Iguazu Falls
Argentina
Mendoza
Argentina
Iguazu Falls
Mendoza
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Iguazu Falls
Puerto Iguazú and the national park are among the safer tourist zones in Argentina. The park itself is well-managed and staffed. The main risks are environmental — slippery walkways, intense sun, wildlife interactions, and occasional boardwalk closures from flooding — rather than crime. Exercise normal urban precautions in Puerto Iguazú town center and around the bus terminal.
Mendoza
Mendoza is one of Argentina's safer major cities for tourists, with a relatively low violent crime rate compared to Buenos Aires or Rosario. The main tourist areas — the city centre, Chacras, Maipú, and the wine routes — are safe for independent travel. Petty theft and opportunistic crime occur in busy markets and bus terminal areas. Exercise standard urban caution, particularly at night in unfamiliar neighbourhoods.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Iguazu Falls
Iguazu sits in a subtropical rainforest climate — hot and humid year-round with no true dry season. Rainfall feeds the falls' volume directly: after heavy summer rains the cascades swell dramatically, sometimes closing the Devil's Throat boardwalk due to flooding. Winter (June-August) is milder and drier with the most comfortable conditions for walking the trails.
Mendoza
Mendoza has a semi-arid continental climate with hot, dry summers and mild winters. The city enjoys over 300 days of sunshine per year. Rainfall is low — averaging just 200 mm annually — with most precipitation falling in summer as brief thunderstorms. Snow falls on the surrounding Andes throughout winter but rarely reaches the city itself. The zonda wind — a hot, dry föhn wind descending from the Andes — can push temperatures above 40°C in summer and autumn, sometimes with only hours of warning.
🚇 Getting Around
Iguazu Falls
There is no regular public transit between the Argentine and Brazilian sides — the border crossing requires a bus or taxi via the Ponte Tancredo Neves bridge. Within the Argentine park, the Tren Ecológico (ecological train) connects the visitor centre to the Upper Circuit and Devil's Throat stops. Puerto Iguazú itself is small and walkable; taxis are cheap and plentiful.
Walkability: Puerto Iguazú town is small and walkable — the central area, main street (Avenida Córdoba), and waterfront can all be reached on foot from most hotels. The national park is also walk-friendly within its circuits, though the train is needed to reach Devil's Throat without a 3 km return walk on a service road.
Mendoza
Mendoza city is served by a light rail tram, a comprehensive bus network, and taxis and rideshare apps. The city centre is walkable and flat. Getting into wine country requires a dedicated plan — most visitors combine bike rental in Maipú with guided tours or rental cars for Luján de Cuyo and the Uco Valley.
Walkability: Mendoza city centre is flat, well-shaded by its famous tree canopy, and very walkable between Plaza Independencia, Avenida San Martín, and the Quinta Sección bar district. Parque San Martín is a 15-minute walk from the centre. Wine country requires wheels — distances between bodegas and the city make walking impractical except on the Maipú bike route.
The Verdict
Choose Iguazu Falls if...
you want one of the New 7 Natural Wonders — 275 cascades, the Devil's Throat catwalk, and the triple-frontier of Argentina + Brazil + Paraguay
Choose Mendoza if...
you want Argentina's wine capital — Malbec routes through Maipú + Luján + Uco Valley, plus Aconcagua + the Andes for adventure side trips
Iguazu Falls
Mendoza