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Agra vs Isfahan

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🏆 Isfahan wins 82 OVR vs 70 · attribute matchup 25

Agra
Agra

India

70OVR

VS
Isfahan

Iran

82OVR

Isfahan
55
Safety
75
90
Affordability
80
72
Food
86
99
Culture
99
44
Nightlife
58
56
Walkability
99
58
Nature
72
72
Connectivity
67
Agra

Agra

India

Isfahan

Isfahan

Iran

Agra

Safety: 55/100Pop: 1.7M (city), 2.1M (metro)Asia/Kolkata

Isfahan

Safety: 75/100Pop: 2.2MAsia/Tehran

💰 Budget

budget
Agra: $20-35Isfahan: $20-40
mid-range
Agra: $60-120Isfahan: $50-100
luxury
Agra: $250+Isfahan: $120-250

🛡️ Safety

Agra55/100Safety Score68/100Isfahan

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.

Isfahan

Isfahan itself is an extraordinarily safe city at street level — violent crime against tourists is essentially nonexistent, Iranians are famously hospitable, and the tourist zones are heavily patrolled and well-lit at night. The safety caveats for travel to Iran are almost entirely political and logistical rather than personal-safety issues: heightened regional tensions can lead to sudden changes in consular advice, protests occasionally flare (2022–2023 were particularly tense), and dual-nationals and some Western passport holders face additional scrutiny. Check your government's travel advisory within 7 days of departure.

Ratings

Agra3/5English Friendly2/5Isfahan
Agra2/5Walkability5/5Isfahan
Agra2/5Public Transit3/5Isfahan
Agra3/5Food Scene4/5Isfahan
Agra1/5Nightlife2/5Isfahan
Agra5/5Cultural Sites5/5Isfahan
Agra2/5Nature Access3/5Isfahan
Agra3/5WiFi Reliability3/5Isfahan

🌤️ 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.

Winter (December - February)5-25°C
Spring (March - May)15-40°C
Monsoon (June - September)25-40°C
Post-Monsoon (October - November)14-32°C

Isfahan

Isfahan sits at 1,590 metres on the central Iranian plateau, giving it a continental semi-arid climate with hot dry summers, cold crisp winters, and remarkably clear skies year-round. The city receives very little rainfall (roughly 120 mm per year). Spring and autumn are the clear ideal seasons. Summer is hot but dry enough to remain bearable in the shade; winter can dip below freezing at night and occasionally brings light snow.

Spring (March - May)8-25°C
Summer (June - August)18-38°C
Autumn (September - November)5-28°C
Winter (December - February)-3-12°C

🚇 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.

Auto-Rickshaw₹50–150 (~$0.60–1.80) for short hops; ₹400–600 (~$5–7) for a full-day tour
Uber / Ola₹100–300 (~$1.20–3.60) for most tourist journeys
Cycle Rickshaw₹20–80 (~$0.25–1) within Taj Ganj area

Isfahan

Isfahan's major tourist sights are concentrated in a compact arc from the Jameh Mosque in the old city, through Naqsh-e Jahan Square, across the Zayandeh River bridges, and into the Jolfa quarter — roughly 5 km end to end. The historic centre around Naqsh-e Jahan is highly walkable. For longer hops (to Jolfa, Vank Cathedral, the airport) taxis or the single metro line are the practical options.

Walkability: Very high in the historic core — Naqsh-e Jahan, the bazaar, Chehel Sotoun, and the Jameh Mosque are all walkable from a central hotel. Jolfa is a 25-minute walk south across Si-o-se-pol Bridge or a 10-minute taxi.

WalkingFree
Snapp! (Ride-Hailing App)100,000-300,000 IRR (~$0.20-0.60 USD) per crosstown trip
Street Taxi (Shared or Private)50,000-200,000 IRR (~$0.10-0.40 USD) shared; 200,000-500,000 IRR private

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 Isfahan if...

you want "half the world" — Naqsh-e Jahan Square, the blue-tiled Safavid mosques, Si-o-se-pol bridge — complex visa + cash-only sanctions reality