Overview
The Embassy of Iceland in Berlin is Iceland's principal diplomatic mission in Germany and the career consular hub for Icelandic interests in Central Europe. Iceland and Germany are NATO allies and EEA partners with bilateral ties across trade, fisheries, renewable energy, Arctic affairs, and scientific research. Germany is one of the largest source markets for tourism to Iceland — direct flights from Frankfurt, Munich, Hamburg, Düsseldorf, and Berlin connect to Keflavik year-round via Icelandair and Lufthansa, with seasonal additions from low-cost carriers. The embassy sits on Rauchstraße in Berlin's Tiergarten diplomatic quarter. For Icelandic citizens in Germany, the embassy provides the full range of consular services; a network of honorary consulates in Bremen, Cologne, Cuxhaven, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Munich, Stuttgart, and Warnemünde offers local first-line contact across the country.
Visa Services
Iceland is a Schengen and EEA member. German citizens and all EEA nationals travel to Iceland freely under EEA freedom of movement with no time limit. For nationals of countries requiring a Schengen visa, Iceland's visa applications in Germany are handled through the VFS Global visa application centre in Berlin, with the embassy retaining decision authority. Standard Schengen documentation applies: passport valid at least three months beyond the intended stay, travel insurance with minimum EUR 30,000 coverage, proof of accommodation, return or onward ticket, and proof of financial means.
Consular Services
The embassy provides passport services, identity document processing, civil registrations (births, marriages, deaths of Icelandic citizens abroad), notarial services, and emergency consular assistance for Icelandic nationals in Germany. Appointments should be booked via the embassy's website or by contacting the consular section directly.
Trade & Export Support
Key Icelandic exports to Germany include seafood (cod, haddock, herring, farmed Atlantic salmon), aluminium smelted using Iceland's geothermal and hydroelectric energy, and increasingly technology and software services. German firms engage with Iceland in renewable energy research, geothermal technology, and the marine sciences. The embassy's trade section facilitates contacts between Icelandic and German businesses.
Cultural & Educational Programs
Iceland and Germany share cultural ties rooted in the Old Norse literary tradition — the Sagas and Eddas form the foundation of Icelandic literature and were among the first medieval texts studied by German philologists. Icelandic music has a significant following in Germany, from Björk and Sigur Rós to the Reykjavik jazz and electronic scenes. Academic exchange between Icelandic and German universities covers volcanology, Arctic studies, renewable energy, and fisheries science.
Service Area
The embassy covers the entire Federal Republic of Germany. Honorary consulates in Bremen, Cologne, Cuxhaven, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Munich, Stuttgart, and Warnemünde provide local first-line contact and document authentication but refer passport, visa, and complex consular matters to the embassy.
Appointment Information
Appointments for consular services should be booked via the embassy's website or by telephone. The embassy observes both Icelandic and German public holidays.