π Bangkok wins 77 OVR vs 74 Β· attribute matchup 5β4
Bangkok
Thailand
Mykonos
Greece
Bangkok
Mykonos
How do Bangkok and Mykonos compare?
You want chaos with a great soundtrack, and you're picking between an Asian megacity that never sleeps and a Greek island built around the dance floor. Bangkok delivers 10 million people, Sukhumvit rooftop bars on the 64th floor, Khao San Road backpacker mayhem, $2 boat noodles at Victory Monument, and Wat Arun glowing across the Chao Phraya at dusk. Mykonos is the opposite scale β a 10,000-person island where Scorpios on Paraga, Nammos on Psarou, and Cavo Paradiso's 6 AM closing sets are the entire universe, with Chora's whitewashed alleys and Delos UNESCO ruins as the daytime backdrop.
The cost gap is brutal: Bangkok runs $60/day mid-range while Mykonos sits at $280/day, almost five times more. Bangkok's BTS and MRT mean you skip traffic and never need a taxi, while Mykonos has no public transit beyond crowded buses β you're paying $30 cab rides from Chora to Super Paradise or renting an ATV. Bangkok's food scene is unmatched at any price (Jay Fai's Michelin omelette, $6 pad thai on Sukhumvit Soi 38), while Mykonos eating runs $40 grilled octopus and $25 Greek salads at Kiki's Tavern. Seasons don't overlap β Bangkok shines November through February, Mykonos peaks June through September β so a flexible year can hit both at their best.
If you want street food, neon, and a different rooftop every night for $60/day, go Bangkok. If you want sun-drenched beach clubs where the dress code is white linen and the bill is four figures, go Mykonos. Pro tip: fly into Mykonos via Athens on Aegean rather than direct from Western Europe β the connection saves you $200 round-trip and the Athens layover lets you knock out the Acropolis in a day. Pick Bangkok.
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Bangkok
Bangkok is generally safe for tourists, and violent crime against visitors is rare. The main risks are petty scams, pickpocketing in crowded areas, and reckless traffic. Use the same common sense you would in any major city. Thais are overwhelmingly friendly and helpful.
Mykonos
Mykonos is a safe destination by international standards β Greece overall has a low violent crime rate and a strong tourist police presence. The genuine risks are mostly bracketed by alcohol, scooters, and the meltemi. Petty theft picks up in peak season around Chora's densest pedestrian areas and on busier beaches; scooter and ATV rentals account for the great majority of tourist injuries; and the meltemi can be hazardous at sea. Year-round violent crime against tourists is rare.
π€οΈ Weather
Bangkok
Bangkok has a tropical climate that is hot year-round. There are three seasons: hot, rainy, and cool. Even the "cool" season rarely dips below 25Β°C. Humidity is consistently high.
Mykonos
Mykonos has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Csa) β long, dry, sun-drenched summers and mild damp winters. Annual rainfall is low (around 380 mm) and almost all of it falls between November and March. Summer humidity is moderate thanks to the meltemi, the dry north wind that defines July and August on the island. Winter is genuinely closed: most hotels, restaurants, and beach clubs shut from late October to mid-April. Sea temperatures lag the air β peak swimming is late July through September, when the water reaches 24β25Β°C.
π Getting Around
Bangkok
Bangkok's traffic is legendary β avoid road transport during rush hour (7β9am, 5β8pm) when possible. The BTS Skytrain and MRT subway are fast and reliable for routes they cover. For everything else, motorcycle taxis and river boats fill the gaps.
Walkability: Low overall due to heat, uneven sidewalks, and missing pedestrian infrastructure. However, individual areas like the Old City temple district, Sukhumvit between BTS stations, and Chinatown are walkable if you tolerate the heat. Elevated walkways connect many BTS stations to nearby malls.
Mykonos
Mykonos is small (90 kmΒ², 15 km east-to-west) but the road network is constricted, the centre of Chora is closed to vehicles entirely, and parking is famously bad. The KTEL bus network is the practical and surprisingly comprehensive backbone for beach trips; taxis are scarce and overpriced; scooter and ATV rentals are popular but injury-prone. A small rental car gives the most flexibility for north-coast beaches and the Ano Mera direction. Inside Chora itself, walking is the only option.
Walkability: Excellent inside Chora β the entire core is car-free and walkable end-to-end in 15 minutes. Beyond Chora the island is genuinely dispersed and walking between settlements is not realistic; the bus, taxi, or rental car becomes essential. The single most useful piece of advice for a Mykonos visitor is to base in Chora and rely on KTEL buses for beach days.
The Verdict
Choose Bangkok if...
you want incredible street food, vibrant nightlife, ornate temples, and unbeatable value for money
Choose Mykonos if...
you want the Cycladic island that defines the Greek summer β Chora's windmills and Little Venice balconies, Paradise and Psarou beach clubs, ferry to UNESCO Delos, and the Mediterranean's loudest party scene from June to September
Bangkok
Mykonos