Brazil United States Portugal Argentina Italy Mexico France Spain Germany Chile Canada Hungary United Kingdom Russia Czech Republic Romania Venezuela Poland Turkey Peru Japan Colombia Greece Egypt Ireland Uruguay Netherlands Bulgaria Slovakia Switzerland Finland Belgium Ukraine Estonia Ecuador Algeria Sweden Thailand Vietnam Australia Serbia Puerto Rico South Africa Lithuania Kyrgyzstan Israel India Paraguay Norway Austria Philippines Costa Rica Croatia Syria Saudi Arabia Indonesia Singapore Malaysia Tunisia Denmark Angola Morocco Bolivia Cabo Verde Taiwan Slovenia Iceland Dominican Republic Jordan Albania El Salvador North Macedonia Bosnia and Herzegovina Panama Belarus Luxembourg Lebanon Pakistan Iran Guatemala Cyprus Malta United Arab Emirates Honduras Georgia South Korea Mozambique Qatar Iraq Moldova China Kazakhstan New Zealand Hong Kong Reunion Azerbaijan Palestinian Territory Montenegro Trinidad and Tobago Latvia Armenia Cote D'Ivoire Nicaragua Guadeloupe French Guiana Barbados Kuwait Jamaica Libya Martinique Namibia Cambodia Sri Lanka Suriname Mauritius Mongolia Andorra Maldives Bahamas Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Senegal Kenya Yemen Nigeria Cuba Oman Seychelles Ghana Ethiopia Macao Myanmar Bahrain Bangladesh Botswana French Polynesia Faroe Islands Belize Saint Lucia Curacao Jersey Saint Barthelemy Saint Pierre and Miquelon Nepal Sao Tome and Principe Liechtenstein Madagascar Gabon Tanzania Zimbabwe Guernsey New Caledonia Guinea-Bissau Haiti Zambia Kosovo Saint Martin San Marino Grenada Sudan Timor-Leste Uganda Iceland Flag Meaning & Details 54 VISITORS FROM HERE! Iceland Flag Flag Information blue with a red cross outlined in white extending to the edges of the flag the vertical part of the cross is shifted to the hoist side in the style of the Dannebrog (Danish flag) the colors represent three of the elements that make up the island: red is for the island's volcanic fires, white recalls the snow and ice fields of the island, and blue is for the surrounding ocean
Learn more about Iceland »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook