
Find Prikið at the corner of Bankastræti, right in the middle of downtown Reykjavik’s shopping run – the founding year, 1951, is still painted on the sign out front. The main floor keeps things simple: a long bar with red stools, a handful of tables squeezed in by the windows, and a narrow staircase heading up to a second level. Early mornings bring regulars in for drip coffee – there’s a self-serve flask at the end of the bar and mismatched mugs lined up for refills. The smell of coffee lingers as sunlight comes through the front windows. Breakfast runs all day, with skyr pancakes, pastries, and a steady line of open-faced sandwiches, burgers, and sweet potato fries filling checkered tables by midday. The house brew is the go-to, but there’s beer on tap by afternoon and cocktails later on. Happy hour kicks off around four, and by evening, the space shifts – music comes up, crowds fill in, and the whole place takes on a pub energy. Nights here can be lively, with DJs or dancing on weekends and a regular stream of locals, students, and travelers drifting through. The vibe is always casual – wooden chairs, worn posters, and framed photos covering decades of history. Dogs sometimes curl up under tables, especially on rainy days, and the crowd changes with the hour. Some just come for breakfast, others settle in with drinks, and a few stay long enough to see the place turn from diner to bar as the night goes on. No steps at the entrance, and everything is street-level – the upstairs seats fill up when it’s busy, but most just grab any open spot. Prikið has stayed a fixture for generations, wearing each role easily: coffee shop, café, pub, and downtown meeting spot, all in one.