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Granada vs Kotor

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Granada

Granada

Nicaragua

Kotor

Kotor

Montenegro

Granada

Safety: 55/100Pop: 130,000America/Managua

Kotor

Safety: 82/100Pop: 13,000 (town), 23,000 (municipality)Europe/Podgorica

💰 Budget

budget
Granada: $25-40Kotor: $45-70
mid-range
Granada: $50-90Kotor: $100-170
luxury
Granada: $120-200Kotor: $250+

🛡️ Safety

Granada55/100Safety Score82/100Kotor

Granada

Granada is generally safe for tourists, particularly within the well-traveled historic center. Nicaragua as a whole has lower crime rates than its Central American neighbors. Exercise standard precautions, especially at night and near the lake area. Political protests have occasionally caused unrest in the past.

Kotor

Kotor is very safe for tourists. Violent crime is rare and the small-town atmosphere means the Old Town feels secure at all hours. The main risks are related to the physically demanding fortress climb, cruise-ship crowds, and driving on narrow mountain roads. Montenegro is generally one of the safest countries in the Balkans for visitors.

Ratings

Granada2/5English Friendly3/5Kotor
Granada4/5Walkability5/5Kotor
Granada1/5Public Transit2/5Kotor
Granada3/5Food Scene3/5Kotor
Granada2/5Nightlife2/5Kotor
Granada3/5Cultural Sites4/5Kotor
Granada4/5Nature Access5/5Kotor
Granada2/5WiFi Reliability3/5Kotor

🌤️ Weather

Granada

Granada has a tropical climate with a distinct dry season (November-April) and wet season (May-October). Temperatures are consistently hot year-round, with the lowland location near Lake Nicaragua adding humidity. The dry season is the peak travel period.

Dry Season (Verano) (November - April)22-35°C
Wet Season (Invierno) (May - October)21-32°C

Kotor

Kotor has a Mediterranean climate with hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters. The bay's enclosed geography amplifies summer heat and winter rainfall — Kotor is one of the wettest spots on the Adriatic. The swimming season runs from June through September.

Spring (March - May)10-22°C
Summer (June - August)20-32°C
Autumn (September - November)12-26°C
Winter (December - February)4-12°C

🚇 Getting Around

Granada

Granada's colonial core is compact and easily walkable. For destinations outside the center, cheap taxis, horse-drawn carriages, and local buses are readily available. Chicken buses connect to Managua and other cities. Tourist shuttles run to major destinations.

Walkability: Granada's colonial center is flat, compact, and best explored on foot. The Parque Central, Calle La Calzada, and all major churches are within a 10-minute walk of each other. Sidewalks are uneven and streets can be dusty. Carry water — it gets very hot.

City TaxisC$20-50 ($0.55-1.40) within the city; C$200-400 ($5.50-11) to Masaya
Chicken BusesC$15-50 ($0.40-1.40) per ride; Managua C$35 ($1)
Tourist Shuttles$15-35 per person per trip (León, San Juan del Sur, Ometepe)

Kotor

Kotor's Old Town is entirely pedestrianized and small enough to walk across in 10 minutes. For exploring the wider Bay of Kotor (Perast, Tivat, Budva), you will need a bus, taxi, or rental car. The bay is ringed by a scenic road that connects all the waterfront villages.

Walkability: Kotor's Old Town is superbly walkable — compact, flat, car-free, and endlessly explorable. The fortress climb is the only strenuous walk. Beyond the Old Town, a waterfront path extends north to Dobrota (about 2 km). The wider bay requires transport, as villages are connected by a narrow two-lane road along the water's edge.

WalkingFree
Local Buses (Blue Line)€1-3 (~$1.10-3.30) depending on distance
Taxis€5-10 within Kotor area; €10-15 to Tivat Airport; €45-60 to Dubrovnik

The Verdict

Choose Granada if...

you want colonial charm, volcanoes, and Lake Nicaragua islands at rock-bottom backpacker prices

Choose Kotor if...

you want a medieval walled town in a dramatic fjord — Adriatic beauty with a fraction of Dubrovnik's crowds and prices