JÓLABÆRINN – “THE CHRISTMAS TOWN” OF ICELANDHafnarfjörður (pop. 30 000) lies 10 km / 15 min south of Reykjavík on Reykjanesbraut (Route 41). From mid-November until Epiphany (6 Jan) the whole harbour town turns into Jólabærinn – literally “the Christmas Village” – a place so thoroughly illuminated that locals joke the aurora borealis comes here to practice.
1. THE STORY BEHIND THE LIGHTS
• 1996 – A single strand of hopeAfter the 1995-96 recession, shop-owners on the pedestrian street Strandgata wanted to cheer the town up. They pooled money for 3 000 white LEDs along 200 m of storefronts. The effect was instant: people started driving in from Reykjavík just to “walk under the stars”.
• 2000 – The elves move inHafnarfjörður has long marketed itself as the “Town of the Hidden Folk”. Local artist Páll Guðmundsson designed the first wooden “elf-houses” and hid them in lava gardens. Children’s letters to the Yule Lads were answered by volunteers; the project snowballed and lights began following the elf trail.
• 2004 – The Great FireAn electrical fault in a warehouse destroyed half the decorations. Instead of scaling back, the town declared “more light than before”. Residents donated spare strings, electricians volunteered, and the 2004 display doubled in size – a tradition of community-funded winter art was born.
• 2010 – Going professionalThe municipality created the Jólabærinn fund (today ~€100 000 annually). A design team now maps every building, lava outcrop, and fishing boat mast so the lights tell a story – e.g., 2023’s theme “Northern Lights in the Harbour” used 180 000 addressable LEDs that pulsed in real time to music broadcast on 92.5 FM.
1. WHAT YOU WILL SEE IN 2024-25
• Strandgata canopy – 400 m tunnel of warm-white icicles that change colour every 15 min.• The Elf Trail – 12 small houses (one for each Yule Lad) on posts 2–3 m high, each with motion sensors that giggle or sneeze when you walk past.• Víkinghellan – a 5 000-year-old lava cave turned into a walk-through nativity scene with 3-D projections on the rock walls.• The Harbour Constellation – 52 fishing boats rigged with blue LEDs that flash in sequence to mimic waves.• Hafnarborg Art Museum façade – mapped projection every evening 18:00-22:00 telling the 13-night saga of Grýla and the Yule Lads.• Christmas Tree Forest – Hafnarfjörður’s main square planted with 60 living spruce trees, each sponsored by a local family and decorated in their personal style.
1. PROGRAMME & EVENTS
Opening weekend (second Friday of November)• 17:00 Town square lights switched on by the mayor and the Yule Lads.• 17:30 Torch-lit procession of the Icelandic Yuletide Cat (Jólakötturinn) and the 13 Lads.• 18:00 Fireworks over the harbour.
Every Saturday in December• 14:00-17:00 Christmas market on Fjörukráin square (hand-knitted lopapeysa, smoked arctic char, local birch schnapps).• 17:00 Live carol concert inside Víkinghellan cave (acoustic, candles only).
Weekdays• 12:00-14:00 Free hot cocoa for children at the library.• 19:00-21:00 Story-telling in the Elf House by the harbour (Icelandic & English).
New Year’s Eve add-on• 23:30 Community bonfire on the lava field by Hellisgerði park, followed by a communal fireworks show.
1. PRACTICAL VISITOR INFO
Getting there• Bus: Strætó line 1 (red) from Reykjavík (Lækjartorg) every 15 min, 21 min ride. Day-pass 2 380 ISK.• Car: 15 min via Route 41, free parking after 18:00 on weekdays and all day weekends in colour-coded zones.• Bike: 45 min on the coastal cycle path (lighted).
Best time to photograph• Blue hour (16:00) for the harbour constellation.• 19:30-20:00 when the Strandgata canopy switches to aurora-green for 3 min every 30 min.
Food stops within 200 m of the lights• Tilveran – langoustine soup & craft beer in a 19th-century house.• Pallett Kaffibar – single-origin espresso and kleinur.• Fjörukráin – Viking-themed buffet with smoked puffin if you dare.
Souvenirs you can’t get elsewhere• Hand-carved lava-stone Yule Lad figurines by Páll Guðmundsson (only sold at the Hafnarborg museum shop).• Limited-edition Jólabærinn enamel pins (proceeds fund next year’s display).
1. WHY NOT TO MISS IT
1. Density of lights: Reykjavík has beautiful public trees, but only Hafnarfjörður wraps entire neighbourhoods.
2. Interaction: the elf trail and cave nativity are walk-through experiences, not just look-at displays.
3. Zero crowds: even on opening night you rarely queue more than 5 min.
4. Authentic community effort: every bulb is paid for by bake-sales, pub quizzes, and school kids’ coin drives; it feels like Christmas used to.
