🏆 Amalfi Coast wins 82 OVR vs 78 · attribute matchup 5–2
Italy
82OVR
Norway
78OVR
Amalfi Coast
Italy
Lofoten Islands
Norway
Amalfi Coast
Lofoten Islands
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Amalfi Coast
The Amalfi Coast is generally very safe for tourists. Violent crime is extremely rare. The main safety concerns relate to the treacherous coastal road, steep terrain, and sea conditions rather than crime. Petty theft can occur on crowded buses and beaches during peak season.
Lofoten Islands
Lofoten is extraordinarily safe by global standards. Violent crime is essentially absent, theft minimal, and the Norwegian social safety net supports a calm rural society. The real hazards are environmental: weather changes rapidly, mountains are genuinely dangerous despite looking accessible, and the narrow E10 road demands cautious driving — especially in winter or with a camper van. Search and rescue is excellent but helicopters cannot fly in all conditions, so self-reliance is essential on any serious hike.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Amalfi Coast
The Amalfi Coast enjoys a classic Mediterranean climate with hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters. The coastal mountains create microclimates — coastal towns are warm and sunny while hilltop Ravello can be cooler and cloudier. Sea breezes moderate summer heat along the coast.
Lofoten Islands
Lofoten has a subarctic maritime climate that is remarkably mild for its latitude — the Gulf Stream keeps winters hovering around freezing rather than the deep cold you would expect at 68°N. What defines Lofoten weather instead is rapid change: four seasons in a day is a cliché here because it is true. Wind, rain, sleet, sudden sun, rainbows, and fog can all appear within an hour. Waterproofs and layers are mandatory year-round. Winters are dark but not impossibly cold; summers are cool, windy, and luminously bright 24 hours a day.
🚇 Getting Around
Amalfi Coast
The Amalfi Coast is served by SITA buses along the main road and ferry services between towns from April to October. Driving is not recommended due to narrow roads, limited parking, and heavy traffic. Ferries are the most scenic and stress-free way to travel between the main towns.
Walkability: Individual towns are walkable but involve hundreds of steps due to the cliffside terrain. Positano is essentially vertical with 400+ steps from the main road to the beach. Amalfi's center is flat but surrounded by hills. Walking between towns is possible on ancient footpaths but requires fitness and good shoes. Bring as little luggage as possible — wheels are useless on stairs.
Lofoten Islands
Lofoten is a car destination. The archipelago stretches 160 km along the scenic E10 highway with villages, viewpoints, and trailheads scattered across five main islands. Public buses exist but are infrequent outside peak summer. Renting a car — ideally from Evenes (EVE) or Leknes (LKN) airport — is the practical choice for most visitors. Cycling the E10 is increasingly popular in summer; distances are manageable but the road has no bike lane and tunnel sections require detours.
Walkability: Individual villages are small and walkable end-to-end in 15–30 minutes. Between villages, however, Lofoten is not a walkable destination — you need a car, bus, or bicycle. Some popular hikes (Reinebringen, Djevelporten) start directly from village edges, which helps.
The Verdict
Choose Amalfi Coast if...
you want cliffside pastel villages over the Tyrrhenian — Positano, Ravello gardens, lemon groves, Capri day trips, and the SS163 coast drive
Choose Lofoten Islands if...
you want granite peaks rising straight from the sea, red rorbuer cabins, Reinebringen hikes, and the E10 scenic drive — peak summer + aurora winter both work
Amalfi Coast
Lofoten Islands