← Back to Compare

Dolomites vs Palermo

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🏆 Palermo wins 83 OVR vs 79 · attribute matchup 25

Dolomites
Dolomites

Italy

79OVR

VS
Palermo
Palermo

Italy

83OVR

92
Safety
72
35
Affordability
70
86
Food
99
78
Culture
99
72
Nightlife
86
72
Walkability
86
99
Nature
72
81
Connectivity
81
72
Transit
72
Dolomites

Dolomites

Italy

Palermo

Palermo

Italy

Dolomites

Safety: 85/100Europe/Rome

Palermo

Safety: 72/100Pop: 650KEurope/Rome

💰 Budget

budget
Dolomites: $80-120Palermo: $40–65
mid-range
Dolomites: $180-300Palermo: $80–130
luxury
Dolomites: $400-800+Palermo: $200–400

🛡️ Safety

Dolomites88/100Safety Score72/100Palermo

Dolomites

The Dolomites are generally very safe. Italy is a well-organized country with excellent mountain rescue services. The main risks are altitude-related and weather-related hazards typical of high Alpine environments. Via ferrata routes require proper equipment and experience. Mountain rescue is highly professional but can result in significant costs if you lack insurance.

Palermo

Palermo has transformed significantly in the past 20 years and is considerably safer than its historical reputation suggests. Violent crime against tourists is very rare. The main risks are petty theft (pickpocketing, bag-snatching on scooters) and traffic, which follows its own logic.

Ratings

Dolomites3/5English Friendly3/5Palermo
Dolomites3/5Walkability4/5Palermo
Dolomites3/5Public Transit3/5Palermo
Dolomites4/5Food Scene5/5Palermo
Dolomites3/5Nightlife4/5Palermo
Dolomites3/5Cultural Sites5/5Palermo
Dolomites5/5Nature Access3/5Palermo
Dolomites4/5WiFi Reliability4/5Palermo

🌤️ Weather

Dolomites

The Dolomites have a classic Alpine climate with warm summers, cold snowy winters, and significant temperature variation with altitude. Mountain weather can change rapidly — a sunny morning can turn to thunderstorms by afternoon in summer. Temperatures drop roughly 6°C for every 1,000 meters of elevation gained.

Summer (June - August)10-25°C (valley) / 0-15°C (high altitude)
Autumn (September - November)2-18°C
Winter (December - March)-10 to 5°C
Spring (April - May)5-18°C

Palermo

Palermo has a hot Mediterranean climate — one of the warmest cities in Europe, with summers that regularly exceed 35°C and winters that rarely drop below 10°C. The sirocco wind from the Sahara occasionally raises temperatures even in winter and brings orange-tinged dust. The city has 2,500+ hours of sunshine per year.

Summer (June–September)25–38°C
Spring (March–May)14–24°C
Autumn (October–November)14–24°C
Winter (December–February)8–15°C

🚇 Getting Around

Dolomites

A car is the most flexible way to explore the Dolomites, as the region is spread across multiple valleys connected by dramatic mountain passes. Public buses serve the main towns and some trailheads, especially in summer. Cable cars and chairlifts provide access to high-altitude starting points for hikes.

Walkability: The valley towns (Ortisei, Corvara, Cortina) are compact and walkable. However, the Dolomites as a region require transport between valleys. Many world-class hikes start directly from rifugios or cable car stations, making the hiking itself highly accessible once you reach the starting point.

Rental Car€50-100 per day
SAD/DolomitiBus Public Buses€2-8 per trip, Mobilcard €15-28 for 1-7 days
Cable Cars & Chairlifts€15-40 per single/return trip

Palermo

Palermo's historic centre is walkable but chaotic — traffic, parked scooters, and narrow medieval streets require pedestrian confidence. City buses serve the wider city; taxis are metered. Parking is impossible in the centre; walking or taxi is recommended.

Walkability: High in historic centre — all major monuments within 30 minutes on foot. Chaotic but manageable.

WalkingFree
Taxi / inTaxi app€8–20 most city trips
AMAT City Buses€1.40 single; €3.50 day pass

The Verdict

Choose Dolomites if...

you want the Italian Alps' pink-rock peaks — Tre Cime di Lavaredo, Seceda, Lago di Braies, via ferrata routes, Cortina d'Ampezzo, and Alta Badia skiing

Choose Palermo if...

you want Sicily's most layered city — Arab-Norman Cappella Palatina mosaics, raucous street food markets, Monreale's gold cathedral, Sicilian puppets, and arancini fresh from the fryer at 7am