The curve is the real spectacle
What makes Goðafoss stick in your memory is not raw height but shape. The water spreads across a 30 m (98 ft) arc before dropping 12 m (39 ft), so the scene feels broad, open, and almost theatrical rather than like a single narrow plunge. That wide sweep is why the waterfall reads so well even on a short stop.
The name belongs to Iceland's year 1000 story
The waterfall's identity is tied to one of Iceland's best-known turning points. According to the long-standing story, the lawspeaker Þorgeir chose Christianity for the country in the year 1000 AD and then threw the old pagan idols into the falls, which is why the name means Waterfall of the Gods. Nearby Þorgeirskirkja, ordained in August 2000, shows that this memory still shapes the landscape around the stop.
Two banks give you two moods
The west bank feels efficient and immediate, which is why it suits first visits so well. The east bank slows the view down and lets the curve of the water read more laterally, so photographers and repeat visitors often prefer adding both rather than declaring one side objectively better. The shift is subtle, but it is real.
Winter turns the whole stop into a different scene
In winter, Goðafoss becomes less of a quick roadside look and more of a moody encounter with ice, low light, and sound. The waterfall can feel quieter visually but stronger emotionally, because frozen edges and blowing spray slow your attention down. If you like landscapes with atmosphere, this is when the stop feels most cinematic.