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Denver vs Toronto

Which destination is right for your next trip?

πŸ† Toronto wins 86 OVR vs 81 Β· attribute matchup 1–5

Denver
Denver

United States

81OVR

VS
Toronto
Toronto

Canada

86OVR

70
Safety
80
50
Affordability
50
86
Food
99
94
Culture
99
86
Nightlife
86
72
Walkability
86
99
Nature
86
99
Connectivity
99
72
Transit
86
Denver

Denver

United States

Toronto

Toronto

Canada

Denver

Safety: 70/100Pop: 710K (city), 2.95M (metro)America/Denver

Toronto

Safety: 80/100Pop: 2.9M (city), 6.7M (metro)America/Toronto

πŸ’° Budget

budget
Denver: $110-160Toronto: $65–100
mid-range
Denver: $230-380Toronto: $160–260
luxury
Denver: $600+Toronto: $400+

πŸ›‘οΈ Safety

Denver70/100Safety Scoreβœ“80/100Toronto

Denver

Denver is generally safe for visitors in core neighborhoods (LoDo, RiNo, Capitol Hill, Cherry Creek, Wash Park), but property crime and visible homelessness have both risen sharply since 2020. Car break-ins are extremely common β€” never leave anything visible. The 16th Street Mall and stretches of Colfax Avenue have a rougher feel at night. The bigger danger for most travelers is environmental: altitude, sun, and weather catch visitors off guard.

Toronto

Toronto is one of the safest large cities in North America. The tourist areas β€” downtown core, Distillery District, Kensington Market, Yorkville, and the waterfront β€” are very safe at virtually any hour. Petty theft (phone snatching, bag theft) does occur in busy areas. The Jane-Finch and Scarborough areas have higher crime rates but are well away from tourist destinations.

⭐ Ratings

Denver5/5English Friendly5/5Toronto
Denver3/5Walkabilityβœ“4/5Toronto
Denver3/5Public Transitβœ“4/5Toronto
Denver4/5Food Sceneβœ“5/5Toronto
Denver4/5Nightlife4/5Toronto
Denver4/5Cultural Sitesβœ“5/5Toronto
Denver5/5βœ“Nature Access4/5Toronto
Denver5/5WiFi Reliability5/5Toronto

🌀️ Weather

Denver

Denver has a semi-arid, high-altitude climate with 300+ days of sunshine a year and very low humidity. The altitude and dry air make the sun intense β€” UV levels are routinely "very high" even in winter. Weather is famously volatile: 70Β°F one afternoon and snowing the next morning is standard. Afternoon thunderstorms roll off the Front Range most summer days; big snowstorms punctuate winter. Hydrate aggressively regardless of the season β€” the combination of altitude and dry air dehydrates visitors fast.

Spring (March - May)-2 to 20Β°C
Summer (June - August)13-32Β°C
Autumn (September - November)0-24Β°C
Winter (December - February)-7 to 7Β°C

Toronto

Toronto has a humid continental climate with four distinct seasons. Winters are cold with snow and occasional ice storms, though milder than many Canadian cities. Summers are warm and humid with temperatures regularly hitting 30Β°C+. Lake Ontario moderates temperatures slightly β€” the lake stays cold until July, which delays summer warming near the waterfront. Spring and fall are beautiful but brief.

Spring (March – May)0–18Β°C
Summer (June – August)18–32Β°C
Autumn (September – November)-2–20Β°C

πŸš‡ Getting Around

Denver

Denver is a sprawling car-oriented metro with a workable (by US standards) light rail and commuter rail network operated by RTD. The A Line train from Union Station to the airport is one of the best airport transit links in any US city. Core neighborhoods (LoDo, RiNo, Capitol Hill, Wash Park) are walkable individually, but connecting them typically means rideshare or transit. Rideshare is cheap and ubiquitous.

Walkability: Denver is walkable within neighborhoods but sprawling overall. LoDo, RiNo, Capitol Hill, Cherry Creek, and Wash Park each work on foot. Connecting them means rideshare, transit, or cycling. The altitude makes the first 24-48 hours of walking unexpectedly tiring β€” go slower than you think you should. Summer sun at 5,280 ft is aggressive even in cooler temperatures.

Uber & Lyft β€” $8-18 typical trip within central Denver; $35-55 to mountain towns (short trips)
RTD Light Rail & Bus β€” $2.75 local / $10 airport; $5.50 daily cap (local)
A Line to Airport β€” $10.50 one-way (regional fare)

Toronto

The TTC (Toronto Transit Commission) runs the subway, buses, and streetcars. It's functional but old and often overcrowded during rush hour. The Presto card is used on TTC, GO Transit (regional rail), and most regional buses β€” load it at any subway station. Driving in downtown Toronto is not recommended: traffic is severe and parking costs CAD $4–8/hour. The waterfront and many neighbourhoods are pleasant to walk.

Walkability: Downtown Toronto is very walkable between major attractions. The CN Tower, Harbourfront, Distillery District, St. Lawrence Market, and the AGO are all reachable on foot from each other. Kensington Market, Chinatown, and the Annex form another walkable cluster. The financial district's underground PATH system (30km) makes it possible to navigate a huge area without going outside in winter.

TTC Subway β€” CAD $3.30 per ride with Presto card; CAD $3.35 cash (exact change only on buses/streetcars)
TTC Streetcars β€” CAD $3.30 with Presto (transfer included within 2 hours)
GO Transit β€” CAD $6–15 depending on distance; Presto card accepted

The Verdict

Choose Denver if...

you want a mile-high Rockies gateway β€” breweries, legal cannabis, Red Rocks, and ski towns an hour west

Choose Toronto if...

you want Canada's most cosmopolitan city β€” CN Tower EdgeWalk, 200-language multiculturalism, St. Lawrence Market, the Distillery District, ROM and AGO, world-class restaurants on every block, and Niagara Falls 90 minutes away