Quick Verdict
Pick Anchorage if Denali base camping, Kenai Fjords cruises, and Coastal Trail beluga sightings trump Midwest free museums. Pick St. Louis if Forest Park's six free museums, Gateway Arch tram rides, and Cardinals games beat Alaska logistics.
🏆 St. Louis wins 65 OVR vs 64 · attribute matchup 3–3
St. Louis
United States
Anchorage
United States
St. Louis
Anchorage
How do St. Louis and Anchorage compare?
$240 in Anchorage against $160 in St. Louis is a real gap, and Anchorage's premium goes to launchpad logistics, not downtown nights. Anchorage is the Alaska base camp — Lake Hood's floatplane departures, the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail's 11 miles along Cook Inlet (with beluga whales offshore in late summer), and the smell of fresh sockeye on the Ship Creek docks in July. St. Louis is the Midwestern river city — the Gateway Arch tram ride at $19, Forest Park's six free major museums (Art, Science, History, Zoo, Cathedral, Missouri History), $9 toasted ravioli at Mama's on the Hill, and Cardinals bleacher seats at Busch for $20.
Trip type fundamentally differs. Anchorage wins on nature access (5/5 against STL's 3/5) — Denali National Park is a 4-hour drive north, Kenai Fjords day-cruises run $189, and you'll see brown bears within a day's drive. St. Louis wins on cost, on free-museum density (Forest Park's six major institutions are all $0 — that's not a typo), and on baseball culture. STL safety is its weak point at 52/100 — Lyft-aware in The Loop after dark — but the Hill and Central West End neighborhoods are perfectly fine.
Practical move: Anchorage peaks June–August (June and July are 18+ hours of daylight); St. Louis peaks April–May and September–October. They're a 7-hour Alaska Airlines flight apart with a Seattle connection. Pick Anchorage if Denali base camping, Kenai Fjords cruises, and Coastal Trail beluga sightings trump Midwest free museums. Pick St. Louis if Forest Park's six free museums, Gateway Arch tram rides, and Cardinals bleacher games beat Alaska base-camping logistics.
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
St. Louis
St. Louis has high reported crime rates city-wide — but they're heavily concentrated in specific North Side neighbourhoods that visitors have no reason to enter. The tourist neighbourhoods (Downtown around the Arch, Soulard, The Hill, Central West End, Forest Park, Tower Grove, Clayton, University City) are well-policed and safe day and night. Common-sense urban precautions apply: secure valuables in cars, avoid walking alone late, use rideshare after midnight in less busy areas.
Anchorage
Anchorage has higher property and violent crime rates than typical mid-size US cities — ranks consistently in the top 20 US cities for property crime per capita, and the city has visible homelessness in some downtown areas. Tourist areas are safe in daytime; common sense at night. The bigger genuine risks are wildlife (moose attacks, bear encounters on trails) and weather (winter ice, summer river hypothermia).
🌤️ Weather
St. Louis
St. Louis has a humid continental climate at the southern edge — hot, humid summers (heat index regularly above 38°C / 100°F in July–August), cold winters with occasional ice storms, and dramatic spring weather including tornado risk in March–May. The city sits in the lower Tornado Alley and has a functional warning siren system. Spring (April–May) and autumn (September–October) are the only months without weather extremes.
Anchorage
Anchorage has a subarctic climate moderated by Cook Inlet — surprisingly mild for its latitude (61° N), with summer highs in the high teens and low 20s°C and winter lows averaging -10°C. The Chugach Mountains shield the city from the worst Pacific storms; rainfall is moderate (15-17 inches annually). The defining variable is daylight, not temperature: 19+ hours in late June, ~5.5 hours around winter solstice.
🚇 Getting Around
St. Louis
St. Louis is a driving city — the metro area sprawls 60 miles end-to-end and the dominant mode of transport is the private car. The MetroLink light rail (two lines, blue and red) connects the airport, downtown, Forest Park, Clayton, and East St. Louis on a single useful axis; MetroBus covers the rest. Most visitors rent a car for at least part of their stay, particularly to reach The Hill, Soulard, and the Botanical Garden. Uber and Lyft operate everywhere and are inexpensive ($8–$25 for most trips within the city).
Walkability: Inside individual neighbourhoods (Soulard, The Hill, Central West End, Forest Park) walking is excellent. Between neighbourhoods St. Louis is a driving city — distances are real Midwest distances and surface streets are fast but built for cars, not pedestrians. The Delmar Loop in University City is the longest pure pedestrian commercial strip; the Old Courthouse-to-Arch riverfront is the most photogenic walk.
Anchorage
Anchorage is a car city — the People Mover bus system exists but is slow and limited; rideshare works downtown and in midtown but coverage thins in outlying areas. A rental car is essential for almost any visit longer than two days, especially if you plan to access the Chugach trailheads or take day trips down the Seward Highway. The Alaska Railroad is the iconic intercity option for Denali and Seward.
Walkability: Downtown core is walkable; everything else requires a vehicle. Anchorage sprawls south to the Old Seward Highway commercial strip and west to Spenard — 30+ minute walks each. The Coastal Trail makes the western side bikeable.
📅 Best Time to Visit
St. Louis
Apr–May, Sep–Oct
Peak travel window
Anchorage
Jun–Sep
Peak travel window
The Verdict
Choose St. Louis if...
You want a Midwestern river city with cheap baseball tickets, world-class free museums in a giant park, and the best toasted ravioli on Earth.
Choose Anchorage if...
You want a city you can use as a launchpad for Denali and the Kenai while staying somewhere with hotels, restaurants, and a 737.
St. Louis
Anchorage
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