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Baku vs Kanazawa

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🏆 Kanazawa wins 87 OVR vs 78 · attribute matchup 25

Baku
Baku

Azerbaijan

78OVR

VS
Kanazawa
Kanazawa

Japan

87OVR

68
Safety
96
75
Affordability
70
86
Food
99
91
Culture
99
72
Nightlife
58
86
Walkability
86
72
Nature
86
81
Connectivity
90
72
Transit
72
Baku

Baku

Azerbaijan

Kanazawa

Kanazawa

Japan

Baku

Safety: 68/100Pop: 2.3MAsia/Baku

Kanazawa

Safety: 96/100Pop: 460KAsia/Tokyo

💰 Budget

budget
Baku: $35-50Kanazawa: $60–90
mid-range
Baku: $80-140Kanazawa: $130–220
luxury
Baku: $220+Kanazawa: $350–800+

🛡️ Safety

Baku68/100Safety Score96/100Kanazawa

Baku

Baku is a relatively safe city for tourists with low levels of street crime and a visible police presence. The main concerns are petty theft in crowds, unmarked taxi scams, and political sensitivities around photography and criticism of the government. Azerbaijan has ongoing conflict with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh — the military situation in the conflict zone is separate from Baku, which is far from the border. LGBTQ+ travelers should be aware that same-sex relationships are legal but not socially accepted, and public displays of affection are inadvisable.

Kanazawa

Kanazawa is one of the safest cities in Japan and therefore one of the safest cities in the world. Violent crime is virtually nonexistent; petty crime is extremely rare. The biggest practical risks for visitors are traffic-related (drivers don't always yield to pedestrians at crossings) and weather-related (ice and snow on cobblestones in winter). Solo women travellers consistently rate Kanazawa as exceptionally safe.

Ratings

Baku3/5English Friendly3/5Kanazawa
Baku4/5Walkability4/5Kanazawa
Baku3/5Public Transit3/5Kanazawa
Baku4/5Food Scene5/5Kanazawa
Baku3/5Nightlife2/5Kanazawa
Baku4/5Cultural Sites5/5Kanazawa
Baku3/5Nature Access4/5Kanazawa
Baku4/5WiFi Reliability5/5Kanazawa

🌤️ Weather

Baku

Baku has a semi-arid climate moderated by the Caspian Sea — hot dry summers, mild winters, and the persistent Khazri (north wind) that can make any season feel harsher than temperatures suggest. The city is significantly drier than its latitude would imply, receiving only about 200mm of rain per year.

Spring (March–May)10–22°C
Summer (June–September)25–38°C
Autumn (October–November)12–24°C
Winter (December–February)2–10°C

Kanazawa

Kanazawa faces the Sea of Japan, which makes it one of the cloudiest and rainiest cities in Japan — locally nicknamed "Ame no Machi" (City of Rain). Winters bring heavy snowfall due to cold air from Siberia picking up moisture over the relatively warm Sea of Japan. Summers are warm and humid. The city is beautiful in all seasons but pack a waterproof and layers for almost any time of year.

Spring (March – May)6–22°C
Summer & Autumn (June – November)15–33°C
Winter (December – February)0–9°C

🚇 Getting Around

Baku

Baku has a Soviet-built metro, a BRT bus network, and an active Bolt ride-hailing scene. The metro covers the core tourist areas well. Taxis are cheap but negotiate or use apps to avoid tourist-rate scams. The Old City itself is pedestrian only.

Walkability: High in Old City and waterfront; moderate in central Baku; low in outlying districts. The city's main tourist axis (Old City → Boulevard → Nizami Street) is walkable in 20 minutes.

Baku Metro0.40 AZN per trip (~$0.24 USD)
Bolt / Uber2–8 AZN ($1.20–4.70 USD) for most city trips
BRT & Bus Network0.30 AZN per trip

Kanazawa

Kanazawa is well-served by a network of city buses, with two tourist-oriented loop routes (Kenroku-en and Right Loop, Left Loop) covering all major sights. There is no subway or tram system. The city is compact enough to walk between many attractions in the historical districts, but the distances between Higashi Chaya, Kenroku-en, and Ninja-dera add up — a day bus pass is the best investment for most visitors.

Walkability: The three historical districts (Higashi Chaya, Nishi Chaya, Teramachi/Ninja-dera) are compact and extremely pleasant to walk within. However, they are 20–30 minutes apart on foot through modern urban streets — most visitors use the loop buses to transfer between them. Kanazawa Station to Kenroku-en is a 25-minute walk. Cobblestones are charming but hard on ankles and potentially icy in winter.

Hokutetsu Kanazawa City Bus¥210 per ride / ¥700 all-day pass (kanazawa city bus pass)
Taxi¥680 flag fall + ¥80 per additional 288m; ¥1,200–1,800 typical station-to-Kenroku-en fare
Community Cycle (Machi-nori)¥200 registration + ¥200 per 60 minutes (electric: ¥400/hr)

The Verdict

Choose Baku if...

you want the Caucasus's most dramatic contrast — UNESCO medieval Old City beneath Flame Tower skyscrapers, Gobustan's mud volcanoes, and the Zaha Hadid Center

Choose Kanazawa if...

you want Japan without the crowds — the only major city never bombed in WWII, Kenroku-en garden, the Higashi Chaya geisha district unchanged since 1820, and Omicho Market's incomparable seafood at one-third of Tokyo prices