United States Brazil China Canada South Africa India Russia France Philippines Nigeria Italy Portugal United Kingdom Singapore Germany Greece Ethiopia Pakistan Ireland Australia Czech Republic Spain Mexico Romania Indonesia Serbia Argentina Ukraine Turkey Netherlands Malaysia Finland Colombia Japan Ecuador Poland Bangladesh Hong Kong Armenia Zambia Belarus Uganda Switzerland Chile Lebanon Kenya Sri Lanka Thailand Vietnam Ghana Belgium United Arab Emirates Puerto Rico Cambodia Panama Kuwait Peru Sweden Tanzania South Korea Angola Dominican Republic Iraq Mauritius Egypt Cameroon Malta Slovakia Saudi Arabia Morocco Jamaica Venezuela Hungary Reunion Estonia North Macedonia Nepal Oman Albania Austria Lithuania Bulgaria Norway Slovenia American Samoa Paraguay Bolivia Mongolia Myanmar Denmark Israel Georgia Seychelles New Zealand Bahamas Afghanistan Madagascar Bahrain Croatia Fiji Trinidad and Tobago Cyprus Uruguay Moldova Tunisia Rwanda Sint Maarten Costa Rica Azerbaijan Kazakhstan Cayman Islands Kyrgyzstan Saint Kitts and Nevis Cote D'Ivoire Benin Liberia Turks and Caicos Islands Montenegro Honduras Guatemala Latvia Laos Martinique Saint Lucia Jordan Namibia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Zimbabwe Botswana Sudan Democratic Republic of the Congo Algeria Togo Faroe Islands Gibraltar Dominica Iceland Guadeloupe French Polynesia Palestinian Territory El Salvador Yemen Nicaragua U.S. Virgin Islands Sierra Leone Lesotho Aruba Papua New Guinea Gambia Solomon Islands Vanuatu Curacao Barbados Kosovo Brunei Darussalam Mozambique Cabo Verde Haiti Senegal Guernsey Bhutan Taiwan Gabon Iceland Flag Meaning & Details 1 VISITOR 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