Moving from France to Iceland
A practical guide to shipping a home from France to Iceland by sea, the realistic timeline to Reykjavik, why customs still apply even within Europe, the duty free relief for people transferring residence, and the steps that fit this corridor.
France to Iceland is a sea move where customs still apply, but a transfer of residence brings relief.
Moving a household from France to Iceland is an ocean shipment across the North Atlantic. Containers leave a continental load point, often consolidated through Rotterdam or a northern European hub on the regular Iceland liner service, and sail to Reykjavik, where almost all household goods enter the country. From the port at Sundahofn your goods clear customs and move the short distance to your new home in the capital area, or on to Akureyri or wherever you are settling.
The point that surprises people is customs. Iceland sits inside the European Economic Area, so people move freely, but it is outside the European Union customs union. That means your used household goods are formally imported and must be declared, even though you are moving within Europe. The good news is that Iceland Revenue and Customs, known as Skatturinn, grants relief on a home inventory for people transferring their residence, so a properly documented move of used personal effects is normally admitted free of duty and value added tax.
As an indicative range for 2026, a one bedroom move runs roughly €2,800 to €4,500 in shared space, while a full three bedroom home in sole use lands around €8,500 to €12,000 door to door. The freight is the simple part. The planning sits in your inventory and your registration, because the kennitala, the personal identity number, is what unlocks tax, banking and almost every formal step on arrival.
What shipping a household from France to Iceland costs in 2026.
Indicative ranges in euros for 2026. Sea freight on this lane is priced by the volume you ship and whether you share container space or take a sole use box, with the North Atlantic service setting the rhythm.
Indicative ranges for 2026, in euros. Real quotes depend on your volume, the French loading point, season, the Reykjavik clearance and the delivery distance to your Icelandic address.
- +You pay only for the space your goods occupy
- +Best value for a one bedroom
- −Consolidation adds time before the sailing
- −Sailing date depends on the load completing
- +Fits a typical two bedroom home
- +Your goods travel alone and are handled less
- +Faster and on your own schedule
- −You pay for the box even if part empty
- +Days rather than weeks in transit
- +Good for essentials you need quickly
- −Far more expensive per cubic metre
- −Best kept to a small, careful selection
Get moving quotes for France to Iceland.
Tell us your size and timing. We pass your request to vetted international movers who run the France to Iceland lane, and you compare them on your own terms.
A realistic schedule for this route.
A conservative schedule for a France to Iceland move. The fixed points are your sailing date and your home inventory documents, so prepare both early.
Book the move and take a survey
Get a binding in home or video survey of your volume from movers who run the France to Iceland lane, and choose shared space or a sole use container.
Prepare your inventory
Build a detailed, valued inventory of your used household goods, which supports both insurance and the Skatturinn relief for a transfer of residence. Confirm you meet the ownership and residence conditions.
Pack and load in France
Movers pack and load your goods at your French address, then move the container to the load point that feeds the Iceland sailing.
North Atlantic crossing
The box sails to Reykjavik, often via a northern European hub. This is the longest and least visible stretch of the move.
Customs clearance at Reykjavik
Your agent declares the goods to Skatturinn and applies the transfer of residence relief. Accurate documents and a registered legal residence keep this step smooth.
Register and get your kennitala
Register your legal residence with Registers Iceland, obtain your kennitala, and set up tax and banking so daily life can begin.
Bringing used household goods into Iceland.
Iceland is in the European Economic Area but outside the European Union customs union, so a move from France is a formal import. Used household goods are declared to Iceland Revenue and Customs, known as Skatturinn. A home inventory is admitted free of duty and value added tax for people transferring their residence, provided the conditions are met: you had your permanent residence abroad for at least twelve months before moving, the goods have been owned and used by you for at least a year, you register your legal residence in Iceland, and the goods arrive within six months of your move.
The practical work is documentary. Prepare a clear, valued inventory, keep proof of prior residence and ownership, and have your registration in hand, because the relief depends on these. New items, goods that cannot be considered part of the actual household inventory, and anything outside normal personal effects can attract charges. Vehicles, alcohol and tobacco above allowances, and any restricted items follow their own rules and are handled separately from the home inventory.
The routes in for this corridor.
As a French citizen you have the right to live and work in Iceland under European Economic Area free movement, so there is no visa to apply for. You register your residence and obtain your personal identity number rather than seeking permission to stay. Non EU family members follow a different path.
French and other EEA citizens can live, work and study in Iceland without a visa. For stays beyond three months you register your right of residence and obtain a kennitala through Registers Iceland.
Family members who are not EEA citizens can join you in Iceland and apply for residence on family grounds. The process is lighter than a standard third country route, but still requires documentation.
If you are not an EEA citizen but are relocating from France, you will generally need a work and residence permit arranged through the Directorate of Immigration before you move.
Iceland's universities and research institutions draw people from France, with residence granted for the duration of an accepted programme. Conditions and proof of means apply.
How to pick a mover for this route, without the guesswork.
We do not rank or recommend individual companies. We teach you the criteria that separate a safe international move from an expensive mistake, then put your request in front of vetted movers who run this lane.
Check the trade affiliation. Membership of FIDI or IAM is the clearest signal a mover is financially screened and bound to industry standards for international household goods. In France, look for movers affiliated with FIDI or IAM and ask directly about their sailings onto the Iceland liner service, their experience with Skatturinn clearance and the transfer of residence relief, and their delivery network in the Reykjavik capital area.
Insist on a binding pre move survey. A real video or in home survey of your volume is the only honest basis for a price. A quote given without one is a guess that tends to grow on moving day.
Compare like for like. Read what each quote includes: packing, materials, customs clearance, destination delivery, stair or long carry charges, and insurance. The cheapest headline number is rarely the cheapest move.
Understand the insurance terms. Ask whether cover is full replacement value or depreciated, what the excess is, and how claims are handled. Read the valuation clause before you sign.
Read recent reviews for this corridor. A mover can be excellent locally and weak on international shipments. Look for verified reviews that mention the actual route and customs experience.
Questions people ask about this move.
How much does it cost to move from France to Iceland?
As an indicative range for 2026, a one bedroom move runs about €2,800 to €4,500 in shared container space, and a full three bedroom home in sole use lands around €8,500 to €12,000 door to door. Your real price depends on volume, season and the delivery distance in Iceland.
How long does shipping take from France to Iceland?
Plan on roughly four to seven weeks door to door for a sole use container and six to ten weeks for a shared load. Goods sail to Reykjavik, often via a northern European hub, which adds time before the Atlantic crossing.
Do I pay duty on my furniture moving to Iceland?
Usually no. Iceland is outside the EU customs union, so the goods are imported and declared, but Skatturinn grants relief on a home inventory for people transferring residence who meet the ownership and prior residence conditions. A well documented move of used effects is normally admitted free of duty and value added tax.
Can I bring my car from France to Iceland?
Yes, but a vehicle follows its own rules separate from your home inventory, with potential charges and a registration process in Iceland. Many people sell in France and buy locally. Confirm the current vehicle requirements before shipping a car.
What number will I need in Iceland?
You will need a kennitala, the personal identity number, obtained when you register your legal residence with Registers Iceland. It is used for tax, banking, healthcare and almost every formal transaction, so arrange it soon after arrival.
Last reviewed: 30 April 2026. We refresh this guide as costs, customs, and visa rules change.