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Water & Ice · Dynjandi, Westfjords, Iceland

Dynjandi Westfjords Waterfall — Iceland

Dynjandi ('the thunderous one') in Iceland's remote Westfjords — a series of seven waterfalls descending 100 metres over a fan-shaped cliff that widens from 30 metres at the top to 60 metres at the base, creating a bridal veil effect of water spreading as it falls in a composition of mathematical elegance — is Iceland's finest visually composed waterfall, accessible via the Westfjords' spectacular but challenging coastal road system. The Dynjandi's combination of its fan geometry (the physics of water spreading under gravity creating the naturally widening form that gives the falls their visual symmetry), the six smaller waterfalls below visible from the path's first viewpoint, and the Dýrafjörður fjord's mirror surface in the distance creates Iceland's most complete waterfall composition. The Westfjords' extraordinary geological character (the oldest rocks in Iceland, the peninsula's near-complete isolation creating the most unchanged traditional Icelandic landscape) and the almost complete absence of tourists creates an encounter of rare Icelandic remoteness.

When
Jun — Sep, peak Jun — Aug
Best viewing
A 100-metre fan-shaped waterfall of rare geometric elegance, set against a remote Westfjords fjord with virtually no other visitors. Expect a short uphill path past six smaller falls before the thundering main cascade reveals itself.
Category
Water & Ice
Status
Returns Jun 2026

About this spectacle

Standing before Dynjandi — 'the thunderous one' — you feel the roar before you see the falls in full. Water pours over a fan-shaped cliff, beginning as a narrow curtain 30 metres wide at the top and spreading to 60 metres at the base as gravity pulls and disperses the flow into a bridal-veil formation. The cascade drops a full 100 metres through the clean Westfjords air, and the sound reverberates off ancient basalt — the oldest rock in Iceland. The path up from the shore passes six smaller waterfalls in sequence, each a spectacle in its own right, before the main fan reveals itself. In the distance, the mirror surface of Dýrafjörður fjord reflects the pale Icelandic sky. Visitors are almost entirely absent; the silence between the thunderous surges is startling. Morning light catches the mist and throws soft rainbows across the fan's lower third. The Westfjords' near-complete isolation means the surrounding landscape — turf-edged roads, empty headlands, no visible infrastructure — amplifies the feeling of encountering something utterly unmediated.

When to go

Jun — Sep, peak Jun — Aug

Getting there

Nearest airport: REK. Nearest city: Ísafjörður.

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