Taiwan United States Hong Kong Malaysia Singapore Japan Canada Australia United Kingdom Macao Germany New Zealand France China South Korea Indonesia Vietnam Thailand Netherlands Philippines South Africa Spain Italy Brazil Switzerland Belgium Austria Sweden Mexico Poland Argentina Russia India Ireland Costa Rica Ecuador Turkey United Arab Emirates Brunei Darussalam Finland Denmark Cambodia Czech Republic Chile Guam Bolivia Norway Saudi Arabia Paraguay Belize Hungary Slovakia Portugal Panama Qatar Guatemala Nicaragua Myanmar Honduras El Salvador Dominican Republic Jordan Venezuela Greece Colombia Saint Lucia Ukraine Peru Israel Lesotho Bangladesh Morocco Nigeria Palau Mauritius Romania Luxembourg Egypt Fiji Algeria Sri Lanka Iceland Barbados Estonia Kuwait Reunion Eswatini Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Serbia Namibia Bulgaria Isle of Man Laos Mauritania Angola Marshall Islands Northern Mariana Islands Nepal Bahrain Solomon Islands Mozambique Mongolia Netherlands Antilles Kenya Sao Tome and Principe Liechtenstein French Polynesia Puerto Rico Burkina Faso Trinidad and Tobago Saint Kitts and Nevis Lebanon Zimbabwe Tunisia Oman Bermuda Ghana Gabon Jersey Iran Pakistan Senegal Nauru Bosnia and Herzegovina Malta Zambia Aruba Slovenia Madagascar Ethiopia Azerbaijan Cyprus Mali Tanzania Seychelles Georgia Armenia Belarus Latvia Christmas Island New Caledonia Syria U.S. Virgin Islands Iraq Papua New Guinea Moldova North Macedonia Democratic Republic of the Congo French Guiana Kazakhstan Croatia Uganda Guernsey Cameroon Kiribati Lithuania Uruguay Guinea Cote D'Ivoire Suriname Bhutan Uzbekistan Libya Iceland Flag Meaning & Details 9 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