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Belfast vs Edinburgh

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Quick Verdict

Pick Belfast for Black Cab Troubles tours, Titanic slipway museums, and the Antrim coast Causeway drive. Pick Edinburgh for Royal Mile castle climbs, Arthur's Seat sunrises, and August Fringe festival electricity.

Can't pick? Visit both.

Build a trip that includes Belfast and Edinburgh, with complementary stops we'll suggest.

🧭 Plan a trip with both →

🏆 Belfast wins 80 OVR vs 78 · attribute matchup 41

82
Safety
80
78
Cleanliness
78
73
Affordability
49
79
Food
79
82
Culture
91
88
Nightlife
77
90
Walkability
90
65
Nature
64
99
Connectivity
99
74
Transit
74
At a glanceBelfastEdinburgh
Mid-range cost/day$115$85/day cheaper$200
Safety score82/100+2 safer80/100
Food scene★★★★☆★★★★☆
Cultural sites★★★★★★★★★★
Nightlife★★★★★+1 on nightlife★★★★☆
Walkability★★★★★★★★★★
Nature access★★★★☆+1 on nature access★★★☆☆
Best monthsMay–SepMay–Jun, Aug–Sep
Flight between them51m direct
Belfast

Belfast

United Kingdom

Edinburgh

Edinburgh

United Kingdom

Belfast

Safety: 82/100Pop: 340KEurope/London

Edinburgh

Safety: 80/100Pop: 527K (city)Europe/London

How do Belfast and Edinburgh compare?

The UK Celtic-capital question — and at 2 hours apart by ferry-and-train or a 50-minute flight, both reasonably fit on a single trip. Belfast is the rebuilt Northern Irish capital — the Titanic Belfast museum on the slipway where the ship was launched, Black Cab tours through the Falls and Shankill peace lines explaining the Troubles in plain language, the Cathedral Quarter's converted-warehouse pubs, Crumlin Road Gaol tours, and the Giant's Causeway 90 minutes north along the Antrim coast. Edinburgh is the older, postcard Scottish capital — Edinburgh Castle on the volcanic plug above the Old Town, the Royal Mile descending past St Giles' Cathedral to Holyroodhouse, Arthur's Seat as a 45-minute climb from the city centre, the Grassmarket's pub crawl, and a Festival in August that turns the entire city into a stage.

Belfast runs $50 hostel / $130 mid / $320 luxe, Edinburgh slightly more at $55 / $140 / $360. Safety lands at 82 in Belfast, 85 in Edinburgh — both well above UK average. Belfast wins on price, the historical-political weight that the city now confronts directly rather than hiding (the Black Cab tour is the must-do), and the dramatic Antrim coast as a day trip. Edinburgh wins on architectural ensemble (the Old and New Towns are both UNESCO listed), the Festival, the castle-volcanic-plug-Arthur's-Seat density, and a single-week trip's worth of museums and pubs within walking distance.

Both peak May-September. August in Edinburgh is Festival season (Fringe, International, Book) and books out 6 months ahead; the city is electric but accommodation triples in price. Pro tip: in Edinburgh, climb Arthur's Seat at sunrise — 45 minutes up from Holyrood, almost no one there before 7 AM, and the city laid out from the Pentlands to the Forth is the photo. In Belfast, book the Black Cab tour with a guide who lived through the Troubles rather than the bus tours — the cabbies' first-person accounts are the experience. Pick Belfast for the deeper history trip and the Antrim coast access. Pick Edinburgh for the headline Scottish-capital week and August Festival energy.

These pair naturally for a 10-day British Isles loop since they're 50 minutes apart by Ryanair or 4 hours via Stranraer ferry-and-train — both Celtic capitals, both moody-weather cities, both built around walkable historic cores. For days, Belfast 2-3 (with the Causeway day trip earning the third day), Edinburgh 3-4 (the Old Town, Castle, Holyrood, Arthur's Seat, Stockbridge, and the museum trio fill the calendar). Couples and solo travelers do well in both; families lean Edinburgh for the headline sights kids actually remember; August Festival timing in Edinburgh radically changes the trip — book accommodation 6 months out or skip the month entirely.

💰 Budget

budget
Belfast: $50–70Edinburgh: $60-90
mid-range
Belfast: $90–140Edinburgh: $150-250
luxury
Belfast: $200–350Edinburgh: $350+

🛡️ Safety

Belfast82/100Safety Score82/100Edinburgh

Belfast

Belfast is a safe city for tourists. The Troubles ended with the 1998 Good Friday Agreement and violence against visitors is essentially unheard of. Occasional community tensions persist in interface areas but are rarely visible to tourists. Standard urban safety practices apply.

Edinburgh

Edinburgh is one of the safest capitals in Europe. Violent crime is rare, especially in tourist areas. The main concerns are petty theft during festival season when the city is extremely crowded, and the occasional rowdy pub night in the Grassmarket or Cowgate.

🌤️ Weather

Belfast

Belfast has an oceanic climate — mild and wet year-round, with no extreme cold or heat. Summer days can be genuinely pleasant but rain is always possible. The city gets 850mm of rain annually spread fairly evenly across the year. Wind is the defining feature — pack a windproof layer regardless of season.

