Los Angeles
United States
Muscat
Oman
Los Angeles
Muscat
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Los Angeles
Most tourist areas in LA (Santa Monica, Venice, Beverly Hills, West Hollywood, Hollywood, Downtown Arts District) are generally safe by day. Petty theft β car break-ins especially β is the most common crime against visitors. Homelessness is highly visible in parts of Downtown and Venice. Certain neighborhoods see higher violent crime but are well outside typical tourist routes.
Muscat
Muscat is one of the safest capital cities in the world. Violent crime is virtually nonexistent, theft is extremely rare, and the culture of hospitality means visitors are treated with genuine warmth. The main risks are traffic accidents and heat-related illness.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Los Angeles
LA has a Mediterranean climate with warm, dry summers and mild, wetter winters. The "marine layer" β a low morning cloud cover off the Pacific β often burns off by late morning (locals call it "June Gloom" when it lingers). Inland valleys run significantly hotter than the coast, sometimes by 10-15Β°C on the same day.
Muscat
Muscat has a hot desert climate. Summers are brutally hot and humid, while winters are warm and pleasant. The best time to visit is October through April. Rainfall is extremely rare β the city gets about 100 mm per year.
π Getting Around
Los Angeles
LA is famously car-centric and spread over an enormous area, though Metro rail and bus service has expanded significantly. A TAP card works on Metro rail, buses, and most municipal systems. Expect traffic β rush hour on the 405 or 101 can be brutal. Rideshare is widespread, and neighborhoods like Santa Monica, Venice, and Downtown are walkable in pockets.
Walkability: LA is a city of walkable pockets inside a driving city. Santa Monica, Venice (Abbot Kinney/Boardwalk), Downtown (Arts District, Grand Park, Broadway), Hollywood Boulevard, Old Pasadena, and Silver Lake/Los Feliz all reward pedestrians. Getting between these pockets almost always requires a car, train, or rideshare.
Muscat
Muscat is spread along 60 km of coastline, making a car essential for serious exploration. Public transport is limited but improving with the Mwasalat bus network. Taxis and ride-hailing apps are the main options for visitors without a car. Walking is impractical in most areas due to heat and distances.
Walkability: Muscat is not a walkable city in any conventional sense β it stretches 60 km along the coast. However, Mutrah (corniche and souq), Old Muscat, and the Qurum beach area are pleasant walking zones. The heat makes walking difficult for much of the year. Dawn and dusk walks along the corniche are magical.
The Verdict
Choose Los Angeles if...
you want Hollywood glamour, Pacific beaches, world-class tacos and sushi, and year-round sunshine in a sprawling car-culture city
Choose Muscat if...
you want the Middle East's safest, most hospitable capital β Grand Mosque, pristine wadis, and Arabian charm without Dubai's flash
Los Angeles