🏆 Warsaw wins 88 OVR vs 87 · attribute matchup 3–5
Spain
87OVR
Poland
88OVR
Granada
Spain
Warsaw
Poland
Granada
Warsaw
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
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.
Warsaw
Warsaw is a very safe European capital. Violent crime against tourists is rare. The main concerns are standard urban petty crime — pickpockets on trams and buses (particularly line 15 through the city centre) and around the central station (Warszawa Centralna). The city is well-lit, has an active police presence, and is genuinely welcoming to tourists.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ 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.
Warsaw
Warsaw has a humid continental climate — cold, snowy winters and warm summers, with spring and autumn as pleasant shoulder seasons. The city sits on a flat plain with no geographic protection, so winter winds can be biting and summer heat can arrive suddenly. Snow is reliable from December through February.
🚇 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.
Warsaw
Warsaw has one of the best urban transit systems in Central Europe — two metro lines, an extensive tram network, and good bus coverage. The Jakdojade app (or Google Maps) handles routing across all modes. Bolt and Uber are widely available and affordable. The city centre (Stare Miasto to Łazienki Park) is walkable in 40 minutes.
Walkability: The historic core — Old Town, Castle Square, Royal Route (Krakowskie Przedmieście) to Łazienki — is 4.5 km and highly walkable along a single elegant boulevard. Nowy Świat and Aleje Jerozolimskie extend the walkable zone. Praga requires the metro (M2) or Bolt.
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 Warsaw if...
you want Central Europe's most historically charged capital — rebuilt Old Town, POLIN Museum, Rising Museum, free Chopin concerts, and bar mleczny dining at $5
Granada