Iceland Volcano Erupts for Ninth Time Since 2023

Iceland is home to 33 active volcanic systems

Wed Jul 16 2025
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Key points

  • Live video feeds showed lava spewing out of a fissure in the ground
  • Nearby fishing village Grindavik evacuated
  • Previous eruption to hit the area was in April
  • Latest eruption not expected to impact international flights

REYKJAVIK, Iceland: A volcano erupted on Wednesday in Iceland’s Reykjanes peninsula in the southwest, weather authorities said, the ninth eruption to hit the region since the end of 2023.

Live video feeds showed lava spewing out of a fissure in the ground, with the Icelandic Met Office saying that it began just before 4:00 am (0400 GMT).

Broadcaster RUV reported that the nearby fishing village Grindavik had been evacuated, as had the Blue Lagoon, Iceland’s famed tourist spot.

The previous eruption to hit the area was in April.

First eruption

When the first volcanic eruption first hit the area in late 2023, most of Grindavik’s 4,000 residents were evacuated.

Since then, almost all of the houses have been sold to the state, and most of the residents have left.

Iceland
Handout picture released on July 16, 2025 by the Public Defense Department of the State Police Commissioner in Iceland shows lava and smoke erupting from a volcano near Grindavik on the Icelandic peninsula of Reykjanes. (Photo by Public Defense Department of the State Police / AFP)

Volcanoes on the Reykjanes peninsula had not erupted for eight centuries when in March 2021 a period of heightened seismic activity began.

Volcanologists have warned in recent years that volcanic activity in the region had entered a new era.

No interruption

RUV said the latest eruption was not expected to impact international flights.

A volcanic eruption in another part of Iceland in 2010 caused worldwide travel chaos as the ash spewed into the atmosphere sparked airspace closures in Europe.

Iceland is home to 33 active volcanic systems, more than any other European country.

It is located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, a fault in the ocean floor that separates the Eurasian and North American tectonic plates and causes earthquakes and eruptions.

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