American Southwest
United States
Seattle
United States
American Southwest
Seattle
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
American Southwest
The Southwest's gateway towns (Sedona, Flagstaff, Page, Williams) have low crime rates. The real risks are environmental: extreme heat, flash floods, altitude sickness on the rim, dehydration, and long distances between services. More national-park visitors die from heat and falls here than anywhere else in the system.
Seattle
Seattle is generally safe for visitors, with low rates of violent crime in tourist areas. Property crime (car break-ins, package theft, bike theft) is common. Homelessness is visible in parts of downtown, Pioneer Square, and SoDo. Avoid empty downtown streets and Third Avenue late at night.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
American Southwest
The American Southwest spans a huge elevation range β from desert floors at 900 meters to canyon rims above 2,500 meters β so weather varies dramatically. Low deserts (Phoenix, Page) bake in summer (40Β°C+), while Grand Canyon South Rim and Flagstaff can get snow in winter. Sedona sits in between. The July-September "monsoon" brings sudden, violent thunderstorms and flash floods.
Seattle
Seattle has a temperate oceanic climate β mild year-round with a pronounced wet season from October through April. Summers are dry, sunny, and cool. The famous rain is usually a fine drizzle ("Seattle mist") rather than downpours. Snow at sea level is rare.
π Getting Around
American Southwest
A rental car is essentially mandatory to explore the Southwest. Distances are huge (Grand Canyon to Monument Valley is 280 km; Sedona to Page is 210 km) and public transport between parks is minimal. Once inside Grand Canyon South Rim, however, free shuttle buses efficiently cover all viewpoints. Amtrak's Southwest Chief stops at Flagstaff, and small regional airports serve the area.
Walkability: Downtown Sedona, Flagstaff, Williams, and Page are pleasantly walkable once you've parked. The Grand Canyon Village is very walkable β you can walk the entire South Rim Trail (21 km) past all major viewpoints. Outside town centers, distances and lack of sidewalks make walking impractical.
Seattle
Seattle transit is run by Sound Transit (regional) and King County Metro (buses, streetcar, water taxi). Light rail, buses, streetcars, and Washington State Ferries form a useful network. An ORCA card works across all systems. Driving downtown is painful β traffic is consistently ranked among America's worst.
Walkability: Downtown, Pike Place Market, Pioneer Square, and Seattle Center are all walkable β but prepare for steep hills. Capitol Hill, Ballard, and Fremont are each walkable neighborhoods, but you'll want transit between them. The Link light rail plus walking will cover most of what you want to see.
The Verdict
Choose American Southwest if...
you want Grand Canyon vistas, Sedona red rocks, Antelope Canyon light shafts, and the great American road trip through red-rock country
Choose Seattle if...
you want Pike Place Market, coffee culture, Puget Sound ferries, and Mt. Rainier & Olympic National Park at the doorstep
American Southwest
Seattle