You'll retake your driving test. Your dog will spend 14 days in quarantine. Your heating bill will make you smile and your bar tab won't. And in December you'll see the sun for four hours — if it's not raining sideways. Details below.
Figures verified 9 July 2026Iceland exchanges licences without a test only for the EEA, UK, Switzerland, and Japan. American and Canadian licences are not on the list: after six months of residence your home licence stops being valid, and getting an Icelandic one means passing the theory exam and a practical test — often with a few mandatory lessons to learn local specifics (gravel roads, single-lane bridges, wind that removes car doors). Start early; instructors book out. Applications go through the District Commissioner (sýslumaður). A medical certificate is needed if you wear glasses or have conditions affecting driving.
Iceland protects an isolated animal population, and it isn't negotiable: every dog and cat entering the country does 14 days at an approved quarantine station. Before that: import permit from MAST (apply at least 30 days ahead, fee from ISK 39,633), rabies vaccination plus an antibody titer test at least 30 days post-vaccination, leptospirosis vaccination for dogs, and specified parasite treatments and health certificates. Total realistic cost per pet, permit plus quarantine board plus vet work, commonly lands well north of $2,000 — and some breeds are banned entirely. Plan months ahead.
This is where Iceland is cheap. Geothermal district heating and renewably generated electricity mean heating a whole house through a North Atlantic winter costs a fraction of what New Englanders or Prairie Canadians pay. Hot water is effectively limitless. Internet is excellent — fiber and 5G reach almost everywhere. Combined utilities for an average household typically run a modest fraction of a US winter bill; the swimming pools heated by the same geothermal water are the national social institution, at a few hundred krónur a swim.
Coastal Iceland is not Arctic-cold — Reykjavik's January averages hover around freezing, milder than Minneapolis or Ottawa. The challenges are different: wind, horizontal rain, ice, and above all light. Around the winter solstice you get 4–5 hours of low, gorgeous daylight; many residents take vitamin D and use daylight lamps, and seasonal low mood is a real, discussed thing. The payback is June: ~21 hours of light and a country that doesn't sleep. Roughly 1,300 sunshine hours a year is less than half of what the Algarve gets. Spend a full winter (the remote-work visa exists for exactly this) before you commit to one.
The test, the lessons, the costs, and winter-driving skills nobody tells you about.
MAST's process month by month, quarantine stations compared, and real all-in costs.
Light strategies, pool culture, and what long-term expats actually do from November to February.
The logistics are where Iceland moves get expensive. We'll introduce a relocation specialist we've independently vetted who has run Icelandic moves before.