Not at the moment — no snow is falling in Reykjavik right now. It's currently 54°F, light rain. The camera above is live, so conditions can change while you watch.
Reykjavik, Capital Region, Iceland, sits at 64.14°N — squarely in subarctic territory, where snow is a near-certainty for much of the year. This page pairs a live camera with current, real weather readings so you can stop guessing and just look. Bookmark it for the next time someone asks "wait, is it actually snowing in Reykjavik?" and you want receipts.
In a typical year, Reykjavik sees its best chance of snow roughly October through May. That's a climatological average, not a promise — mountains, lake effect, and the general chaos of weather all bend the rules. The camera and the 24-hour snowfall figure on this page are the ground truth for what's happening today.
This camera looks out over Reykjavik itself — streets, skyline, or terrain depending on the angle. It refreshes live, so you're seeing Reykjavik as it is right now, not a postcard from last winter.
Not at the moment — no snow is falling in Reykjavik right now. It's currently 54°F, light rain. The camera above is live, so conditions can change while you watch.
Historically, roughly October through May. Outside that window you can still get surprised — weather enjoys making liars of averages.
The "snowing / not snowing" badge comes from live weather data for the camera's exact coordinates, refreshed regularly. When in doubt, trust your own eyes on the live feed above — that's why it's there.
Yes — head back to the live map to browse nearby cameras, or filter for "snowing now" to jump straight to wherever it's actually coming down.
At this latitude, winter daylight is in short supply — if the camera looks dark, that's not a malfunction, that's just Reykjavik being honest about the season.