🏆 Riga wins 86 OVR vs 83 · attribute matchup 3–3
Latvia
86OVR
Norway
83OVR
Riga
Latvia
Tromsø
Norway
Riga
Tromsø
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
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.
Tromsø
Tromsø is extraordinarily safe by global standards — violent crime is rare, pickpocketing minimal, and the Norwegian welfare state underwrites a calm public sphere. The real hazards are environmental: icy sidewalks in winter (the leading cause of tourist injury), winter driving challenges, and the cold itself. Medical care is excellent and the city has a full hospital (UNN) with Arctic expertise.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
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.
Tromsø
Tromsø has a subarctic maritime climate — remarkably mild for its latitude thanks to the North Atlantic Current, but defined year-round by dramatic daylight extremes. Snow falls heavily from November through April. Summer temperatures rarely exceed 20°C. Winter lows typically hover between −5 and −10°C — cold but manageable in proper layers. What you plan for is light, not cold.
🚇 Getting Around
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.
Tromsø
Tromsø is a small island city — most sights are within walking distance in the city centre. The local bus system (Troms Fylkestrafikk) covers the island and the mainland, including the airport. Taxis are readily available; ride-hailing is limited. For excursions outside the city (dog sledding at Camp Tamok, Sommarøy fishing village, reindeer camps), a tour bus or rental car is essential.
Walkability: City centre is highly walkable and concentrated. The island of Tromsøya itself is 9 km long but the useful tourist zone is just 2 km of it. Outside the island — mainland, Kvaløya, or further afield — you need bus, taxi, or car.
The Verdict
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
Choose Tromsø if...
you want the Gateway to the Arctic — 240 aurora nights/year, Fjellheisen panoramas, dog sledding, Sami reindeer culture