Spring (March–May)7–15°C
Summer (June–August)13–20°C
Autumn (September–November)8–15°C
Winter (December–February)3–9°C

Edinburgh

Edinburgh has a maritime climate that is milder than its northern latitude suggests but famously changeable. Expect four seasons in one day. Wind is a constant companion, especially on exposed hilltops. Rain is frequent but rarely heavy — a drizzle jacket is essential year-round.

Spring (March - May)4-14°C
Summer (June - August)10-20°C
Autumn (September - November)5-15°C
Winter (December - February)1-7°C

🚇 Getting Around

Belfast

Belfast city centre is very walkable. Translink buses and the Glider (rapid transit) cover the wider city. Metro buses reach the suburbs. Black taxis are culturally embedded and affordable. A car is needed for the Causeway Coast and Giant's Causeway.

Walkability: High in city centre and Cathedral Quarter. West Belfast murals require bus or taxi.

Metro Buses & Glider£2–3.50 single
Black Taxis£5–15 most city trips
Belfast Bikes (Cycle Share)£1/30 min or daily pass

Edinburgh

Edinburgh is compact and very walkable. The tram line connects the airport to the city center and beyond to Newhaven. Lothian Buses cover the entire city with frequent service. A single bus or tram ticket costs £2.00 and a day ticket is £5.00.

Walkability: Edinburgh's center is extremely walkable — most major sights are within 20-30 minutes on foot. However, the Old Town is very hilly with steep closes and stairs. Princes Street to the castle is a significant uphill climb. Wear comfortable shoes with good grip for the cobblestones.

Edinburgh Trams£2.00 single / £5.00 day ticket / £7.50 airport single
Lothian Buses£2.00 single / £5.00 day ticket
Black Cabs & Rideshare£5-15 within the city center

📅 Best Time to Visit

Belfast

May–Sep

Peak travel window

Edinburgh

May–Jun, Aug–Sep

Peak travel window

The Verdict

Choose Belfast if...

you want the Titanic's birthplace, Game of Thrones filming locations, dark tourism from the Troubles era, and some of the UK's most welcoming pub culture — the craic is mighty

Choose Edinburgh if...

you want Scotland's castle capital — Royal Mile, Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh Fringe in August, Harry Potter cafés, and whisky tastings

Frequently asked

Is Belfast or Edinburgh cheaper?

Belfast is cheaper on average. A mid-range day in Belfast costs about $115 vs $200 in Edinburgh, so Belfast saves you roughly $85 per day compared to Edinburgh.

Is Belfast or Edinburgh safer?

Belfast scores higher on our safety index (82/100 vs 80/100). Belfast is a safe city for tourists.

Which has better weather, Belfast or Edinburgh?

Belfast has the more temperate climate year-round. Belfast has an oceanic climate — mild and wet year-round, with no extreme cold or heat. Summer days can be genuinely pleasant but rain is always possible. The city gets 850mm of rain annually spread fairly evenly across the year. Wind is the defining feature — pack a windproof layer regardless of season.

When is the best time to visit Belfast vs Edinburgh?

Belfast peaks in May–Sep. Edinburgh peaks in May–Jun, Aug–Sep. Both peak in May–Jun, Aug–Sep, so a single trip pairs them naturally.

How long is the flight from Belfast to Edinburgh?

Roughly 51m on a direct flight (about 230 km / 143 mi). One-way fares typically run $60-180 depending on season and how far in advance you book.

How do daily costs in Belfast and Edinburgh compare?

In Belfast: budget ~$50–70/day, mid-range ~$90–140/day, luxury ~$200–350/day. In Edinburgh: budget ~$60-90/day, mid-range ~$150-250/day, luxury ~$350+/day.

How many days should I spend in Belfast vs Edinburgh?

Belfast 2-3, Edinburgh 3-4. Belfast's headline experiences (Titanic Belfast, Black Cab tour, Cathedral Quarter, Antrim Coast day) compress into 3 days; Edinburgh absorbs 4 days easily — Castle, Royal Mile, Arthur's Seat, Stockbridge, the museums, plus a day trip to St Andrews or the Highlands.

Can I combine Belfast and Edinburgh in one trip?

Yes — Ryanair, easyJet, and Aer Lingus fly Belfast-Edinburgh in 50 minutes for $40-90, or you can take the Stena ferry from Cairnryan to Belfast in 2h15. Standard British Isles loop: London 4 days, Edinburgh 3-4, Belfast 2-3.

Is the Antrim Coast day trip from Belfast worth it?

Absolutely — Giant's Causeway, Carrick-a-Rede rope bridge, Dunluce Castle ruins, and Bushmills Distillery on a single 9-hour route are one of Europe's great coastal drives. Self-drive a rental for £40 or take the McComb's tour bus.

When is Edinburgh's August Festival worth timing?

Worth it if you book accommodation 6+ months out — the city is electric, the Fringe runs 3,500+ shows daily, and the International Festival programs world-class theatre. Skip it if you can't book early; prices triple and rooms vanish, and the city becomes nearly unwalkable.

Should I do a Black Cab tour in Belfast?

Yes — the political-history tours through the Falls and Shankill peace lines run £40-60 for 90 minutes, with drivers giving first-person Troubles accounts no museum can match. The Belfast experience hinges on this.

Is Edinburgh family-friendly?

Yes — Edinburgh Castle, the Royal Yacht Britannia, the National Museum of Scotland (free, world-class for kids), Camera Obscura, and Arthur's Seat as a 45-minute climb work for kids 6+. The compact walkable core and decent public transit make it one of the UK's easier family cities.

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