🏆 Chengdu wins 87 OVR vs 84 · attribute matchup 2–2
China
87OVR
Vietnam
84OVR
Chengdu
China
Hanoi
Vietnam
Chengdu
Hanoi
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Chengdu
Chengdu is a very safe city for tourists. China generally has low violent crime rates and Chengdu specifically is considered relaxed and welcoming. The main issues are scams targeting tourists (tea ceremony scams, "art student" approaches) and traffic (pedestrian crossings are advisory rather than enforced).
Hanoi
Hanoi is generally safe for travelers with violent crime being rare. The main risks are petty theft, traffic accidents, and scams targeting tourists, particularly in the Old Quarter and around major sights.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Chengdu
Chengdu sits in the Sichuan Basin — a climate that is mild year-round but famously overcast. The basin traps moisture from the Tibetan Plateau, resulting in more foggy days than almost any major Chinese city. Summers are hot and humid; winters are mild but grey. Clear blue sky is genuinely rare and celebrated by locals.
Hanoi
Hanoi has a humid subtropical climate with four distinct seasons. Summers are hot and humid with heavy monsoon rains, while winters are cool and drizzly. The shoulder seasons of spring and autumn are the most pleasant.
🚇 Getting Around
Chengdu
Chengdu has an excellent metro system with 11+ lines covering the city and reaching the airport. Taxis are cheap and abundant. Didi (Chinese Uber) is the ride-hailing app of choice. The metro is the fastest way to most tourist destinations.
Walkability: Good in historic centre and Jinli. Metro + Didi essential for Panda Base and outer attractions.
Hanoi
Hanoi's public transit is expanding rapidly with new metro lines, but most visitors rely on Grab (ride-hailing), walking in the Old Quarter, and buses. The city launched Metro Line 2A in 2021 and Line 3 is under construction.
Walkability: The Old Quarter and Hoan Kiem area are very walkable, though chaotic sidewalks (often blocked by parked motorbikes and street food stalls) force pedestrians onto the road. Beyond the center, distances are long and walking is impractical due to traffic and heat.
The Verdict
Choose Chengdu if...
you want giant panda volunteering, Sichuan's mouth-numbing hotpot, the ancient Jinli Street teahouse scene, and the gateway to Jiuzhaigou's rainbow lakes — China's most livable city
Choose Hanoi if...
you want Vietnam's thousand-year capital — Old Quarter motorbike chaos, phở breakfasts, Train Street, Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, and weekend escapes to Ha Long Bay