Which airport will I land at in Iceland if my ticket says “Reykjavik Keflavik Internationl Apt.”?












31















I have booked my flight from London to Iceland. The flight ticket says London Heathrow Apt - Reykjavik Keflavik Internationl Apt. I checked on Google Maps; it shows Reykjavik Domestic, Reykjavik International, and Keflavik International - all three as different airports (although the first two are very close or probably the same, whereas Keflavik one is far from the other two; about 41 mins drive according to Google Maps).



Now I need to hire a car from the airport. Which airport should I request car hire from?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Note that the pattern seems to be [City name] [Airport name]

    – Andrew T.
    yesterday






  • 2





    As a tip, you should rely more on the IATA airport code than the airport name itself. The latter can change, the former cannot.

    – MooseBoys
    12 hours ago
















31















I have booked my flight from London to Iceland. The flight ticket says London Heathrow Apt - Reykjavik Keflavik Internationl Apt. I checked on Google Maps; it shows Reykjavik Domestic, Reykjavik International, and Keflavik International - all three as different airports (although the first two are very close or probably the same, whereas Keflavik one is far from the other two; about 41 mins drive according to Google Maps).



Now I need to hire a car from the airport. Which airport should I request car hire from?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Note that the pattern seems to be [City name] [Airport name]

    – Andrew T.
    yesterday






  • 2





    As a tip, you should rely more on the IATA airport code than the airport name itself. The latter can change, the former cannot.

    – MooseBoys
    12 hours ago














31












31








31








I have booked my flight from London to Iceland. The flight ticket says London Heathrow Apt - Reykjavik Keflavik Internationl Apt. I checked on Google Maps; it shows Reykjavik Domestic, Reykjavik International, and Keflavik International - all three as different airports (although the first two are very close or probably the same, whereas Keflavik one is far from the other two; about 41 mins drive according to Google Maps).



Now I need to hire a car from the airport. Which airport should I request car hire from?










share|improve this question
















I have booked my flight from London to Iceland. The flight ticket says London Heathrow Apt - Reykjavik Keflavik Internationl Apt. I checked on Google Maps; it shows Reykjavik Domestic, Reykjavik International, and Keflavik International - all three as different airports (although the first two are very close or probably the same, whereas Keflavik one is far from the other two; about 41 mins drive according to Google Maps).



Now I need to hire a car from the airport. Which airport should I request car hire from?







airports iceland reykjavik kef icelandair






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 28 mins ago









V2Blast

1154




1154










asked 2 days ago









ShrilekhaShrilekha

396310




396310








  • 2





    Note that the pattern seems to be [City name] [Airport name]

    – Andrew T.
    yesterday






  • 2





    As a tip, you should rely more on the IATA airport code than the airport name itself. The latter can change, the former cannot.

    – MooseBoys
    12 hours ago














  • 2





    Note that the pattern seems to be [City name] [Airport name]

    – Andrew T.
    yesterday






  • 2





    As a tip, you should rely more on the IATA airport code than the airport name itself. The latter can change, the former cannot.

    – MooseBoys
    12 hours ago








2




2





Note that the pattern seems to be [City name] [Airport name]

– Andrew T.
yesterday





Note that the pattern seems to be [City name] [Airport name]

– Andrew T.
yesterday




2




2





As a tip, you should rely more on the IATA airport code than the airport name itself. The latter can change, the former cannot.

– MooseBoys
12 hours ago





As a tip, you should rely more on the IATA airport code than the airport name itself. The latter can change, the former cannot.

– MooseBoys
12 hours ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















50














You will be arriving at Keflavik (KEF), which is a 40-ish minute drive outside Reykjavik. Keflavik is now the main airport for Reykjavik, and all the car hire agencies have a presence there.






share|improve this answer


























  • Thank you, that's very useful info for me. I just wanted to be sure since I am travelling first time to Iceland and want to avoid any surprises.

    – Shrilekha
    yesterday






  • 16





    @Shrilekha Oh, but Iceland is full of surprises; it's fantastic that way.

    – Strawberry
    yesterday






  • 1





    @Strawberry: As in "Surprise! we're being diverted to Ísafjörður?"

