Florence
Italy
Helsinki
Finland
Florence
Helsinki
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Florence
Florence is a safe city overall. Violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. The main concerns are pickpocketing in crowded tourist areas and around train stations, plus occasional bag snatching by scooter riders.
Helsinki
Helsinki is consistently ranked among the safest capital cities in the world. Violent crime is extremely rare, pickpocketing is uncommon compared to most European cities, and the city feels calm and orderly at all hours. The greatest safety challenges are environmental: icy sidewalks and steps in winter present a genuine fall hazard (locals walk with deliberate caution), slippery harbor edges, and the risk of serious hypothermia if caught outdoors unprepared during a cold snap. Emergency services are excellent and English is spoken everywhere.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Florence
Florence has a humid subtropical climate with hot summers and cool, damp winters. Its valley location means summer heat can feel intense. Spring and autumn are the most comfortable seasons for sightseeing.
Helsinki
Helsinki has a subarctic climate with four genuinely distinct seasons. Summers are mild to warm with extraordinarily long daylight hours β around the June solstice the sun barely dips below the horizon, creating near-continuous golden light. Winters are cold, dark, and snowy, with only 6 hours of daylight in December. The Gulf of Finland regularly freezes in winter, requiring icebreaker ships to keep ferry routes open. Auroras are occasionally visible on clear winter nights north of the city. Spring and autumn are short but beautiful. Pack for rain in any season and extreme cold November through March.
π Getting Around
Florence
Florence's historic center is compact and best explored on foot. The limited traffic zone (ZTL) restricts cars in the center, making walking the default. Buses serve outlying neighborhoods and Piazzale Michelangelo. A single tram line connects the train station to the suburbs.
Walkability: Florence's centro storico is one of the most walkable city centers in Europe β flat, compact, and largely pedestrianized. You can walk from Santa Maria Novella station to Santa Croce in 20 minutes. Comfortable shoes are essential on the uneven cobblestones.
Helsinki
Helsinki has an excellent integrated public transport network operated by HSL (Helsingin Seudun Liikenne), covering metro, trams, buses, local trains, and the ferry to Suomenlinna β all on a single ticketing system. The city center is compact and highly walkable in good weather. Trams are the most useful mode for tourists, running frequently and connecting all the main sights. The metro is useful for longer trips east or west. City Bikes (shared bicycles) are excellent in summer. For winter, the tram and metro keep running regardless of snow.
Walkability: The Helsinki city center peninsula is highly walkable in summer β Senate Square to Market Square to Esplanadi to the Design District is a comfortable 30-minute stroll. In winter, walking is possible but requires proper footwear for icy conditions. Distances between major sights are modest and the flat terrain helps.
The Verdict
Choose Florence if...
you want Renaissance art, Tuscan food and wine, intimate piazzas, and the cradle of Western art and architecture
Choose Helsinki if...
you want saunas everywhere, Nordic design, white-night summers, and the cheapest 2-hour ferry to medieval Tallinn
Florence
Helsinki