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Las Vegas vs Toronto

Which destination is right for your next trip?

πŸ† Toronto wins 86 OVR vs 77 Β· attribute matchup 1–4

Las Vegas
Las Vegas

United States

77OVR

VS
Toronto
Toronto

Canada

86OVR

62
Safety
80
45
Affordability
50
99
Food
99
63
Culture
99
99
Nightlife
86
86
Walkability
86
86
Nature
86
99
Connectivity
99
72
Transit
86
Las Vegas

Las Vegas

United States

Toronto

Toronto

Canada

Las Vegas

Safety: 62/100Pop: 660K (city), 2.3M (metro)America/Los_Angeles

Toronto

Safety: 80/100Pop: 2.9M (city), 6.7M (metro)America/Toronto

πŸ’° Budget

budget
Las Vegas: $80-150Toronto: $65–100
mid-range
Las Vegas: $200-400Toronto: $160–260
luxury
Las Vegas: $600+Toronto: $400+

πŸ›‘οΈ Safety

Las Vegas65/100Safety Scoreβœ“80/100Toronto

Las Vegas

The Strip itself is heavily policed and generally safe for tourists, with extensive casino security and LVMPD patrols. Off-Strip neighborhoods vary significantly β€” areas immediately east and north of downtown can be rough, particularly at night. The main risks on the Strip are pickpockets in crowds, aggressive timeshare touts, and scammers posing as celebrities or show promoters. Drink spiking and gambling-related disputes are reported concerns.

Toronto

Toronto is one of the safest large cities in North America. The tourist areas β€” downtown core, Distillery District, Kensington Market, Yorkville, and the waterfront β€” are very safe at virtually any hour. Petty theft (phone snatching, bag theft) does occur in busy areas. The Jane-Finch and Scarborough areas have higher crime rates but are well away from tourist destinations.

⭐ Ratings

Las Vegas5/5English Friendly5/5Toronto
Las Vegas4/5Walkability4/5Toronto
Las Vegas3/5Public Transitβœ“4/5Toronto
Las Vegas5/5Food Scene5/5Toronto
Las Vegas5/5βœ“Nightlife4/5Toronto
Las Vegas2/5Cultural Sitesβœ“5/5Toronto
Las Vegas4/5Nature Access4/5Toronto
Las Vegas5/5WiFi Reliability5/5Toronto

🌀️ Weather

Las Vegas

Las Vegas has a hot desert climate with extreme temperature swings between summer and winter. Summers are brutally hot β€” June through August regularly sees highs above 40Β°C (104Β°F), with July averages around 42Β°C. Winters are mild and pleasant, with daytime highs around 15Β°C. Spring and autumn are the ideal windows: warm, dry, and comfortable. Flash floods are possible year-round but most common in late summer monsoon season.

Spring (March - May)15-35Β°C
Summer (June - September)35-45Β°C
Autumn (October - November)14-28Β°C
Winter (December - February)5-15Β°C

Toronto

Toronto has a humid continental climate with four distinct seasons. Winters are cold with snow and occasional ice storms, though milder than many Canadian cities. Summers are warm and humid with temperatures regularly hitting 30Β°C+. Lake Ontario moderates temperatures slightly β€” the lake stays cold until July, which delays summer warming near the waterfront. Spring and fall are beautiful but brief.

Spring (March – May)0–18Β°C
Summer (June – August)18–32Β°C
Autumn (September – November)-2–20Β°C

πŸš‡ Getting Around

Las Vegas

Getting around the Strip is surprisingly challenging despite its apparent simplicity β€” the boulevard looks walkable but distances between resorts are much longer than they appear. A mix of the Las Vegas Monorail, the Deuce bus, ride-hailing apps, and your feet will cover most needs on the Strip. A rental car is strongly recommended for off-Strip destinations like Red Rock Canyon, Hoover Dam, and Valley of Fire.

Walkability: The Strip looks walkable on a map but is deceptive β€” the distance from Mandalay Bay to the Stratosphere is over 4 miles, and summer temperatures make outdoor walking dangerous. Between individual resorts in a cluster (e.g., Cosmopolitan to Bellagio), walking is fine. In summer, use the air-conditioned casino connectors and skywalks linking several properties. Downtown Fremont Street is very walkable within the Experience canopy.

Las Vegas Monorail β€” $5 single ride / $13 24-hour pass
Deuce on the Strip & SDX β€” $6 for 2 hours / $8 24-hour pass
Uber & Lyft β€” $10-25 for short Strip trips; $15-35 to airport

Toronto

The TTC (Toronto Transit Commission) runs the subway, buses, and streetcars. It's functional but old and often overcrowded during rush hour. The Presto card is used on TTC, GO Transit (regional rail), and most regional buses β€” load it at any subway station. Driving in downtown Toronto is not recommended: traffic is severe and parking costs CAD $4–8/hour. The waterfront and many neighbourhoods are pleasant to walk.

Walkability: Downtown Toronto is very walkable between major attractions. The CN Tower, Harbourfront, Distillery District, St. Lawrence Market, and the AGO are all reachable on foot from each other. Kensington Market, Chinatown, and the Annex form another walkable cluster. The financial district's underground PATH system (30km) makes it possible to navigate a huge area without going outside in winter.

TTC Subway β€” CAD $3.30 per ride with Presto card; CAD $3.35 cash (exact change only on buses/streetcars)
TTC Streetcars β€” CAD $3.30 with Presto (transfer included within 2 hours)
GO Transit β€” CAD $6–15 depending on distance; Presto card accepted

The Verdict

Choose Las Vegas if...

you want 24-hour neon spectacle β€” Strip megaresorts, the Sphere, celebrity-chef dining, pool clubs, and Red Rock + Grand Canyon + Zion within day-trip range

Choose Toronto if...

you want Canada's most cosmopolitan city β€” CN Tower EdgeWalk, 200-language multiculturalism, St. Lawrence Market, the Distillery District, ROM and AGO, world-class restaurants on every block, and Niagara Falls 90 minutes away