    – RedGrittyBrick
    17 hours ago






  • 7





    @RedGrittyBrick "This is your captain speaking. Due to bad weather at Reykjavík, we've been diverted to Eye-suhf... er, Ee-suh... Um. We're going back to London. Sorry about that!"

    – David Richerby
    17 hours ago











  • It's a quite a nice airport too.

    – mythofechelon
    12 hours ago



















63














Google is wrong. There are two airports "in" Reykjavík: Reykjavík Airport, which is close to town and serves only domestic destinations and Greenland, and Keflavík International Airport, a.k.a. Reykjavík Keflavík, which is 50km to the west and which has all the international flights.



If you search Google Maps for "Reykjavik International Airport", it incorrectly marks a spot within Reykjavík [domestic] airport and marks it "Reykjavik International Airport". There is no such thing as "Reykjavik International Airport".



In all cases, the way to be sure which airport you're going to is to look at the IATA code, which is a three-letter code that will appear in your booking confirmation and on your boarding pass. Reykjavík Airport is RKV; Keflavík is KEF.






share|improve this answer





















  • 21





    +1 for "teaching to fish" by referring to IATA codes.

    – Angew
    yesterday






  • 1





    I guess technically RKV is international (there are flights to Nuuk, which is in Greeenland).

    – xuq01
    yesterday






  • 1





    RKV has seasonal international flights to the Faroe Isles (Vagar) as well as to Greenland. And isn't any airport in which someone can land their own plane flying in from abroad, technically international?

    – gerrit
    19 hours ago






  • 1





    @gerrit One can have a discussion about whether Reykjavík Airport is an international airport. But it certainly is not "Reykjavík International Airport" with a capital I and a capital A.

    – David Richerby
    17 hours ago



















0














In Rvk, there are officially 2 airports. One is called "international" but large planes can't land there because the strip is too short. There's an agency where you can buy plane tickets, though :).






share|improve this answer








New contributor




Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




























    0














    If you are travelling from London, then you are going to land on the International airport not the domestic one. This would be KEF and is approx. 30 miles (49.5 km) away from Reykjavík.
    In terms of transportation, you can always hire a car on arrival, the rates aren't high and is economical too. If you require recommendations for which car rental company to use let me know, I would be able to advise on that. Cheers!






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.




















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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      50














      You will be arriving at Keflavik (KEF), which is a 40-ish minute drive outside Reykjavik. Keflavik is now the main airport for Reykjavik, and all the car hire agencies have a presence there.






      share|improve this answer


























      • Thank you, that's very useful info for me. I just wanted to be sure since I am travelling first time to Iceland and want to avoid any surprises.

        – Shrilekha
        yesterday






      • 16





        @Shrilekha Oh, but Iceland is full of surprises; it's fantastic that way.

        – Strawberry
        yesterday






      • 1





        @Strawberry: As in "Surprise! we're being diverted to Ísafjörður?"

        – RedGrittyBrick
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @RedGrittyBrick "This is your captain speaking. Due to bad weather at Reykjavík, we've been diverted to Eye-suhf... er, Ee-suh... Um. We're going back to London. Sorry about that!"

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago











      • It's a quite a nice airport too.

        – mythofechelon
        12 hours ago
















      50














      You will be arriving at Keflavik (KEF), which is a 40-ish minute drive outside Reykjavik. Keflavik is now the main airport for Reykjavik, and all the car hire agencies have a presence there.






      share|improve this answer


























      • Thank you, that's very useful info for me. I just wanted to be sure since I am travelling first time to Iceland and want to avoid any surprises.

        – Shrilekha
        yesterday






      • 16





        @Shrilekha Oh, but Iceland is full of surprises; it's fantastic that way.

        – Strawberry
        yesterday






      • 1





        @Strawberry: As in "Surprise! we're being diverted to Ísafjörður?"

        – RedGrittyBrick
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @RedGrittyBrick "This is your captain speaking. Due to bad weather at Reykjavík, we've been diverted to Eye-suhf... er, Ee-suh... Um. We're going back to London. Sorry about that!"

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago











      • It's a quite a nice airport too.

