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Las Vegas vs Vancouver

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Las Vegas

Las Vegas

United States

Vancouver

Vancouver

Canada

Las Vegas

Safety: 62/100Pop: 660K (city), 2.3M (metro)America/Los_Angeles

Vancouver

Safety: 78/100Pop: 675K (city), 2.6M (metro)America/Vancouver

πŸ’° Budget

budget
Las Vegas: $80-150Vancouver: $60-100
mid-range
Las Vegas: $200-400Vancouver: $150-280
luxury
Las Vegas: $600+Vancouver: $400+

πŸ›‘οΈ Safety

Las Vegas65/100Safety Scoreβœ“72/100Vancouver

Las Vegas

The Strip itself is heavily policed and generally safe for tourists, with extensive casino security and LVMPD patrols. Off-Strip neighborhoods vary significantly β€” areas immediately east and north of downtown can be rough, particularly at night. The main risks on the Strip are pickpockets in crowds, aggressive timeshare touts, and scammers posing as celebrities or show promoters. Drink spiking and gambling-related disputes are reported concerns.

Vancouver

Vancouver is generally safe for tourists. The Downtown Eastside (DTES) around East Hastings Street has visible homelessness, addiction, and poverty β€” it's important to be aware but it's largely concentrated in a few blocks. Tourist areas are safe, and violent crime targeting visitors is rare.

⭐ Ratings

Las Vegas5/5English Friendly5/5Vancouver
Las Vegas4/5Walkability4/5Vancouver
Las Vegas3/5Public Transitβœ“4/5Vancouver
Las Vegas5/5Food Scene5/5Vancouver
Las Vegas5/5βœ“Nightlife4/5Vancouver
Las Vegas2/5Cultural Sitesβœ“3/5Vancouver
Las Vegas4/5Nature Accessβœ“5/5Vancouver
Las Vegas5/5WiFi Reliability5/5Vancouver

🌀️ Weather

Las Vegas

Las Vegas has a hot desert climate with extreme temperature swings between summer and winter. Summers are brutally hot β€” June through August regularly sees highs above 40Β°C (104Β°F), with July averages around 42Β°C. Winters are mild and pleasant, with daytime highs around 15Β°C. Spring and autumn are the ideal windows: warm, dry, and comfortable. Flash floods are possible year-round but most common in late summer monsoon season.

Spring (March - May)15-35Β°C
Summer (June - September)35-45Β°C
Autumn (October - November)14-28Β°C
Winter (December - February)5-15Β°C

Vancouver

Vancouver has a moderate oceanic climate β€” the mildest of any major Canadian city. Winters are wet and gray but rarely freezing at sea level. Summers are warm and dry with long daylight hours. Rain is the defining weather feature, falling mostly from October through March.

Spring (March - May)7-16Β°C
Summer (June - August)15-24Β°C
Autumn (September - November)5-16Β°C
Winter (December - February)1-7Β°C

πŸš‡ Getting Around

Las Vegas

Getting around the Strip is surprisingly challenging despite its apparent simplicity β€” the boulevard looks walkable but distances between resorts are much longer than they appear. A mix of the Las Vegas Monorail, the Deuce bus, ride-hailing apps, and your feet will cover most needs on the Strip. A rental car is strongly recommended for off-Strip destinations like Red Rock Canyon, Hoover Dam, and Valley of Fire.

Walkability: The Strip looks walkable on a map but is deceptive β€” the distance from Mandalay Bay to the Stratosphere is over 4 miles, and summer temperatures make outdoor walking dangerous. Between individual resorts in a cluster (e.g., Cosmopolitan to Bellagio), walking is fine. In summer, use the air-conditioned casino connectors and skywalks linking several properties. Downtown Fremont Street is very walkable within the Experience canopy.

Las Vegas Monorail β€” $5 single ride / $13 24-hour pass
Deuce on the Strip & SDX β€” $6 for 2 hours / $8 24-hour pass
Uber & Lyft β€” $10-25 for short Strip trips; $15-35 to airport

Vancouver

Vancouver has a modern and efficient public transit system operated by TransLink. The SkyTrain (automated light metro), buses, and SeaBus ferry cover the metropolitan area. The Compass Card is the universal fare payment system. The city is also extremely bike-friendly with dedicated lanes throughout.

Walkability: Downtown Vancouver is very walkable and compact. The West End, Gastown, Yaletown, and Chinatown are all connected on foot. The Seawall provides a continuous waterfront path. The North Shore and suburbs require transit or a car.

SkyTrain β€” $3.15-6.25 CAD depending on zones (Compass Card), day pass $11.25 CAD
TransLink Bus β€” $3.15 CAD per ride (1 zone), free transfer within 90 minutes
SeaBus β€” $3.15-4.55 CAD with Compass Card (2 zones)

The Verdict

Choose Las Vegas if...

you want 24-hour neon spectacle β€” Strip megaresorts, the Sphere, celebrity-chef dining, pool clubs, and Red Rock + Grand Canyon + Zion within day-trip range

Choose Vancouver if...

you want a mountains-and-ocean city β€” Stanley Park seawall, Granville Island, Grouse Mountain, Whistler 2 hours up, and the best dim sum outside Asia