🏆 Athens wins 85 OVR vs 82 · attribute matchup 3–3
Greece
85OVR
Norway
82OVR
Athens
Greece
Tromsø
Norway
Athens
Tromsø
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Athens
Athens is generally safe for tourists. The main risks are pickpocketing on crowded metro lines and in tourist areas (Monastiraki, Plaka, Syntagma), bag snatching on motorbikes, and some petty scams. Exercise normal urban awareness, especially on public transport and at night around Omonia Square.
Tromsø
Tromsø is extraordinarily safe by global standards — violent crime is rare, pickpocketing minimal, and the Norwegian welfare state underwrites a calm public sphere. The real hazards are environmental: icy sidewalks in winter (the leading cause of tourist injury), winter driving challenges, and the cold itself. Medical care is excellent and the city has a full hospital (UNN) with Arctic expertise.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Athens
Athens has a hot Mediterranean climate with long, dry summers and mild, wet winters. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 35°C and the Acropolis bakes in the sun. Spring and autumn are ideal for sightseeing. Winter is mild with some rain but temperatures rarely drop below 5°C.
Tromsø
Tromsø has a subarctic maritime climate — remarkably mild for its latitude thanks to the North Atlantic Current, but defined year-round by dramatic daylight extremes. Snow falls heavily from November through April. Summer temperatures rarely exceed 20°C. Winter lows typically hover between −5 and −10°C — cold but manageable in proper layers. What you plan for is light, not cold.
🚇 Getting Around
Athens
Athens has a modern metro system (built for the 2004 Olympics), extensive bus and trolleybus network, and a tram line to the coast. A single ticket costs €1.20 and is valid for 90 minutes on all modes. The 5-day tourist ticket (€9) is excellent value.
Walkability: Central Athens is very walkable, though hilly in places. The pedestrianized Dionyssiou Areopagitou walkway around the Acropolis is one of Europe's finest urban walks. Plaka, Monastiraki, and Syntagma are all within easy walking distance of each other. The heat in summer can make walking exhausting — carry water.
Tromsø
Tromsø is a small island city — most sights are within walking distance in the city centre. The local bus system (Troms Fylkestrafikk) covers the island and the mainland, including the airport. Taxis are readily available; ride-hailing is limited. For excursions outside the city (dog sledding at Camp Tamok, Sommarøy fishing village, reindeer camps), a tour bus or rental car is essential.
Walkability: City centre is highly walkable and concentrated. The island of Tromsøya itself is 9 km long but the useful tourist zone is just 2 km of it. Outside the island — mainland, Kvaløya, or further afield — you need bus, taxi, or car.
The Verdict
Choose Athens if...
you want the Acropolis + Parthenon, Plaka tavernas, Acropolis Museum, Lycabettus sunset, and an island ferry out of Piraeus
Choose Tromsø if...
you want the Gateway to the Arctic — 240 aurora nights/year, Fjellheisen panoramas, dog sledding, Sami reindeer culture