        – mythofechelon
        12 hours ago














      50












      50








      50







      You will be arriving at Keflavik (KEF), which is a 40-ish minute drive outside Reykjavik. Keflavik is now the main airport for Reykjavik, and all the car hire agencies have a presence there.






      share|improve this answer















      You will be arriving at Keflavik (KEF), which is a 40-ish minute drive outside Reykjavik. Keflavik is now the main airport for Reykjavik, and all the car hire agencies have a presence there.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 4 hours ago









      smci

      1,121912




      1,121912










      answered 2 days ago









      Greg HewgillGreg Hewgill

      26.6k372100




      26.6k372100













      • Thank you, that's very useful info for me. I just wanted to be sure since I am travelling first time to Iceland and want to avoid any surprises.

        – Shrilekha
        yesterday






      • 16





        @Shrilekha Oh, but Iceland is full of surprises; it's fantastic that way.

        – Strawberry
        yesterday






      • 1





        @Strawberry: As in "Surprise! we're being diverted to Ísafjörður?"

        – RedGrittyBrick
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @RedGrittyBrick "This is your captain speaking. Due to bad weather at Reykjavík, we've been diverted to Eye-suhf... er, Ee-suh... Um. We're going back to London. Sorry about that!"

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago











      • It's a quite a nice airport too.

        – mythofechelon
        12 hours ago



















      • Thank you, that's very useful info for me. I just wanted to be sure since I am travelling first time to Iceland and want to avoid any surprises.

        – Shrilekha
        yesterday






      • 16





        @Shrilekha Oh, but Iceland is full of surprises; it's fantastic that way.

        – Strawberry
        yesterday






      • 1





        @Strawberry: As in "Surprise! we're being diverted to Ísafjörður?"

        – RedGrittyBrick
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        @RedGrittyBrick "This is your captain speaking. Due to bad weather at Reykjavík, we've been diverted to Eye-suhf... er, Ee-suh... Um. We're going back to London. Sorry about that!"

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago











      • It's a quite a nice airport too.

        – mythofechelon
        12 hours ago

















      Thank you, that's very useful info for me. I just wanted to be sure since I am travelling first time to Iceland and want to avoid any surprises.

      – Shrilekha
      yesterday





      Thank you, that's very useful info for me. I just wanted to be sure since I am travelling first time to Iceland and want to avoid any surprises.

      – Shrilekha
      yesterday




      16




      16





      @Shrilekha Oh, but Iceland is full of surprises; it's fantastic that way.

      – Strawberry
      yesterday





      @Shrilekha Oh, but Iceland is full of surprises; it's fantastic that way.

      – Strawberry
      yesterday




      1




      1





      @Strawberry: As in "Surprise! we're being diverted to Ísafjörður?"

      – RedGrittyBrick
      17 hours ago





      @Strawberry: As in "Surprise! we're being diverted to Ísafjörður?"

      – RedGrittyBrick
      17 hours ago




      7




      7





      @RedGrittyBrick "This is your captain speaking. Due to bad weather at Reykjavík, we've been diverted to Eye-suhf... er, Ee-suh... Um. We're going back to London. Sorry about that!"

      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago





      @RedGrittyBrick "This is your captain speaking. Due to bad weather at Reykjavík, we've been diverted to Eye-suhf... er, Ee-suh... Um. We're going back to London. Sorry about that!"

      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago













      It's a quite a nice airport too.

      – mythofechelon
      12 hours ago





      It's a quite a nice airport too.

      – mythofechelon
      12 hours ago













      63














      Google is wrong. There are two airports "in" Reykjavík: Reykjavík Airport, which is close to town and serves only domestic destinations and Greenland, and Keflavík International Airport, a.k.a. Reykjavík Keflavík, which is 50km to the west and which has all the international flights.



      If you search Google Maps for "Reykjavik International Airport", it incorrectly marks a spot within Reykjavík [domestic] airport and marks it "Reykjavik International Airport". There is no such thing as "Reykjavik International Airport".



      In all cases, the way to be sure which airport you're going to is to look at the IATA code, which is a three-letter code that will appear in your booking confirmation and on your boarding pass. Reykjavík Airport is RKV; Keflavík is KEF.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 21





        +1 for "teaching to fish" by referring to IATA codes.

