How to Spend Three Perfect Days in the Faroe Islands

With charming new hotels and gourmet restaurants, the remote Scandinavian archipelago is ready for a new wave of visitors.

The Múlafossur waterfall on Vágar Island falls from a cliff into the sea in the Faroe Islands
The Múlafossur waterfall on Vágar Island. Photo: Getty Images

There's a monumental beauty to the Faroes, a necklace of 18 volcanic isles in the North Atlantic between Norway, Scotland, and Iceland. Jagged cliffs drop into fjords, waterfalls spray toward the sky on gusty winds, and thick fog envelops stark moorlands (the Faroese language has 40 words for the meteorological phenomenon). It's tempting to get lost amid these landscapes while imagining yourself a shepherd or a Viking settler.

Faroese landscape with idyllic village Gjogv, most northern village on the island of Eysturoy.
The idyllic village Gjogv is the most northern village on the island of Eysturoy. iStockphoto/Getty Images

But with the recent debuts of smart hotels, gourmet restaurants, and charming cafés—plus a maze of roads, bridges, and tunnels connecting the islands—it's worth seeing what modernity has to offer, too. This road-trip itinerary winds around three of the archipelago's largest islands, combining sights that are new, ancient, and otherworldly.

Day 1

Home to the main airport, Vágar Island has six villages, the smallest of which, Gásadalur, has only 10 full-time residents. You're here to see Múlafossur, a magnificent waterfall that drops 500 feet into the North Atlantic. From there, drive 20 minutes south to colorful Sandavágur, a village wedged between a frigid bay and the western slope of Trollkonufinger Mountain. After snapping photos of the town's red-roofed church, built during World War I, swing by Fiskastykkið (entrées $16–$19), a café that serves Nordic specialties like hot-smoked-salmon salad with braised rhubarb. Spend the night in a traditional grass-roofed cottage at View to Drangarnar, Tindholm end Mykines (house from $369), in the village of Bøur.

Smoked fish on rye bread at Fiskastykkið café in the Faroe Islands
Smoked fish on rye bread at Fiskastykkið café. Jana Jonhardsdóttir

Day 2

A 45-minute drive (part of which winds through a tunnel) brings you to the capital, Tórshavn, located on the island of Streymoy. Here, you'll find brightly painted houses and atmospheric pubs alongside sod-roofed dwellings and 19th-century churches. Browse traditional yet on-trend Faroese knitwear at Ullvøruhúsið, then stop by the National Gallery of the Faroe Islands to admire seascapes by renowned homegrown painter Sámal Joensen-Mikines. Enjoy a slice of wild-berry cheesecake in the sunny backyard of the Paname Café. Or splurge on a 17-course tasting menu at Koks (tasting menus from $310), a Michelin two-starred restaurant set inside a 280-year-old farmhouse on Lake Leynar. The restaurant uses regional practices of salting, smoking, and fermenting to concoct creative plates like steamed deep-sea crab with pickled-leek jam. After a day of sightseeing, retire at the Havgrím Seaside Hotel (doubles from $425), a former private residence recently transformed into an elegant coastal escape, with 14 rooms done up in shades of powder blue and cream.

A couple enjoys the view of Tórshavn and the Faroe Islands from their room at the Havgrim Seaside Hotel
The view from the Commodore Suite at the Havgrím Seaside Hotel. Courtesy of Havgrím Seaside Hotel 1948

Day 3

Last month saw the unveiling of a new tunnel—complete with a light installation by Faroese artist Tróndur Patursson—connecting the islands of Streymoy and Eysturoy. Once you've arrived on Eysturoy, head north toward Gjógv, a quaint village named for the sea-filled gorge that runs through it. Order a glass of wine at Gjáarkaffi, a stone-walled café with bright red trim and picnic seating. Afterward, check in to your simple, homey room at Gjáargarður Guesthouse (doubles from $165), where there's live music and Faroese folk dancing every Wednesday evening.

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