United States Indonesia Brazil Portugal Singapore Italy United Kingdom Germany France Hong Kong Canada Spain Australia Russia Thailand Mexico Japan Malaysia South Korea India Netherlands Saudi Arabia Turkey Belgium Poland Vietnam Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Austria Philippines Greece Ukraine New Zealand Czech Republic Argentina Israel Denmark Chile Dominican Republic Colombia Hungary Norway South Africa Egypt Romania Pakistan United Arab Emirates Ireland Serbia Finland Morocco Slovakia Puerto Rico Sri Lanka Venezuela Belarus Peru Algeria Costa Rica Iran Slovenia Bulgaria Croatia Kuwait Guatemala Ecuador China Lebanon Estonia Jordan Latvia Mauritius Tunisia Lithuania Reunion Bangladesh Kenya Bahrain Panama North Macedonia Qatar Moldova Cambodia Bolivia Cyprus Iraq El Salvador Palestinian Territory Iceland Kazakhstan Bosnia and Herzegovina Cote D'Ivoire Laos Malta Albania Uruguay Macao Georgia Nepal Jamaica Maldives Sudan Syria Brunei Darussalam Ghana Uzbekistan Yemen Azerbaijan Paraguay Myanmar Cuba Libya New Caledonia Mongolia Uganda French Polynesia Nigeria Netherlands Antilles Trinidad and Tobago Honduras Oman Ethiopia Guam Luxembourg Zambia Guadeloupe Bahamas Cabo Verde Senegal Barbados Nicaragua Haiti Madagascar Angola Gabon Zimbabwe Afghanistan Greenland Benin Martinique Monaco Democratic Republic of the Congo Saint Lucia Kyrgyzstan Aland Islands Mali Eritrea U.S. Virgin Islands Andorra Botswana Tanzania Rwanda Guyana Northern Mariana Islands Aruba Palau Seychelles Sierra Leone Mozambique Armenia San Marino Dominica Tajikistan Cameroon Iceland Flag Meaning & Details 10 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