        – Angew
        yesterday






      • 1





        I guess technically RKV is international (there are flights to Nuuk, which is in Greeenland).

        – xuq01
        yesterday






      • 1





        RKV has seasonal international flights to the Faroe Isles (Vagar) as well as to Greenland. And isn't any airport in which someone can land their own plane flying in from abroad, technically international?

        – gerrit
        19 hours ago






      • 1





        @gerrit One can have a discussion about whether Reykjavík Airport is an international airport. But it certainly is not "Reykjavík International Airport" with a capital I and a capital A.

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago
















      63














      Google is wrong. There are two airports "in" Reykjavík: Reykjavík Airport, which is close to town and serves only domestic destinations and Greenland, and Keflavík International Airport, a.k.a. Reykjavík Keflavík, which is 50km to the west and which has all the international flights.



      If you search Google Maps for "Reykjavik International Airport", it incorrectly marks a spot within Reykjavík [domestic] airport and marks it "Reykjavik International Airport". There is no such thing as "Reykjavik International Airport".



      In all cases, the way to be sure which airport you're going to is to look at the IATA code, which is a three-letter code that will appear in your booking confirmation and on your boarding pass. Reykjavík Airport is RKV; Keflavík is KEF.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 21





        +1 for "teaching to fish" by referring to IATA codes.

        – Angew
        yesterday






      • 1





        I guess technically RKV is international (there are flights to Nuuk, which is in Greeenland).

        – xuq01
        yesterday






      • 1





        RKV has seasonal international flights to the Faroe Isles (Vagar) as well as to Greenland. And isn't any airport in which someone can land their own plane flying in from abroad, technically international?

        – gerrit
        19 hours ago






      • 1





        @gerrit One can have a discussion about whether Reykjavík Airport is an international airport. But it certainly is not "Reykjavík International Airport" with a capital I and a capital A.

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago














      63












      63








      63







      Google is wrong. There are two airports "in" Reykjavík: Reykjavík Airport, which is close to town and serves only domestic destinations and Greenland, and Keflavík International Airport, a.k.a. Reykjavík Keflavík, which is 50km to the west and which has all the international flights.



      If you search Google Maps for "Reykjavik International Airport", it incorrectly marks a spot within Reykjavík [domestic] airport and marks it "Reykjavik International Airport". There is no such thing as "Reykjavik International Airport".



      In all cases, the way to be sure which airport you're going to is to look at the IATA code, which is a three-letter code that will appear in your booking confirmation and on your boarding pass. Reykjavík Airport is RKV; Keflavík is KEF.






      share|improve this answer















      Google is wrong. There are two airports "in" Reykjavík: Reykjavík Airport, which is close to town and serves only domestic destinations and Greenland, and Keflavík International Airport, a.k.a. Reykjavík Keflavík, which is 50km to the west and which has all the international flights.



      If you search Google Maps for "Reykjavik International Airport", it incorrectly marks a spot within Reykjavík [domestic] airport and marks it "Reykjavik International Airport". There is no such thing as "Reykjavik International Airport".



      In all cases, the way to be sure which airport you're going to is to look at the IATA code, which is a three-letter code that will appear in your booking confirmation and on your boarding pass. Reykjavík Airport is RKV; Keflavík is KEF.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 17 hours ago

























      answered yesterday









      David RicherbyDavid Richerby

      12.6k84482




      12.6k84482








      • 21





        +1 for "teaching to fish" by referring to IATA codes.

        – Angew
        yesterday






      • 1





        I guess technically RKV is international (there are flights to Nuuk, which is in Greeenland).

        – xuq01
        yesterday






      • 1





        RKV has seasonal international flights to the Faroe Isles (Vagar) as well as to Greenland. And isn't any airport in which someone can land their own plane flying in from abroad, technically international?

        – gerrit
        19 hours ago






      • 1





        @gerrit One can have a discussion about whether Reykjavík Airport is an international airport. But it certainly is not "Reykjavík International Airport" with a capital I and a capital A.

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago














      • 21





        +1 for "teaching to fish" by referring to IATA codes.

