🏆 Valletta wins 86 OVR vs 85 · attribute matchup 1–3
Bosnia and Herzegovina
85OVR
Malta
86OVR
Sarajevo
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Valletta
Malta
Sarajevo
Valletta
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Sarajevo
Sarajevo is a safe city for tourists. The war ended in 1995 — 30 years ago — and the city has rebuilt. Violent crime against visitors is extremely rare. The main risks are standard urban petty crime (pickpockets in Baščaršija and around the Eternal Flame area) and the residual but real risk of land mines in rural and mountain areas outside the city. In the city itself you will feel comfortable and welcomed.
Valletta
Malta is consistently ranked one of the safest countries in Europe. Valletta is peaceful day and night, with violent crime extremely rare. The main hazards are environmental — the fierce summer sun, slippery limestone streets after rain, and careless drivers on narrow island roads. Traffic drives on the left (legacy of British rule).
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Sarajevo
Sarajevo sits in a valley at 511 metres elevation — higher than most Balkan capitals — giving it a continental climate with cold, snowy winters and warm summers. Snowfall in winter is significant and reliable (the 1984 Olympics ran on natural snow); spring and autumn are short but beautiful. Summer temperatures are pleasant (25–32°C) compared to coastal Adriatic destinations.
Valletta
Valletta has a classic Mediterranean climate — long, hot, dry summers and short, mild, rainy winters. The city sits on an exposed peninsula surrounded by water on three sides, which moderates temperatures but also means the wind can be relentless. Malta averages around 3,000 hours of sunshine a year, one of the highest totals in Europe.
🚇 Getting Around
Sarajevo
Sarajevo's public transport network is based on trams, trolleybuses, and minibuses (kombi). The city centre is highly walkable — the Baščaršija old town, Ferhadija pedestrian zone, and Vijećnica (city hall) are all within a 20-minute walk of each other. Bolt is available and reliable; licensed taxis exist but some kerb taxis near tourist areas overcharge.
Walkability: The old town core is highly walkable and the most pleasant way to see Sarajevo. Ferhadija pedestrian street connects the Austro-Hungarian centre to the Ottoman bazaar seamlessly. The War Tunnel Museum and Vrelo Bosne require transport (taxi or tram respectively).
Valletta
Valletta itself is entirely walkable — the whole peninsula is well under 1 km long and cars are largely banned inside the walls. For the rest of the island, Malta Public Transport runs an efficient and cheap bus network radiating out from the Valletta terminus just outside the City Gate. Ferries, water taxis, and taxis fill the gaps.
Walkability: Valletta itself is perfectly walkable — the whole old city fits within a 0.8 km² fortified grid. However the cross streets running down to the bastions are extremely steep and stepped in places, which is physically harder than the gentle distances suggest. Comfortable shoes with grip are essential, especially on the limestone paving.
The Verdict
Choose Sarajevo if...
you want Europe's most layered city — Ottoman bazaar, WWI assassination site, 1990s siege tunnel, interfaith coexistence, and ćevapi for €5 in a Baščaršija kafana
Choose Valletta if...
you want the Knights of St. John's honey-limestone capital — Caravaggio at the Co-Cathedral, Saluting Battery, Grand Harbour views, and Mdina the silent city
Sarajevo
Valletta