🤝 It's a tie — both rated 86 OVR
Germany
86OVR
Latvia
86OVR
Munich
Germany
Riga
Latvia
Munich
Riga
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Munich
Munich is one of the safest large cities in Europe and consistently ranks among the top cities globally for quality of life and low crime. The public transport system runs reliably into the early hours, streets are well-lit, and aggressive crime towards tourists is genuinely rare. The main exception is Oktoberfest: six weeks of mass intoxication creates opportunistic pickpocketing around the Theresienwiese grounds, on the U4/U5 U-Bahn lines, and in Marienplatz. Bag snatching and phone theft spike sharply during the festival. Outside Oktoberfest, the usual urban vigilance around crowded tourist areas and train stations is sufficient. The Hauptbahnhof area around the main train station can feel rough late at night but is not genuinely dangerous.
Riga
Riga is a very safe city by European standards. Violent crime targeting tourists is rare. The primary concerns are pickpocketing in the Old Town and Central Market during summer, and tourist-trap scams in certain Old Town bars (check prices before ordering). As an EU and NATO member state, Latvia's security situation is stable despite geographic proximity to Russia — the Latvian government and public take national security seriously.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Munich
Munich has a continental climate with warm, sometimes hot summers and reliably cold winters — snow is common from December through February, and the city handles it with characteristic Bavarian efficiency. The Alps to the south create a unique weather phenomenon: the Föhn wind, a warm and intensely dry Alpine wind that rushes down from the mountains and can raise temperatures by 10°C in hours. Locals say the Föhn causes headaches and irritability, and statistically more disputes are filed with Munich police on Föhn days. It also brings extraordinary clarity — from the city centre you can see the Alps in sharp, almost cinematic detail. Autumn arrives damp and golden, which is precisely the backdrop for Oktoberfest.
Riga
Riga has a humid continental climate significantly moderated by the Baltic Sea. Winters are grey, cold, and snowy; summers are surprisingly warm and long-daylight. The city is beautiful under snow and even more beautiful in June when it barely gets dark. Pack layers regardless of season — Baltic weather is changeable.
🚇 Getting Around
Munich
Munich has one of the best public transport systems in Europe, run under the unified MVV (Münchner Verkehrsgesellschaft) network that covers U-Bahn (metro), S-Bahn (suburban rail), tram, and bus on a single ticket. The network covers the entire metropolitan area across clearly defined concentric fare zones, and trains run every 5-10 minutes during peak hours. Timetables are reliable to the minute — missing a connection by 30 seconds is a legitimate frustration. The MVV app (or Google Maps) handles journey planning seamlessly. Buy a day ticket (Tageskarte) if making more than two trips; the Isarcard Week pass or the München Card (which includes museums) can offer additional value for visitors staying several days.
Walkability: The Altstadt (old town) is highly walkable with a pedestrianised core along Kaufingerstraße and Neuhauser Straße connecting Marienplatz to Karlsplatz. Most key sights — Frauenkirche, Residenz, Hofbräuhaus, Viktualienmarkt — are within 15 minutes on foot. Beyond the Altstadt, Munich is a large, spread-out city and public transport is more practical than walking.
Riga
Riga's city center is compact and walkable; the public transport network (trams, trolleybuses, buses) covers the broader city efficiently. Bolt ride-hailing works well. Cycling is increasingly viable with dedicated lanes, particularly to Ķīpsala and along the canal.
Walkability: High in the center; moderate to outlying neighborhoods. Flat terrain makes walking and cycling easy.
The Verdict
Choose Munich if...
you want Bavaria at full volume — Oktoberfest, beer gardens, the Alps 45 minutes south, and BMW-grade engineering everywhere
Choose Riga if...
you want Europe's finest Art Nouveau architecture, a magnificent UNESCO Old Town, and Baltic budget prices — Riga is one of the continent's most undervalued capitals