        – Angew
        yesterday






      • 1





        I guess technically RKV is international (there are flights to Nuuk, which is in Greeenland).

        – xuq01
        yesterday






      • 1





        RKV has seasonal international flights to the Faroe Isles (Vagar) as well as to Greenland. And isn't any airport in which someone can land their own plane flying in from abroad, technically international?

        – gerrit
        19 hours ago






      • 1





        @gerrit One can have a discussion about whether Reykjavík Airport is an international airport. But it certainly is not "Reykjavík International Airport" with a capital I and a capital A.

        – David Richerby
        17 hours ago








      21




      21





      +1 for "teaching to fish" by referring to IATA codes.

      – Angew
      yesterday





      +1 for "teaching to fish" by referring to IATA codes.

      – Angew
      yesterday




      1




      1





      I guess technically RKV is international (there are flights to Nuuk, which is in Greeenland).

      – xuq01
      yesterday





      I guess technically RKV is international (there are flights to Nuuk, which is in Greeenland).

      – xuq01
      yesterday




      1




      1





      RKV has seasonal international flights to the Faroe Isles (Vagar) as well as to Greenland. And isn't any airport in which someone can land their own plane flying in from abroad, technically international?

      – gerrit
      19 hours ago





      RKV has seasonal international flights to the Faroe Isles (Vagar) as well as to Greenland. And isn't any airport in which someone can land their own plane flying in from abroad, technically international?

      – gerrit
      19 hours ago




      1




      1





      @gerrit One can have a discussion about whether Reykjavík Airport is an international airport. But it certainly is not "Reykjavík International Airport" with a capital I and a capital A.

      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago





      @gerrit One can have a discussion about whether Reykjavík Airport is an international airport. But it certainly is not "Reykjavík International Airport" with a capital I and a capital A.

      – David Richerby
      17 hours ago











      0














      In Rvk, there are officially 2 airports. One is called "international" but large planes can't land there because the strip is too short. There's an agency where you can buy plane tickets, though :).






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.

























        0














        In Rvk, there are officially 2 airports. One is called "international" but large planes can't land there because the strip is too short. There's an agency where you can buy plane tickets, though :).






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.























          0












          0








          0







          In Rvk, there are officially 2 airports. One is called "international" but large planes can't land there because the strip is too short. There's an agency where you can buy plane tickets, though :).






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.










          In Rvk, there are officially 2 airports. One is called "international" but large planes can't land there because the strip is too short. There's an agency where you can buy plane tickets, though :).







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer






          New contributor




          Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          answered 13 hours ago









          Alain ReveAlain Reve

          1




          1




          New contributor




          Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.





          New contributor





          Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.






          Alain Reve is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.























              0














              If you are travelling from London, then you are going to land on the International airport not the domestic one. This would be KEF and is approx. 30 miles (49.5 km) away from Reykjavík.
              In terms of transportation, you can always hire a car on arrival, the rates aren't high and is economical too. If you require recommendations for which car rental company to use let me know, I would be able to advise on that. Cheers!






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                0














                If you are travelling from London, then you are going to land on the International airport not the domestic one. This would be KEF and is approx. 30 miles (49.5 km) away from Reykjavík.
                In terms of transportation, you can always hire a car on arrival, the rates aren't high and is economical too. If you require recommendations for which car rental company to use let me know, I would be able to advise on that. Cheers!






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  If you are travelling from London, then you are going to land on the International airport not the domestic one. This would be KEF and is approx. 30 miles (49.5 km) away from Reykjavík.
                  In terms of transportation, you can always hire a car on arrival, the rates aren't high and is economical too. If you require recommendations for which car rental company to use let me know, I would be able to advise on that. Cheers!






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                  If you are travelling from London, then you are going to land on the International airport not the domestic one. This would be KEF and is approx. 30 miles (49.5 km) away from Reykjavík.
                  In terms of transportation, you can always hire a car on arrival, the rates aren't high and is economical too. If you require recommendations for which car rental company to use let me know, I would be able to advise on that. Cheers!







                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






                  New contributor




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                  answered 13 hours ago









                  NickNick

                  13




                  13




                  New contributor




                  Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                  New contributor





                  Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






                  Nick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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