Krakow
Poland
Ljubljana
Slovenia
Krakow
Ljubljana
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Krakow
Krakow is generally safe for visitors. The main concerns are pickpocketing in tourist-heavy areas (Main Square, Cloth Hall, on trams), scams targeting tourists in bars, and overconsumption of cheap alcohol in the Kazimierz bar scene. Use normal city awareness.
Ljubljana
Ljubljana is one of Europe's safest capital cities. Violent crime is rare, and the compact, walkable old town is genuinely comfortable at any hour. Pickpockets exist in tourist areas and on public buses but are far less prevalent than in larger European capitals. Solo travelers, including women, consistently report feeling very safe. Metelkova Mesto has a deliberately edgy aesthetic but is not genuinely dangerous — the community self-polices effectively.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Krakow
Krakow has a continental climate with warm summers and cold winters. The city experiences all four seasons distinctly. Summer days are warm and long, while winter brings freezing temperatures and occasional snow. Air quality can be poor in winter due to coal heating — check smog levels.
Ljubljana
Ljubljana sits in a basin between the Alps and the Karst plateau, giving it a continental climate with Mediterranean touches. Summers are warm and occasionally hot; winters are cold with fog that settles in the valley for days at a stretch — a local phenomenon known as "meglica." Spring and autumn are mild but can be wet. The surrounding mountains mean weather can shift quickly.
🚇 Getting Around
Krakow
Krakow's public transit consists of trams and buses operated by MPK. A single ticket costs 5 PLN (20 min) or 6 PLN (60 min). Buy from machines at stops, kiosks, or the mKKM app. The Old Town itself is largely pedestrianized.
Walkability: Krakow's Old Town is completely pedestrianized and very walkable. The Main Square to Wawel Castle is a 15-minute walk. Kazimierz is a 20-minute walk from the Main Square. The city center is flat. Most major sights are within easy walking distance of each other.
Ljubljana
Ljubljana's old town is almost entirely car-free and supremely walkable — the core can be crossed in 15 minutes on foot. For trips further afield within the city, the LPP city bus network is efficient and cheap. The Urbana contactless card covers buses and provides small discounts. The funicular to Ljubljana Castle is a quick and fun way to reach the hilltop. Electric tourist carts (kavalir) ferry visitors through the old town free of charge.
Walkability: Ljubljana is extremely walkable. The historic old town, riverside market, Triple Bridge, Dragon Bridge, Prešeren Square, and the castle funicular are all within a five-minute walk of each other. Tivoli Park is a ten-minute walk west of the center. Streets are flat in the core (the castle hill aside), well-maintained, and entirely pedestrianized in the old town. Good shoes suffice — heels would manage on main streets but cobblestones in quieter lanes can be uneven.
The Verdict
Choose Krakow if...
you want Central Europe's best-preserved medieval capital — Rynek Główny, Wawel Castle, Jewish Kazimierz, Auschwitz day, and pierogi for €2
Choose Ljubljana if...
you want Europe's greenest capital — traffic-free cobblestones, Plečnik architecture, and Lake Bled plus the Julian Alps an hour away
Ljubljana