← Back to Compare

Helsinki vs Ljubljana

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🤝 It's a tie — both rated 85 OVR

Helsinki
Helsinki

Finland

85OVR

VS
Ljubljana
Ljubljana

Slovenia

85OVR

90
Safety
85
45
Affordability
65
86
Food
86
92
Culture
78
72
Nightlife
72
86
Walkability
99
86
Nature
99
99
Connectivity
86
99
Transit
86
Helsinki

Helsinki

Finland

Ljubljana

Ljubljana

Slovenia

Helsinki

Safety: 90/100Pop: 680K (city), 1.5M (metro)Europe/Helsinki

Ljubljana

Safety: 85/100Pop: 290K (city), 540K (metro)Europe/Ljubljana

💰 Budget

budget
Helsinki: $75-115Ljubljana: $50-80
mid-range
Helsinki: $150-230Ljubljana: $100-170
luxury
Helsinki: $400+Ljubljana: $280+

🛡️ Safety

Helsinki90/100Safety Score85/100Ljubljana

Helsinki

Helsinki is consistently ranked among the safest capital cities in the world. Violent crime is extremely rare, pickpocketing is uncommon compared to most European cities, and the city feels calm and orderly at all hours. The greatest safety challenges are environmental: icy sidewalks and steps in winter present a genuine fall hazard (locals walk with deliberate caution), slippery harbor edges, and the risk of serious hypothermia if caught outdoors unprepared during a cold snap. Emergency services are excellent and English is spoken everywhere.

Ljubljana

Ljubljana is one of Europe's safest capital cities. Violent crime is rare, and the compact, walkable old town is genuinely comfortable at any hour. Pickpockets exist in tourist areas and on public buses but are far less prevalent than in larger European capitals. Solo travelers, including women, consistently report feeling very safe. Metelkova Mesto has a deliberately edgy aesthetic but is not genuinely dangerous — the community self-polices effectively.

Ratings

Helsinki5/5English Friendly4/5Ljubljana
Helsinki4/5Walkability5/5Ljubljana
Helsinki5/5Public Transit4/5Ljubljana
Helsinki4/5Food Scene4/5Ljubljana
Helsinki3/5Nightlife3/5Ljubljana
Helsinki4/5Cultural Sites3/5Ljubljana
Helsinki4/5Nature Access5/5Ljubljana
Helsinki5/5WiFi Reliability4/5Ljubljana

🌤️ Weather

Helsinki

Helsinki has a subarctic climate with four genuinely distinct seasons. Summers are mild to warm with extraordinarily long daylight hours — around the June solstice the sun barely dips below the horizon, creating near-continuous golden light. Winters are cold, dark, and snowy, with only 6 hours of daylight in December. The Gulf of Finland regularly freezes in winter, requiring icebreaker ships to keep ferry routes open. Auroras are occasionally visible on clear winter nights north of the city. Spring and autumn are short but beautiful. Pack for rain in any season and extreme cold November through March.

Summer (June - August)16-22°C
Autumn (September - November)0-14°C
Winter (December - February)-3 to -10°C
Spring (March - May)-2 to 14°C

Ljubljana

Ljubljana sits in a basin between the Alps and the Karst plateau, giving it a continental climate with Mediterranean touches. Summers are warm and occasionally hot; winters are cold with fog that settles in the valley for days at a stretch — a local phenomenon known as "meglica." Spring and autumn are mild but can be wet. The surrounding mountains mean weather can shift quickly.

Spring (March - May)5-18°C
Summer (June - August)20-28°C
Autumn (September - November)6-17°C
Winter (December - February)-3 to 5°C

🚇 Getting Around

Helsinki

Helsinki has an excellent integrated public transport network operated by HSL (Helsingin Seudun Liikenne), covering metro, trams, buses, local trains, and the ferry to Suomenlinna — all on a single ticketing system. The city center is compact and highly walkable in good weather. Trams are the most useful mode for tourists, running frequently and connecting all the main sights. The metro is useful for longer trips east or west. City Bikes (shared bicycles) are excellent in summer. For winter, the tram and metro keep running regardless of snow.

Walkability: The Helsinki city center peninsula is highly walkable in summer — Senate Square to Market Square to Esplanadi to the Design District is a comfortable 30-minute stroll. In winter, walking is possible but requires proper footwear for icy conditions. Distances between major sights are modest and the flat terrain helps.

Tram Network€3.20 single ticket (purchased on board with card or HSL app); €9.00 HSL day ticket covering all modes
Metro (M1/M2)€3.20 single; included in HSL day ticket
HSL Ferry to Suomenlinna€3.20 single (covered by day ticket)

Ljubljana

Ljubljana's old town is almost entirely car-free and supremely walkable — the core can be crossed in 15 minutes on foot. For trips further afield within the city, the LPP city bus network is efficient and cheap. The Urbana contactless card covers buses and provides small discounts. The funicular to Ljubljana Castle is a quick and fun way to reach the hilltop. Electric tourist carts (kavalir) ferry visitors through the old town free of charge.

Walkability: Ljubljana is extremely walkable. The historic old town, riverside market, Triple Bridge, Dragon Bridge, Prešeren Square, and the castle funicular are all within a five-minute walk of each other. Tivoli Park is a ten-minute walk west of the center. Streets are flat in the core (the castle hill aside), well-maintained, and entirely pedestrianized in the old town. Good shoes suffice — heels would manage on main streets but cobblestones in quieter lanes can be uneven.

LPP City Bus€1.30 per ride with Urbana card; €5.20 for a day pass
Bicikelj Bike ShareFirst hour free; €1/hour thereafter
Ljubljana Castle Funicular€4 return; €2.50 one way; free with certain castle passes

The Verdict

Choose Helsinki if...

you want saunas everywhere, Nordic design, white-night summers, and the cheapest 2-hour ferry to medieval Tallinn

Choose Ljubljana if...

you want Europe's greenest capital — traffic-free cobblestones, Plečnik architecture, and Lake Bled plus the Julian Alps an hour away