Austin
United States
Havana
Cuba
Austin
Havana
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Austin
Austin is generally safe for visitors, with most tourist areas (downtown, South Congress, UT, Zilker) feeling comfortable day and night. Property crime (car break-ins) is the most common concern. 6th Street on weekend nights has a reputation for fights and occasional shootings β late-night caution is warranted there specifically.
Havana
Cuba is generally one of the safest countries in Latin America. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. The main annoyances are persistent jineteros (hustlers) offering everything from cigars to restaurant recommendations on commission.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Austin
Austin has a humid subtropical climate with long, brutal summers and mild winters. Summer is the defining weather experience β 100Β°F+ days are routine from June through September. Spring (March-May) is when Austin is at its best. Winter is mild but can bring surprise ice storms roughly once a decade.
Havana
Havana has a tropical climate with a dry season (November-April) and a wet season (May-October). Temperatures are warm year-round. Hurricane season runs from June to November, with September and October being the highest-risk months.
π Getting Around
Austin
Austin is a car city. Public transit (Capital Metro) is limited and slow. Most visitors use rideshare (Uber, Lyft) or rent a car. Downtown, South Congress, and East Austin are walkable individually but connecting them on foot is impractical. Cycling is viable on the Lady Bird Lake trail and protected lanes on Guadalupe and Rio Grande.
Walkability: Austin is a moderately walkable city within individual neighborhoods but not between them. Downtown, South Congress (SoCo), Rainey Street, and the UT campus area each work well on foot. Getting from one to another almost always means rideshare, bike, or driving. Summer heat (June-September) makes any walk over 10 minutes uncomfortable midday.
Havana
Havana's transport is a fascinating mix of vintage American cars, Chinese buses, coconut-shaped taxis, and horse-drawn carts. There's no ride-hailing app that works reliably. Getting around requires a mix of walking, negotiating with taxi drivers, and patience.
Walkability: Old Havana, Centro Habana, and the Malecon are all walkable, though sidewalks are uneven and sometimes missing. The 3-4 km walk from Habana Vieja to Vedado along the Malecon is one of the great urban walks. Beyond central areas, distances become too large for walking.
The Verdict
Choose Austin if...
you want live music every night, legendary brisket and breakfast tacos, Hill Country day trips, and a weird-but-booming Texas capital
Choose Havana if...
you want a time-warp to 1959 β vintage Chevys on the MalecΓ³n, Old Havana plazas, rum mojitos, son cubano clubs, and crumbling colonial grandeur