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Iceland to hold EU referendum ‘in the coming months’, PM says

By Thomson Reuters Feb 25, 2026 | 11:09 AM

WARSAW, Feb 25 (Reuters) – Iceland will hold a referendum “in the coming months” on restarting European Union accession talks, Prime Minister Kristrun ​Frostadottir said on Wednesday during a visit ‌to Poland.

Reykjavik abandoned EU membership talks in 2013 after four years of negotiations, but a rise in the cost of living and the war in Ukraine have helped ‌rekindle ​the island nation’s interest in ⁠joining the bloc, opinion ⁠polls have shown.

Repeated threats by U.S. President Donald Trump to annex Greenland, which is located between Iceland and the United States, have also ​made the question of EU membership more pressing for Iceland, which is home to almost ⁠400,000 people.

“In the coming ⁠months we are going to have ​a referendum on opening up the negotiations, the accession ​negotiations for Iceland to possibly join the ‌EU,” Frostadottir told a joint press conference with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk.

Iceland’s centre-left government, which came to power after a snap election in ⁠2024, had promised to hold a referendum no later than next year on restarting talks with the EU.

Frostadottir ⁠said reopening the ‌talks was about “opening an opportunity” ⁠for Iceland and pursuing better integration ​for the ‌country in Europe.

Iceland is already part ​of the ⁠EU’s single market, the Schengen open-border travel zone, and the European Free Trade Association. It is also a NATO member.

(Reporting by Essi Lehto, Barbara Erling and Louise Rasmussen, editing by Gwladys Fouche and ​Gareth Jones)