5. Northern-light backup: if the sky clouds over, the town itself becomes the aurora.
Plan at least two hours – one to stroll and photograph, one to sit in a harbour café and realise you have just seen Icelanders celebrating winter the way they have since the sagas, only with 21st-century LEDs.JÓLABÆRINN – “THE CHRISTMAS TOWN” OF ICELANDHafnarfjörður (pop. 30 000) lies 10 km / 15 min south of Reykjavík on Reykjanesbraut (Route 41). From mid-November until Epiphany (6 Jan) the whole harbour town turns into Jólabærinn – literally “the Christmas Village” – a place so thoroughly illuminated that locals joke the aurora borealis comes here to practice.
1. THE STORY BEHIND THE LIGHTS
• 1996 – A single strand of hopeAfter the 1995-96 recession, shop-owners on the pedestrian street Strandgata wanted to cheer the town up. They pooled money for 3 000 white LEDs along 200 m of storefronts. The effect was instant: people started driving in from Reykjavík just to “walk under the stars”.
• 2000 – The elves move inHafnarfjörður has long marketed itself as the “Town of the Hidden Folk”. Local artist Páll Guðmundsson designed the first wooden “elf-houses” and hid them in lava gardens. Children’s letters to the Yule Lads were answered by volunteers; the project snowballed and lights began following the elf trail.
• 2004 – The Great FireAn electrical fault in a warehouse destroyed half the decorations. Instead of scaling back, the town declared “more light than before”. Residents donated spare strings, electricians volunteered, and the 2004 display doubled in size – a tradition of community-funded winter art was born.
• 2010 – Going professionalThe municipality created the Jólabærinn fund (today ~€100 000 annually). A design team now maps every building, lava outcrop, and fishing boat mast so the lights tell a story – e.g., 2023’s theme “Northern Lights in the Harbour” used 180 000 addressable LEDs that pulsed in real time to music broadcast on 92.5 FM.
1. WHAT YOU WILL SEE IN 2024-25
• Strandgata canopy – 400 m tunnel of warm-white icicles that change colour every 15 min.• The Elf Trail – 12 small houses (one for each Yule Lad) on posts 2–3 m high, each with motion sensors that giggle or sneeze when you walk past.• Víkinghellan – a 5 000-year-old lava cave turned into a walk-through nativity scene with 3-D projections on the rock walls.• The Harbour Constellation – 52 fishing boats rigged with blue LEDs that flash in sequence to mimic waves.• Hafnarborg Art Museum façade – mapped projection every evening 18:00-22:00 telling the 13-night saga of Grýla and the Yule Lads.• Christmas Tree Forest – Hafnarfjörður’s main square planted with 60 living spruce trees, each sponsored by a local family and decorated in their personal style.
1. PROGRAMME & EVENTS
Opening weekend (second Friday of November)• 17:00 Town square lights switched on by the mayor and the Yule Lads.• 17:30 Torch-lit procession of the Icelandic Yuletide Cat (Jólakötturinn) and the 13 Lads.• 18:00 Fireworks over the harbour.
Every Saturday in December• 14:00-17:00 Christmas market on Fjörukráin square (hand-knitted lopapeysa, smoked arctic char, local birch schnapps).• 17:00 Live carol concert inside Víkinghellan cave (acoustic, candles only).
Weekdays• 12:00-14:00 Free hot cocoa for children at the library.• 19:00-21:00 Story-telling in the Elf House by the harbour (Icelandic & English).
New Year’s Eve add-on• 23:30 Community bonfire on the lava field by Hellisgerði park, followed by a communal fireworks show.
1. PRACTICAL VISITOR INFO
Getting there• Bus: Strætó line 1 (red) from Reykjavík (Lækjartorg) every 15 min, 21 min ride. Day-pass 2 380 ISK.• Car: 15 min via Route 41, free parking after 18:00 on weekdays and all day weekends in colour-coded zones.• Bike: 45 min on the coastal cycle path (lighted).
Best time to photograph• Blue hour (16:00) for the harbour constellation.• 19:30-20:00 when the Strandgata canopy switches to aurora-green for 3 min every 30 min.
Food stops within 200 m of the lights• Tilveran – langoustine soup & craft beer in a 19th-century house.• Pallett Kaffibar – single-origin espresso and kleinur.• Fjörukráin – Viking-themed buffet with smoked puffin if you dare.
Souvenirs you can’t get elsewhere• Hand-carved lava-stone Yule Lad figurines by Páll Guðmundsson (only sold at the Hafnarborg museum shop).• Limited-edition Jólabærinn enamel pins (proceeds fund next year’s display).
1. WHY NOT TO MISS IT
1. Density of lights: Reykjavík has beautiful public trees, but only Hafnarfjörður wraps entire neighbourhoods.
2. Interaction: the elf trail and cave nativity are walk-through experiences, not just look-at displays.
3. Zero crowds: even on opening night you rarely queue more than 5 min.
4. Authentic community effort: every bulb is paid for by bake-sales, pub quizzes, and school kids’ coin drives; it feels like Christmas used to.
5. Northern-light backup: if the sky clouds over, the town itself becomes the aurora.
Plan at least two hours – one to stroll and photograph, one to sit in a harbour café and realise you have just seen Icelanders celebrating winter the way they have since the sagas, only with 21st-century LEDs.

Above is a map of the areas with most activites, give your self enough time to enjoy the vibe, have a look at local arts and crafts e and of course one of the towns great restaurants