π Kyoto wins 88 OVR vs 82 Β· attribute matchup 1β4
Iran
82OVR
Japan
88OVR
Isfahan
Iran
Kyoto
Japan
Isfahan
Kyoto
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Isfahan
Isfahan itself is an extraordinarily safe city at street level β violent crime against tourists is essentially nonexistent, Iranians are famously hospitable, and the tourist zones are heavily patrolled and well-lit at night. The safety caveats for travel to Iran are almost entirely political and logistical rather than personal-safety issues: heightened regional tensions can lead to sudden changes in consular advice, protests occasionally flare (2022β2023 were particularly tense), and dual-nationals and some Western passport holders face additional scrutiny. Check your government's travel advisory within 7 days of departure.
Kyoto
Kyoto is exceptionally safe, even by Japan's high standards. Violent crime against tourists is virtually unheard of. Lost wallets are routinely turned in to police boxes (koban) with cash intact. The main concerns are heat exhaustion in summer and cultural etiquette missteps.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Isfahan
Isfahan sits at 1,590 metres on the central Iranian plateau, giving it a continental semi-arid climate with hot dry summers, cold crisp winters, and remarkably clear skies year-round. The city receives very little rainfall (roughly 120 mm per year). Spring and autumn are the clear ideal seasons. Summer is hot but dry enough to remain bearable in the shade; winter can dip below freezing at night and occasionally brings light snow.
Kyoto
Kyoto has a humid subtropical climate with four distinct seasons. Summers are notoriously hot and humid, while winters are cold but rarely snowy. The city is inland and surrounded by mountains on three sides, trapping heat in summer and cold in winter.
π Getting Around
Isfahan
Isfahan's major tourist sights are concentrated in a compact arc from the Jameh Mosque in the old city, through Naqsh-e Jahan Square, across the Zayandeh River bridges, and into the Jolfa quarter β roughly 5 km end to end. The historic centre around Naqsh-e Jahan is highly walkable. For longer hops (to Jolfa, Vank Cathedral, the airport) taxis or the single metro line are the practical options.
Walkability: Very high in the historic core β Naqsh-e Jahan, the bazaar, Chehel Sotoun, and the Jameh Mosque are all walkable from a central hotel. Jolfa is a 25-minute walk south across Si-o-se-pol Bridge or a 10-minute taxi.
Kyoto
Kyoto's main tourist areas are well-connected by a comprehensive city bus network and two subway lines. Buses are the workhorse for temple-hopping, especially in eastern Kyoto. A one-day bus pass (Β₯700) pays for itself after three rides. IC cards (ICOCA/Suica) work on all transit.
Walkability: The eastern Higashiyama district (Kiyomizu-dera to Ginkaku-ji) is best explored on foot along atmospheric stone-paved lanes. Central Kyoto's flat grid between Shijo and Oike is very walkable. The Philosopher's Path is a 2 km pedestrian route connecting two temple areas. Carry an umbrella β rain appears quickly.
The Verdict
Choose Isfahan if...
you want "half the world" β Naqsh-e Jahan Square, the blue-tiled Safavid mosques, Si-o-se-pol bridge β complex visa + cash-only sanctions reality
Choose Kyoto if...
you want Japan's cultural heart β 2,000 temples, Fushimi Inari torii, Arashiyama bamboo, geisha districts, and cherry blossoms along the Philosopher's Path