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Charleston vs Mexico City

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Charleston

Charleston

United States

Mexico City

Mexico City

Mexico

Charleston

Safety: 78/100Pop: 155K (city), 830K (metro)America/New_York

Mexico City

Safety: 58/100Pop: 9.2M (city), 21M (metro)America/Mexico_City

💰 Budget

budget
Charleston: $90-150Mexico City: $30-55
mid-range
Charleston: $220-400Mexico City: $80-150
luxury
Charleston: $600+Mexico City: $250+

🛡️ Safety

Charleston78/100Safety Score60/100Mexico City

Charleston

The historic peninsula and the surrounding beach/barrier islands are very safe for visitors, with low violent crime and a heavy tourist-police presence downtown. Property crime (car break-ins, package theft) is the most common issue. Some outlying neighborhoods on the West Side and in North Charleston have higher crime rates but are not places most tourists end up.

Mexico City

Mexico City's tourist areas (Roma, Condesa, Polanco, Coyoacan, Centro Historico) are generally safe during the day. Petty crime like phone snatching and pickpocketing occurs. Use common sense, stay in well-traveled areas at night, and use ride-hailing apps rather than hailing random cabs.

Ratings

Charleston5/5English Friendly3/5Mexico City
Charleston5/5Walkability4/5Mexico City
Charleston2/5Public Transit4/5Mexico City
Charleston5/5Food Scene5/5Mexico City
Charleston3/5Nightlife5/5Mexico City
Charleston4/5Cultural Sites5/5Mexico City
Charleston3/5Nature Access3/5Mexico City
Charleston4/5WiFi Reliability4/5Mexico City

🌤️ Weather

Charleston

Charleston has a humid subtropical climate — mild winters, long warm springs, and punishingly hot and humid summers. Hurricane season runs June through November with peak risk in August-September. Spring (March-May) and fall (October-November) are the sweet spots.

Spring (March - May)12-27°C
Summer (June - August)22-34°C
Autumn (September - November)14-29°C
Winter (December - February)5-16°C

Mexico City

Mexico City's high altitude gives it a mild, spring-like climate year-round. There are two main seasons: dry (November-April) and rainy (May-October). Temperatures are remarkably consistent, rarely exceeding 28°C or dropping below 5°C.

Dry Season (November - April)7-24°C
Rainy Season (May - October)12-25°C
Spring (transition) (March - May)10-27°C
Autumn (transition) (September - November)10-23°C

🚇 Getting Around

Charleston

The historic peninsula is small — about 2 miles north-to-south at its widest — and extremely walkable. Charleston has very limited public transit for a US city: CARTA buses exist but run infrequently and cover downtown poorly for tourists. Most visitors walk everything downtown and rent a car or use Uber/Lyft for beaches, plantations, and the airport.

Walkability: Charleston's historic peninsula is one of the most walkable neighborhoods in the American South — flat, shaded by live oaks, well-maintained sidewalks (some brick and uneven), and tightly packed with destinations. Outside the peninsula, however, the metro is car-dependent and pedestrian infrastructure thins out fast.

WalkingFree
DASH TrolleyFree
Uber & Lyft$8-15 within downtown; $20-35 to airport; $25-40 to beaches

Mexico City

Mexico City has an enormous public transit network anchored by the Metro (12 lines), Metrobus (rapid transit buses), and regular buses. The Metro is incredibly cheap but crowded during rush hours. Uber and DiDi are widely used and affordable.

Walkability: Central neighborhoods like Roma, Condesa, Coyoacan, and Centro Historico are very walkable with wide sidewalks and pleasant tree-lined streets. Chapultepec and Polanco also reward walking. However, the city is vast — distances between neighborhoods often require transit. Sidewalks can be uneven, and traffic is aggressive at crossings.

Metro CDMXMXN 5 (~$0.28 USD) per ride — rechargeable Metro card required
MetrobusMXN 6 (~$0.34 USD) per ride with rechargeable card
Uber / DiDi / InDriverMXN 60-200 (~$3.40-11 USD) for most trips within central neighborhoods

The Verdict

Choose Charleston if...

you want pastel antebellum architecture, harbor-side history, modern Southern cuisine's spiritual home, and Gullah-Geechee heritage

Choose Mexico City if...

you want Latin America's biggest food scene — Zócalo, Frida Kahlo, Teotihuacán pyramids, mezcal bars, and Xochimilco trajineras