Cinque Terre
Italy
Faroe Islands
Faroe Islands
Cinque Terre
Faroe Islands
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Cinque Terre
Cinque Terre is a very safe destination for tourists. Violent crime is negligible. The most significant risks are environmental: slippery hiking trails, cliff edges, unstable terrain after rain, and heat exhaustion in summer. Petty theft occurs on crowded trains and at busy platforms, especially La Spezia Centrale. The 2011 flash floods that buried Vernazza and Monterosso are a sobering reminder that extreme weather events are a real risk in autumn.
Faroe Islands
The Faroe Islands are one of the safest destinations in the world for tourists. Crime is essentially negligible. The real hazard is the environment — cliff edges with no guardrails, sudden fog, high winds, and cold North Atlantic seas. Respect the weather and the landscape, and you will be fine.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Cinque Terre
Cinque Terre enjoys a classic Ligurian Mediterranean climate: warm, dry summers and mild, wet winters. The steep cliffs provide some wind shelter but also trap heat and humidity in summer. The mountains behind create occasional microclimates, and the autumn and spring transition months are prone to intense rain events — the 2011 disaster that killed 13 people and buried Vernazza's piazza in three meters of mud happened in late October. Trail closures often follow rainstorms for safety reasons.
Faroe Islands
The Faroe Islands have a hyper-oceanic climate — remarkably mild for their latitude but relentlessly wet, windy, and foggy. The cliché "four seasons in one day" was practically invented here. Summer highs rarely exceed 13°C, winter lows rarely drop below 3°C. Rain, drizzle, and sideways wind are not exceptional events — they are the baseline. June and July bring near-"white nights" with 19-20 hours of usable light but rarely clear skies. Pack waterproofs and windproofs regardless of season.
🚇 Getting Around
Cinque Terre
The Cinque Terre Express train is the backbone of getting around. It runs on the Genoa–La Spezia coastal line, stopping at all five villages roughly every 15 minutes during the day. La Spezia Centrale is the main gateway from the south; Levanto is the gateway from the north (and a cheaper, calmer base village option). Boats connect the villages seasonally. There are no cars inside any village — luggage on wheels is a liability on stairs.
Walkability: Within each individual village, everything is on foot — there is no other option. The streets are narrow, steep, and full of stone stairs. Each village can be walked end-to-end in 10–20 minutes. Inter-village walking (the trails) is the other option but requires fitness and proper footwear. Bring a small daypack and leave wheeled luggage at your accommodation or stored at La Spezia station (left-luggage available at Centrale).
Faroe Islands
A rental car is effectively essential for exploring the Faroe Islands beyond Tórshavn. The main islands are connected by an impressive network of sub-sea tunnels (some with roundabouts beneath the ocean), toll roads, and bridges. Ferries and a subsidised helicopter service reach the outer islands. Public buses exist but schedules are infrequent outside the capital.
Walkability: Tórshavn is fully walkable within its compact city centre. Outside the capital, a car is necessary — villages are often kilometres apart on single-track roads and trailheads have no public transport access.
The Verdict
Choose Cinque Terre if...
you want five fishing villages on Ligurian cliffs — pesto, sciacchetrà, the Sentiero Azzurro trail, and a train every 15 minutes
Choose Faroe Islands if...
you want a North Atlantic outpost — basalt cliffs, grass-roof villages, sub-sea tunnel roundabouts, puffins on Mykines, and weather that changes every 20 minutes
Cinque Terre
Faroe Islands