
Agra
India
Almaty
Kazakhstan
Agra
Almaty
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Agra
Agra is generally safe for tourists in terms of violent crime, but it has a well-documented problem with scams, touts, and aggressive tricksters targeting visitors around the Taj Mahal and railway stations. Gem scams (being taken to an overpriced shop by a "helpful" stranger), fake guides, bogus ticket counters, and rickshaw drivers who take you to commission-paying shops instead of your destination are the most common hazards. Solo women travelers report experiencing harassment and should exercise additional caution after dark. Air pollution is a serious health concern, particularly in winter.
Almaty
Almaty is reasonably safe but more cosmopolitan and fast-paced than smaller Central Asian cities. Petty crime like pickpocketing exists in crowded areas. Taxi scams are common.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Agra
Agra has a semi-arid continental climate with extreme seasonal variation. Winters are cool and hazy, summers are brutally hot and dry before the monsoon breaks in July. The most comfortable and popular months to visit are October through March. Note that winter fog (December–January) sometimes delays morning train services from Delhi and can obscure Taj Mahal views.
Almaty
Almaty has a continental climate with four distinct seasons. The mountains create a microclimate with more precipitation than the surrounding steppe.
🚇 Getting Around
Agra
Agra's main sights are spread several kilometers apart across a city of 1.7 million people with heavy traffic and no metro system. Walking between attractions is generally impractical. Auto-rickshaws and app-based taxis are the main options for tourists. The area immediately around the Taj Mahal (within 500 m) is a low-emission zone where only electric vehicles and non-motorized transport are permitted.
Walkability: Low. Agra's major sights are 3–10 km apart across a chaotic city with minimal footpaths. The Taj Ganj neighborhood and old city lanes reward on-foot exploration, but plan on using transport for all inter-site movement.
Almaty
Almaty is a large, spread-out city. The metro has one line that covers the center, and ride-hailing apps are the main way to get around.
Walkability: Moderate — the city center around Panfilov Park and Green Bazaar is walkable, but the city is large and built on a gentle slope. The grid layout makes navigation easy.
The Verdict
Choose Agra if...
you want the Taj Mahal, Agra Fort, and Fatehpur Sikri — three UNESCO sites in one Golden Triangle stop, easily reached via Gatimaan Express from Delhi
Choose Almaty if...
you want Kazakhstan's leafy ex-capital with the Tian Shan at your back — Medeu ice rink, Shymbulak ski, Kolsai lakes, and Soviet-era Panfilov Park