Quick Verdict
Pick La Paz for Mi Teleferico cable-car commutes, $2 salteñas, and Mercado de las Brujas llama-fetus stalls at 3,650 m. Pick Salvador if Olodum Tuesday drumming, Pelourinho baroque gold, and capoeira rodas drive the trip.
🏆 Salvador wins 72 OVR vs 67 · attribute matchup 5–3
Salvador
Brazil
La Paz
Bolivia
Salvador
La Paz
How do Salvador and La Paz compare?
The Bolivian-altitude vs Afro-Brazilian-coastal comparison — both Latin American capitals of culture, completely different worlds. La Paz is the world's highest capital at 3,650m — sprawled into a canyon under El Alto's rim, the Mi Teleférico cable car system threading 11 lines across the city, the Mercado de las Brujas in Rosario with llama fetuses and Pachamama offerings, $2 salteñas at Paceña La Salteña, and Calle Jaén's colonial museum lane. Salvador is Bahia's Afro-Brazilian capital on the Atlantic coast — the Pelourinho's pastel colonial buildings, Igreja de São Francisco's gold-encrusted baroque interior, Olodum drum circles in Terreiro de Jesus on Tuesday nights, $3 acarajé fritters from baianas in white lace at the Mercado Modelo, and capoeira rodas in plaza after plaza.
La Paz runs $20 hostel / $55 mid / $150 luxe, safety around 62 — fake-taxi express kidnappings are the standard warning. Salvador runs $40 / $110 / $295 with safety around 50 — Pelourinho needs caution after dark and Cidade Baixa has street-crime issues. A Bolivian almuerzo is $2.50, a Salvador por-kilo lunch is $5; a paceña beer is $1.50, a Skol on Porto da Barra beach $2. Climate is fundamentally opposite — La Paz is high-altitude dry-cold (5-18°C), Salvador is tropical humid 28°C year-round with rain April-July. Cultural depth tilts evenly — La Paz for Aymara-mestizo ritual and surreal high-altitude urbanism, Salvador for Candomblé religion, samba-reggae rhythm, and Brazil's deepest African heritage as the country's first capital.
La Paz is best May-October dry season. Salvador is best September-March (drier, warmest); avoid May-July rains. Pro tip: in La Paz, ride Mi Teleférico's red line to El Alto's Sunday market — it's the most surreal $0.45 trip on the continent — and acclimatize 48 hours before any trekking. In Salvador, never carry a daypack into Pelourinho after dark, use Uber for any night moves, and time your trip for Tuesday's free Olodum rehearsal or the Bonfim wash in mid-January. Pick La Paz for half the price of anywhere else on the continent, canyon-and-cable-car geography, and Salar de Uyuni access. Pick Salvador for Afro-Brazilian rhythm, gold-leaf baroque churches, and Carnival energy that runs year-round.
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Salvador
Salvador has real safety challenges and is among Brazil's cities where tourist caution is warranted. The Pelourinho is significantly safer than average during daylight hours due to police presence, but can be sketchy after dark. The Comércio (commercial port district) empties at night and becomes dangerous. Favela areas throughout the city should not be entered by visitors without a trusted local guide. That said, millions of tourists visit safely each year by following sensible precautions.
La Paz
La Paz is generally safe for travelers exercising standard precautions, but altitude sickness is the biggest health risk. Petty crime like pickpocketing is common in markets and on crowded minibuses. Political protests can block roads with little warning.
🌤️ Weather
Salvador
Salvador has a tropical climate and is warm year-round, with temperatures ranging from 24°C to 30°C (75-86°F) in most months. There is no true cold season. The main distinction is between the wet season (April to July) and the drier, sunnier season (September to March), which is when most tourists visit. The coast is moderated by trade winds and sea breezes year-round.
La Paz
La Paz has a subtropical highland climate with two distinct seasons: wet (November-March) and dry (May-October). Temperatures are relatively consistent year-round due to the altitude, with cool days and cold nights. The sun is intense at this elevation — sunburn happens fast.
🚇 Getting Around
Salvador
Salvador is a large, sprawling city built across a peninsula with an upper city and lower city connected by the famous Elevador Lacerda. Public transit exists but is complex — the metro has only 2 lines with limited coverage, and buses cover the city but can be confusing for visitors. Uber and 99 are widely available and are the recommended option for most tourist journeys.
Walkability: Walkability in Salvador is highly neighborhood-dependent. The Pelourinho historic center is excellent for walking and best explored on foot. Barra is also walkable along the waterfront. Beyond these areas, the city sprawls with heavy traffic, few pedestrian crossings, and hot sun making long walks impractical. Use Uber for journeys between neighborhoods.
La Paz
La Paz has no metro, but the Mi Teleferico cable car system is the star of urban transit. Minibuses and trufis (shared taxis) cover the rest. The steep, canyon-like geography makes walking between neighborhoods a serious workout at altitude.
Walkability: Central La Paz is walkable but physically demanding due to the extreme altitude and steep terrain. Walking downhill from El Alto to the center is far easier than going up. Take it slow, rest often, and use the teleferico for uphill segments. The historic center around Plaza Murillo is flat enough for comfortable exploration.
📅 Best Time to Visit
Salvador
Jan–Mar, Sep–Dec
Peak travel window
La Paz
May–Sep
Peak travel window
The Verdict
Choose Salvador if...
you want the cradle of Afro-Brazilian culture — Pelourinho, capoeira, Olodum drums, moqueca, and the world's biggest street Carnival
Choose La Paz if...
you want the world's highest capital — Mi Teleférico cable-car network, Witches Market, Valle de la Luna, Death Road mountain biking, and Uyuni salt flats flights
Salvador
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