🏆 Kanazawa wins 87 OVR vs 83 · attribute matchup 5–2
Japan
87OVR
Japan
83OVR
Kanazawa
Japan
Okinawa
Japan
Kanazawa
Okinawa
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Kanazawa
Kanazawa is one of the safest cities in Japan and therefore one of the safest cities in the world. Violent crime is virtually nonexistent; petty crime is extremely rare. The biggest practical risks for visitors are traffic-related (drivers don't always yield to pedestrians at crossings) and weather-related (ice and snow on cobblestones in winter). Solo women travellers consistently rate Kanazawa as exceptionally safe.
Okinawa
Okinawa is extremely safe by any global standard, consistent with Japan's overall reputation for low crime. The main practical risks are natural: typhoons, ocean currents, and traffic on the Expressway. US military-related incidents are occasionally reported but rarely affect tourists.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Kanazawa
Kanazawa faces the Sea of Japan, which makes it one of the cloudiest and rainiest cities in Japan — locally nicknamed "Ame no Machi" (City of Rain). Winters bring heavy snowfall due to cold air from Siberia picking up moisture over the relatively warm Sea of Japan. Summers are warm and humid. The city is beautiful in all seasons but pack a waterproof and layers for almost any time of year.
Okinawa
Okinawa has a subtropical oceanic climate — warm year-round, with a distinct rainy season (tsuyu) in May–June, typhoon season from July through October, and a mild winter that barely qualifies as cold. The sea temperature is swimmable from April through November.
🚇 Getting Around
Kanazawa
Kanazawa is well-served by a network of city buses, with two tourist-oriented loop routes (Kenroku-en and Right Loop, Left Loop) covering all major sights. There is no subway or tram system. The city is compact enough to walk between many attractions in the historical districts, but the distances between Higashi Chaya, Kenroku-en, and Ninja-dera add up — a day bus pass is the best investment for most visitors.
Walkability: The three historical districts (Higashi Chaya, Nishi Chaya, Teramachi/Ninja-dera) are compact and extremely pleasant to walk within. However, they are 20–30 minutes apart on foot through modern urban streets — most visitors use the loop buses to transfer between them. Kanazawa Station to Kenroku-en is a 25-minute walk. Cobblestones are charming but hard on ankles and potentially icy in winter.
Okinawa
The main island has a single monorail line (Yui Rail) in Naha and a bus network that is slow and complex. A rental car is virtually essential for anything north of Naha or off the urban core — this is not a city built for public transport.
Walkability: Good within Naha's Kokusai-dori area and around Shuri Castle. Very low elsewhere — Okinawa's main island sprawls along a north-south axis with attractions spread across 100+ km. A car is not optional for serious exploration.
The Verdict
Choose Kanazawa if...
you want Japan without the crowds — the only major city never bombed in WWII, Kenroku-en garden, the Higashi Chaya geisha district unchanged since 1820, and Omicho Market's incomparable seafood at one-third of Tokyo prices
Choose Okinawa if...
you want subtropical Japan with a distinct Ryukyuan identity — Shuri Castle, Kerama Islands diving, centenarian longevity diet, and a culture softer and warmer than mainland Japan
Kanazawa
Okinawa