Denver
United States
Nashville
United States
Denver
Nashville
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Denver
Denver is generally safe for visitors in core neighborhoods (LoDo, RiNo, Capitol Hill, Cherry Creek, Wash Park), but property crime and visible homelessness have both risen sharply since 2020. Car break-ins are extremely common β never leave anything visible. The 16th Street Mall and stretches of Colfax Avenue have a rougher feel at night. The bigger danger for most travelers is environmental: altitude, sun, and weather catch visitors off guard.
Nashville
Nashville is generally safe for visitors in the tourist corridor β Broadway, The Gulch, 12 South, East Nashville, Germantown, and the Vanderbilt/Centennial Park area all feel comfortable day and night. Property crime (car break-ins) is the dominant concern. Broadway weekend nights can get rowdy, with the occasional fight spilling out of bars. Gun violence is a citywide issue but rarely touches tourist zones.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Denver
Denver has a semi-arid, high-altitude climate with 300+ days of sunshine a year and very low humidity. The altitude and dry air make the sun intense β UV levels are routinely "very high" even in winter. Weather is famously volatile: 70Β°F one afternoon and snowing the next morning is standard. Afternoon thunderstorms roll off the Front Range most summer days; big snowstorms punctuate winter. Hydrate aggressively regardless of the season β the combination of altitude and dry air dehydrates visitors fast.
Nashville
Nashville has a humid subtropical climate with hot, humid summers, mild winters, and severe storm potential year-round. Spring (April-May) and fall (September-October) are when the city is at its best. July and August are brutal. Winter is mild but brings occasional ice and rare snow. Middle Tennessee sits firmly in the southern end of "Tornado Alley."
π Getting Around
Denver
Denver is a sprawling car-oriented metro with a workable (by US standards) light rail and commuter rail network operated by RTD. The A Line train from Union Station to the airport is one of the best airport transit links in any US city. Core neighborhoods (LoDo, RiNo, Capitol Hill, Wash Park) are walkable individually, but connecting them typically means rideshare or transit. Rideshare is cheap and ubiquitous.
Walkability: Denver is walkable within neighborhoods but sprawling overall. LoDo, RiNo, Capitol Hill, Cherry Creek, and Wash Park each work on foot. Connecting them means rideshare, transit, or cycling. The altitude makes the first 24-48 hours of walking unexpectedly tiring β go slower than you think you should. Summer sun at 5,280 ft is aggressive even in cooler temperatures.
Nashville
Nashville is a car-and-rideshare city. WeGo Public Transit runs buses but the network is limited and slow β few visitors use it. There is no subway or light rail. Downtown, The Gulch, Germantown, 12 South, and East Nashville are each individually walkable, but connecting them means rideshare. The city lacks the dense transit grid of northeastern cities.
Walkability: Nashville is walkable within individual neighborhoods but not between them. Downtown (Broadway, The District, Germantown) is the most walkable core. 12 South runs six walkable blocks of restaurants and shops. East Nashville centers on 5 Points and the Eastland strip. Connecting any of these usually requires rideshare or driving β sidewalks get patchy and stroads (wide commercial roads) make long walks unpleasant.
The Verdict
Choose Denver if...
you want a mile-high Rockies gateway β breweries, legal cannabis, Red Rocks, and ski towns an hour west
Choose Nashville if...
you want nonstop country music, hot chicken, songwriter listening rooms, and honky-tonk chaos on Broadway
Nashville