Human trafficking in Iceland

Iceland ratified the 2000 UN TIP Protocol in June 2010.

In 2010 Iceland was a destination and transit country for women subjected to human trafficking, specifically forced prostitution. Some reports maintained Iceland also may have been a destination country for men and women who were subjected to conditions of forced labor in the restaurant and construction industries. A 2009 Icelandic Red Cross report claimed that there were at least 59 and possibly as many as 128 cases of human trafficking in Iceland over the previous three years; female victims of human trafficking in Iceland came from Eastern Europe, Russia, Africa, South America and Southeast Asia. During the reporting period, foreign women working in Iceland's strip clubs or in brothels were vulnerable to sex trafficking. According to the Red Cross report, undocumented foreign workers - mostly from Eastern Europe - in Iceland's manufacturing and construction industries were vulnerable to forced labor. During the reporting period, local authorities were unable to document cases of forced labor but did acknowledge violations of immigration or employment law.

In 2010 the Government of Iceland did not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking; however, it made significant efforts to do so and has shown a great deal of political will to deal with the problem. Iceland made substantial progress in investigating and prosecuting trafficking offenses during the reporting period, though victim assistance remained ad hoc. The government had yet to establish a national anti-trafficking public awareness campaign, although the amount of information available to the public about trafficking increased dramatically due to several high-profile trafficking cases and a government-sponsored anti-trafficking symposium in October 2009. In a further effort to prevent sex trafficking, the government made the purchase of sex illegal and outlawed strip clubs.

In 2012 the U.S. State Department's Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons placed Iceland at Tier 1; the country stayed there until 2017 when it was placed at Tier 2. By 2023, the country had returned to Tier 1.

In 2023, the Organised Crime Index noted the increased involvement of European criminal gangs in this crime; it also noted changes in legislation to identify and protect victims.