Cruise day transfers in Reykjavík
Reykjavík is one of the busier stops on North-Atlantic and Arctic cruise itineraries. More than 150 ships call here in a typical season, between Princess and Holland America at Skarfabakki and the smaller expedition lines at Miðbakki. We run a dedicated cruise operation built around timing — the driver is at the gangway at the agreed minute, and you're back on board well before all-aboard.
The terminals themselves: Skarfabakki in Sundahöfn (postal code 104) handles most of the large modern ships — Princess, Holland America, Norwegian, Cunard, Royal Caribbean, MSC, Viking. It's about 4–5 km from downtown 101 and is now home to the new Vör cruise terminal building. Miðbakki at the Old Harbour, walking distance from Harpa, takes the smaller expedition vessels — Hurtigruten, Silversea, Ponant, Lindblad, HX. Sundahöfn proper (Korngarður / Vogabakki) is the overflow when Skarfabakki is full.
The new Vör terminal. In 2026 Reykjavík opened Vör, a purpose-built 5,000 m² cruise terminal on the Skarfabakki 312 quay at Viðeyjarsund — the first dedicated cruise terminal in Iceland and the first new passenger terminal in the city in 60 years. Vör is the building; Skarfabakki is the quay, so your schedule, luggage tags and tour voucher may still show berth codes such as Skarfabakki 312 or 315 — it's the same place. The terminal has check-in, baggage handling and dedicated pickup zones; our drivers meet cruise guests right at the Vör terminal exit with a name sign and drive straight to KEF, the Blue Lagoon, the Golden Circle or the city.
If you don't know which berth your ship uses, send the cruise line and the date — we'll check the official Faxaports schedule and get back within a few minutes.