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Granada vs Portland

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Granada

Granada

Nicaragua

Portland

Portland

United States

Granada

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

Portland

Safety: 62/100Pop: 650K (city), 2.5M (metro)America/Los_Angeles

πŸ’° Budget

budget
Granada: $25-40Portland: $90-140
mid-range
Granada: $50-90Portland: $200-320
luxury
Granada: $120-200Portland: $500+

πŸ›‘οΈ Safety

Granada55/100Safety Scoreβœ“62/100Portland

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.

Portland

Portland is generally safe for tourists but the city has genuinely struggled since 2020. Downtown and Old Town lost considerable foot traffic, and visible homelessness and open drug use are more apparent than in most American cities. West side neighborhoods (Pearl, Nob Hill/NW 23rd, Washington Park) and most east side neighborhoods (Hawthorne, Division, Alberta, Mississippi) feel comfortable day and night. Downtown is improving in 2025-2026 but still patchy after dark.

⭐ Ratings

Granada2/5English Friendlyβœ“5/5Portland
Granada4/5Walkabilityβœ“5/5Portland
Granada1/5Public Transitβœ“4/5Portland
Granada3/5Food Sceneβœ“5/5Portland
Granada2/5Nightlifeβœ“4/5Portland
Granada3/5Cultural Sitesβœ“4/5Portland
Granada4/5Nature Accessβœ“5/5Portland
Granada2/5WiFi Reliabilityβœ“5/5Portland

🌀️ 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)22-35Β°C
Wet Season (Invierno) (May - October)21-32Β°C

Portland

Portland has a cool marine climate β€” famously rainy, but not in the way visitors expect. The rain is a persistent drizzle, not heavy downpours. Portland actually receives less annual rainfall (about 36 inches) than New York or Houston, but it is spread over 150+ rainy days from October through May. Summers (July through September) are gloriously dry, sunny, and warm. Winter brings occasional snow that typically melts within a day or two.

Spring (March - May)5-18Β°C
Summer (June - September)14-28Β°C
Autumn (October - November)5-16Β°C
Winter (December - February)2-9Β°C

πŸš‡ 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 β€” it gets very hot.

City Taxis β€” C$20-50 ($0.55-1.40) within the city; C$200-400 ($5.50-11) to Masaya
Chicken Buses β€” C$15-50 ($0.40-1.40) per ride; Managua C$35 ($1)
Tourist Shuttles β€” $15-35 per person per trip (LeΓ³n, San Juan del Sur, Ometepe)

Portland

Portland has the most useful public transit of any city its size on the West Coast. MAX light rail (5 lines) connects the airport, downtown, and key suburbs. The Portland Streetcar loops through downtown, the Pearl, and east side neighborhoods. TriMet buses fill in the gaps. Within individual neighborhoods β€” Pearl, Hawthorne, Alberta, Mississippi, NW 23rd β€” walking is the right answer. Portland is also one of the best US cycling cities with protected lanes and a cyclists-first culture.

Walkability: Portland is one of the most walkable large cities in the American West β€” grid-patterned, flat on the east side, and most interesting neighborhoods (Pearl, NW 23rd, Hawthorne, Division, Alberta, Mississippi, Belmont) have dense commercial strips. Downtown blocks are short (only 200 ft) which makes walking feel quicker. Expect rain 9 months of the year β€” a good waterproof shell is more useful than an umbrella in the Portland wind.

MAX Light Rail β€” $2.80 single ride (2.5 hr transfer); $5.60 day pass
Portland Streetcar β€” $2.80 single ride (same as MAX); valid with TriMet day pass
TriMet Bus β€” $2.80 single ride; $5.60 day pass (capped)

The Verdict

Choose Granada if...

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

Choose Portland if...

you want craft beer everywhere, no sales tax, food carts, Powell's Books, and the Cascades plus Coast at the doorstep