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Granada vs Milan

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🤝 It's a tie — both rated 87 OVR

Granada
Granada

Spain

87OVR

VS
Milan
Milan

Italy

87OVR

82
Safety
82
70
Affordability
43
99
Food
99
99
Culture
99
86
Nightlife
99
99
Walkability
99
86
Nature
72
81
Connectivity
94
72
Transit
99
Granada

Granada

Spain

Milan

Milan

Italy

Granada

Safety: 82/100Pop: 230KEurope/Madrid

Milan

Safety: 82/100Pop: 1.4M (city), 3.2M (metro)Europe/Rome

💰 Budget

budget
Granada: $45–70Milan: $75-110
mid-range
Granada: $110–180Milan: $150-220
luxury
Granada: $280+Milan: $400+

🛡️ Safety

Granada82/100Safety Score82/100Milan

Granada

Granada is a very safe city for travellers. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. The main concerns are pickpocketing in crowded tourist areas (the approach to the Alhambra, the Albayzín, and the main tapas streets) and bag-snatching from café chairs. The Sacromonte caves area warrants extra attention after dark, and some travellers report being approached aggressively by sellers at the Alhambra entrance.

Milan

Milan is a very safe city by any European standard. Violent crime against tourists is rare; the practical risks are pickpockets around the Duomo and on the metro (particularly M1 between Duomo and Cadorna), and occasional bag snatches in the Navigli area late at night. The city is well-lit, well-policed, and has an active nightlife that is generally free of the aggression found in some northern European cities.

Ratings

Granada3/5English Friendly4/5Milan
Granada5/5Walkability5/5Milan
Granada3/5Public Transit5/5Milan
Granada5/5Food Scene5/5Milan
Granada4/5Nightlife5/5Milan
Granada5/5Cultural Sites5/5Milan
Granada4/5Nature Access3/5Milan
Granada4/5WiFi Reliability5/5Milan

🌤️ Weather

Granada

Granada has a semi-arid continental climate — hot, dry summers and cold winters. It's one of Spain's coldest provincial capitals in winter due to elevation (738m above sea level) and proximity to the Sierra Nevada. Summers are extreme with temperatures regularly above 38°C; the surrounding plains can hit 42°C. Spring and autumn are excellent. Rainfall is low (only around 350mm annually) but concentrated in winter and spring.

Spring (March – May)8–22°C
Summer (June – September)18–40°C
Autumn & Winter (October – February)-2–17°C

Milan

Milan has a humid subtropical climate, heavily influenced by its position in the Po Valley, which traps air and creates fog in autumn and winter. Summers are hot and occasionally oppressively humid; winters are cold, damp, and foggy; spring and autumn are genuinely beautiful. August is when Milanese leave — the city empties, many restaurants close, and the streets belong to tourists.

Spring (March - May)10 to 22°C
Summer (June - August)22 to 34°C
Autumn (September - November)12 to 24°C
Winter (December - February)1 to 9°C

🚇 Getting Around

Granada

Granada is a compact city and most tourist areas are walkable from the historic centre — though some involve significant hills (the Alhambra and Albayzín climbs are steep). The city has a small bus network (LAC). There is no metro. Taxis are inexpensive and widely available. A free electric minibus (Line C3 and C34) serves the Albayzín from Plaza Nueva — invaluable if you want to avoid the steep climb.

Walkability: The historic centre (Centro, Realejo) is very walkable and mostly flat. The Albayzín and Alhambra hill are both steep — plan for significant uphill walking (20–30 minutes each). Wear proper shoes, not flip-flops: the Albayzín cobblestones can be treacherous when wet. In summer, walk to the Alhambra in the early morning before the heat builds.

LAC Urban Buses€1.40 per ride; €20 for a 10-trip tarjeta (card) at any tobacco shop
Alhambra Minibus (Line 30/32)€1.40 per ride (standard LAC fare)
Taxis€5–12 for most inner-city trips; €40–55 to Sierra Nevada

Milan

Milan has one of the best urban transit systems in Italy — four metro lines, an extensive tram network (including 1920s historic trams still in service on the No. 1 line), and good bus coverage. A single ATM ticket (€2.20) is valid for 90 minutes on all surface transport (trams, buses) and one metro journey. The city centre is compact and walkable; the Navigli, Brera, and Duomo are all within 20 minutes' walk of each other.

Walkability: The historic centre within the Cerchia dei Navigli (inner ring road) is highly walkable — Duomo to La Scala is 5 minutes, Duomo to Castello Sforzesco is 15 minutes, Duomo to Navigli is 25 minutes. The Brera district is best explored on foot. Outer neighbourhoods (Porta Venezia, Isola, Porta Romana) are also pleasant walking districts.

Metro (ATM)€2.20 single, €7.60 for 10 rides, €4.50 day pass
Tram€2.20 single (shared ATM ticket)
Taxi€5 flagfall + €1.10/km in city; airport to centre €50-80 flat rate

The Verdict

Choose Granada if...

you want the Alhambra — Spain's most visited monument, the last Moorish palace in Europe — plus the Albayzín UNESCO quarter, free tapas with every drink, cave flamenco in Sacromonte, and ski runs 35km away at 3,398m

Choose Milan if...

you want Italy's fashion and design capital — Duomo rooftop, The Last Supper, Navigli aperitivo, La Scala, and the Quadrilatero della Moda