La Paz
Bolivia
Valparaíso
Chile
La Paz
Valparaíso
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
La Paz
La Paz is generally safe for travelers exercising standard precautions, but altitude sickness is the biggest health risk. Petty crime like pickpocketing is common in markets and on crowded minibuses. Political protests can block roads with little warning.
Valparaíso
Valparaíso requires more vigilance than Santiago. Petty crime (bag-snatching, pickpocketing) is common on the cerros and in the Plan, especially after dark. The port area and some lower hills can feel sketchy at night. Stick to well-traveled areas, and the tourist-friendly hills are generally fine during the day.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
La Paz
La Paz has a subtropical highland climate with two distinct seasons: wet (November-March) and dry (May-October). Temperatures are relatively consistent year-round due to the altitude, with cool days and cold nights. The sun is intense at this elevation — sunburn happens fast.
Valparaíso
Valparaíso has a Mediterranean climate with warm, dry summers and mild, rainy winters. The Pacific coast keeps temperatures moderate year-round — it rarely gets very hot or very cold. Fog (camanchaca) is common in the mornings, especially in summer.
🚇 Getting Around
La Paz
La Paz has no metro, but the Mi Teleferico cable car system is the star of urban transit. Minibuses and trufis (shared taxis) cover the rest. The steep, canyon-like geography makes walking between neighborhoods a serious workout at altitude.
Walkability: Central La Paz is walkable but physically demanding due to the extreme altitude and steep terrain. Walking downhill from El Alto to the center is far easier than going up. Take it slow, rest often, and use the teleferico for uphill segments. The historic center around Plaza Murillo is flat enough for comfortable exploration.
Valparaíso
Valparaíso is a city of steep hills and narrow streets, best explored on foot with funicular assistance. Local buses (micros) and colectivos (shared taxis) navigate the hills efficiently. The metro connects to Viña del Mar and other coastal towns.
Walkability: The flat Plan district is easy to walk, but the cerros demand serious hill-climbing. Stairways (escaleras) connect the hills to the lower city — beautiful but exhausting. The funiculars are essential for avoiding the steepest sections. Wear comfortable shoes with grip — the streets are uneven and steep.
The Verdict
Choose La Paz if...
you want the world's highest capital — Mi Teleférico cable-car network, Witches Market, Valle de la Luna, Death Road mountain biking, and Uyuni salt flats flights
Choose Valparaíso if...
you want bohemian street art, funiculars, and colorful hillside neighborhoods by the Pacific — Chile's creative soul
Valparaíso