🏆 Tasmania wins 82 OVR vs 74 · attribute matchup 2–6
Patagonia
Chile
Tasmania
Australia
Patagonia
Tasmania
How do Patagonia and Tasmania compare?
Two southern-hemisphere wildernesses that share the end-of-the-world feel and almost nothing else. Patagonia is the cross-border natural region in southern Argentina and Chile — the W trek in Torres del Paine (4–5 days, refugio-supported), Perito Moreno Glacier calving into Lake Argentino on the Argentine side, Fitz Roy from El Chaltén on a clear morning, and Tierra del Fuego at the literal bottom. Tasmania is the Australian island state — Cradle Mountain–Lake St Clair, the curve of Wineglass Bay in Freycinet, Bay of Fires's orange-lichen boulders, MONA in Hobart, UNESCO Port Arthur for convict history, and the Overland Track as the headline 6-day hike.
Tasmania is the easier version on every operational metric. Budget is similar ($160 Patagonia vs $180 Tasmania) but the spend in Patagonia is dominated by long-haul logistics — internal flights between El Calafate, Puerto Natales, and Ushuaia eat days and money, and the Torres del Paine permit system has gotten harder to navigate. Tasmania is a single rental car and 1,500 km of paved roads. Patagonia delivers scale Tasmania can't match — granite spires, blue glaciers, condors overhead — but Tasmania gives you 90% of the wilderness fix with a tenth of the planning, plus oysters from Bruny Island and a real city in Hobart.
Seasons align: November–March for both. Pro tip: if Patagonia, book the W trek refugios six months ahead and bring at least one full rest day in El Chaltén — Fitz Roy hides behind cloud most days, and a fixed itinerary means you'll see it in fog. If you want raw scale and you can plan ahead, pick Patagonia.
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Patagonia
Patagonia is one of the safest regions in South America. The main risks are weather-related: extreme wind, sudden storms, hypothermia, and altitude on exposed trails. Crime against tourists is rare, though standard precautions apply in larger towns.
Tasmania
Tasmania is one of the safest places in Australia, and Australia is one of the safer countries in the world. Violent crime is rare, the police presence is professional and approachable, and petty theft is uncommon outside the few central Hobart and Launceston nightlife strips on weekend nights. As elsewhere in Australia, the genuine safety considerations are environmental: bushfires in summer, hypothermia in the highlands year-round, sun exposure, and the small but real wildlife hazards (snakes, leeches, jack jumper ants).
🌤️ Weather
Patagonia
Patagonia's weather is defined by wind, unpredictability, and dramatic seasonal extremes. Summers are cool, winters are harsh, and the wind blows relentlessly year-round. Expect four seasons in a single day — pack layers for everything.
Tasmania
Tasmania has a cool-temperate maritime climate — closer to England or southern New Zealand than to the rest of Australia. The four seasons are distinct and pronounced, the weather changes fast, and the difference between coasts is dramatic: the west coast (Strahan) records 2,400 mm of rain a year while Hobart, on the east, gets just 600 mm. Pack layers and a rain shell year-round. Hobart summer highs sit around 22°C, winter lows around 4–8°C; the highlands and west coast run 5–10°C cooler. The Roaring Forties latitude means wind is a constant factor, especially on exposed coasts.
🚇 Getting Around
Patagonia
Patagonia is vast and sparsely populated. Distances between destinations are enormous and public transport is limited. Flying between major hubs saves days of overland travel. Long-distance buses are comfortable but time-consuming. Car rental offers freedom but requires preparedness.
Walkability: El Chalten is entirely walkable — the town is small and all trailheads start from the village itself. El Calafate is walkable along the main Avenida Libertador but the glacier is 80 km away. Ushuaia is compact but attractions require transport.
Tasmania
Tasmania is a road-trip destination, full stop. There is no rail passenger service, public-transit between cities is limited, and rental cars are not optional for any itinerary that goes beyond Hobart and Launceston centres. Distances are deceptively long — Hobart to Strahan is 4.5 hours, Hobart to Cradle Mountain 4.5 hours, and the roads are winding and slow. Allow more driving time than Google estimates; expect 60–80 km/h average on highways, less on rural routes. Within Hobart itself the central area is walkable; Metro Tasmania buses cover the suburbs adequately.
Walkability: Central Hobart (Sullivans Cove, Salamanca, Battery Point, North Hobart) is excellent on foot — the entire tourist core fits in a 1.5 km walkable square. Launceston centre and Cataract Gorge are similarly walkable. Beyond the central districts, the state assumes a car. Hiking, of course, is the entire point of much of the trip — Tasmania has more designated walking tracks per capita than anywhere else in Australia.
The Verdict
Choose Patagonia if...
you want Earth's end — Torres del Paine granite towers, Perito Moreno glacier, Fitz Roy hikes, and the Estancia gaucho steppe
Choose Tasmania if...
you want Australia's wildest state — Cradle Mountain–Lake St Clair, the Overland Track, Wineglass Bay, the Bay of Fires, Hobart's MONA, UNESCO Port Arthur, and some of the cleanest air on Earth
Patagonia
Tasmania