🏆 Oslo wins 85 OVR vs 83 · attribute matchup 4–4
Norway
85OVR
Italy
83OVR
Oslo
Norway
Palermo
Italy
Oslo
Palermo
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Oslo
Oslo is one of the safest capital cities in the world. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare and the city functions efficiently and honestly. The main nuisances are opportunistic pickpockets around Karl Johans gate and the central train station (Oslo S) area, and winter ice on sidewalks and harbor edges. The Vaterland and Grønland areas, east of Oslo S, are worth basic awareness at night but present no serious danger by any international standard.
Palermo
Palermo has transformed significantly in the past 20 years and is considerably safer than its historical reputation suggests. Violent crime against tourists is very rare. The main risks are petty theft (pickpocketing, bag-snatching on scooters) and traffic, which follows its own logic.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Oslo
Oslo has a humid continental climate, though the Gulf Stream moderates temperatures considerably compared to other cities at the same latitude. Summers are genuinely warm and glorious, with up to 19 hours of daylight in June. Winters are cold and dark — only 6 hours of daylight in December — but snowfall and Christmas market season make them atmospheric. The aurora borealis (Northern Lights) is occasionally visible from Oslo on clear, dark winter nights, though you'll see them far better further north. Spring arrives late but emphatically; autumn is crisp and colorful.
Palermo
Palermo has a hot Mediterranean climate — one of the warmest cities in Europe, with summers that regularly exceed 35°C and winters that rarely drop below 10°C. The sirocco wind from the Sahara occasionally raises temperatures even in winter and brings orange-tinged dust. The city has 2,500+ hours of sunshine per year.
🚇 Getting Around
Oslo
Oslo has an excellent public transit system operated by Ruter, covering the T-bane (metro), tram, bus, commuter train, and harbor ferry lines under a single unified ticket. A single trip costs NOK 46 (~$4.25); a 24-hour day pass costs NOK 130 (~$12), and a 72-hour pass NOK 230 (~$21). The Oslo Pass (NOK 495/24h, NOK 695/48h, NOK 845/72h) includes unlimited Ruter transit plus free entry to most major museums — worth calculating based on your itinerary. The city center is compact and very walkable. Cycling is excellent and Oslo Bysykkel (city bikes) are available via app for NOK 49/month or NOK 49 per 45-minute trip.
Walkability: Oslo's city center is compact and extremely walkable. The Opera House, Akershus Fortress, Aker Brygge, Karl Johans gate, and the Royal Palace form a walkable central core within about 2.5 km. Vigeland Park is a comfortable 30-minute walk or 10-minute tram ride. Bygdøy peninsula requires a ferry or bus in summer. Holmenkollen requires the T-bane metro.
Palermo
Palermo's historic centre is walkable but chaotic — traffic, parked scooters, and narrow medieval streets require pedestrian confidence. City buses serve the wider city; taxis are metered. Parking is impossible in the centre; walking or taxi is recommended.
Walkability: High in historic centre — all major monuments within 30 minutes on foot. Chaotic but manageable.
The Verdict
Choose Oslo if...
you want Nordic lifestyle at its most refined — harbor saunas, Vigeland's sculptures, the Bergen Railway, and no concern for your wallet
Choose Palermo if...
you want Sicily's most layered city — Arab-Norman Cappella Palatina mosaics, raucous street food markets, Monreale's gold cathedral, Sicilian puppets, and arancini fresh from the fryer at 7am