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Ljubljana vs Tromsø

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🏆 Ljubljana wins 84 OVR vs 82 · attribute matchup 33

Ljubljana
Ljubljana

Slovenia

84OVR

VS
Tromsø

Norway

82OVR

Tromsø
85
Safety
90
65
Affordability
30
86
Food
86
78
Culture
77
72
Nightlife
86
99
Walkability
88
99
Nature
99
86
Connectivity
99
Ljubljana

Ljubljana

Slovenia

Tromsø

Tromsø

Norway

Ljubljana

Safety: 85/100Pop: 290K (city), 540K (metro)Europe/Ljubljana

Tromsø

Safety: 90/100Pop: 77K (city)Europe/Oslo

💰 Budget

budget
Ljubljana: $50-80Tromsø: $110-170
mid-range
Ljubljana: $100-170Tromsø: $220-360
luxury
Ljubljana: $280+Tromsø: $550+

🛡️ Safety

Ljubljana85/100Safety Score90/100Tromsø

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.

Tromsø

Tromsø is extraordinarily safe by global standards — violent crime is rare, pickpocketing minimal, and the Norwegian welfare state underwrites a calm public sphere. The real hazards are environmental: icy sidewalks in winter (the leading cause of tourist injury), winter driving challenges, and the cold itself. Medical care is excellent and the city has a full hospital (UNN) with Arctic expertise.

Ratings

Ljubljana4/5English Friendly5/5Tromsø
Ljubljana5/5Walkability4/5Tromsø
Ljubljana4/5Public Transit4/5Tromsø
Ljubljana4/5Food Scene4/5Tromsø
Ljubljana3/5Nightlife4/5Tromsø
Ljubljana3/5Cultural Sites3/5Tromsø
Ljubljana5/5Nature Access5/5Tromsø
Ljubljana4/5WiFi Reliability5/5Tromsø

🌤️ Weather

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.

Spring (March - May)5-18°C
Summer (June - August)20-28°C
Autumn (September - November)6-17°C
Winter (December - February)-3 to 5°C

Tromsø

Tromsø has a subarctic maritime climate — remarkably mild for its latitude thanks to the North Atlantic Current, but defined year-round by dramatic daylight extremes. Snow falls heavily from November through April. Summer temperatures rarely exceed 20°C. Winter lows typically hover between −5 and −10°C — cold but manageable in proper layers. What you plan for is light, not cold.

Aurora Winter (November - February)-8 to -2°C
Spring Aurora (March - April)-3 to 5°C
Midnight Sun (Late May - late July)8 to 16°C
Autumn Shoulder (September - October)0 to 10°C

🚇 Getting Around

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.

LPP City Bus€1.30 per ride with Urbana card; €5.20 for a day pass
Bicikelj Bike ShareFirst hour free; €1/hour thereafter
Ljubljana Castle Funicular€4 return; €2.50 one way; free with certain castle passes

Tromsø

Tromsø is a small island city — most sights are within walking distance in the city centre. The local bus system (Troms Fylkestrafikk) covers the island and the mainland, including the airport. Taxis are readily available; ride-hailing is limited. For excursions outside the city (dog sledding at Camp Tamok, Sommarøy fishing village, reindeer camps), a tour bus or rental car is essential.

Walkability: City centre is highly walkable and concentrated. The island of Tromsøya itself is 9 km long but the useful tourist zone is just 2 km of it. Outside the island — mainland, Kvaløya, or further afield — you need bus, taxi, or car.

WalkingFree
Tromsø City Bus (Troms Fylkestrafikk)40 NOK single (~$4); day pass 100 NOK
Taxi150–400 NOK typical (~$14–38)

The Verdict

Choose Ljubljana if...

you want Europe's greenest capital — traffic-free cobblestones, Plečnik architecture, and Lake Bled plus the Julian Alps an hour away

Choose Tromsø if...

you want the Gateway to the Arctic — 240 aurora nights/year, Fjellheisen panoramas, dog sledding, Sami reindeer culture