puffins (summer), fulmars, and other seabirds nesting on cliffs. The fjord views are sublime and moody—often shrouded in mist, sometimes blazingly clear. Bring binoculars.

2–3 hours Free
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3

Cove and Shoreline Photography

The landing cove itself is photogenic: turquoise or grey water depending on light and mood, backed by steep fjord walls and the factory silhouette. Explore the shoreline at the cove's edges; tidal rocks and lichen-covered boulders offer texture and foreground interest.

1–2 hours Free
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Book shore excursions in Djupavik: Things to Do & Practical Tips Skip the ship's tour desk — book independently with free cancellation on most tours.
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Practical Tips for Cruise Passengers

  • Book the guided shore excursion if available; naturalists provide irreplaceable context on Arctic ecology, herring history, and safe route-finding.
  • Pack lunch and water from the ship; expect no food or services ashore. Bring a thermos of hot tea or coffee—the wind can be fierce.
  • Wear waterproof hiking boots, windproof jacket, and layers; weather can shift from calm to gale in minutes, and the terrain is boggy and exposed.
  • Bring a good camera or phone with full battery; this is a photographer's dream, and you'll have few other chances at such remote Arctic ruins.

Frequently Asked Questions

Djupavik is an ultra-remote Icelandic settlement ideal for adventurous cruisers seeking untouched Arctic wilderness and historic exploration.

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