Los Angeles
United States
New Orleans
United States
Los Angeles
New Orleans
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.
New Orleans
New Orleans has higher violent crime rates than most US tourist cities, but crime is heavily concentrated in specific neighborhoods. Tourist areas (French Quarter during day, Garden District, Warehouse District, Frenchmen Street) are generally safe. Pickpocketing and phone theft on Bourbon Street are common. After-hours crime spikes outside these zones.
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.
New Orleans
New Orleans has a humid subtropical climate β hot and sticky for most of the year, with short, mild winters. Summer humidity is famously oppressive, and afternoon thunderstorms are near-daily from June through September. Hurricane season runs June through November.
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.
New Orleans
New Orleans is compact and walkable in its tourist core. The Regional Transit Authority (RTA) runs historic streetcars, buses, and ferries. A Jazzy Pass offers unlimited rides. Driving downtown is difficult β streets are narrow, parking is scarce and expensive, and the one-way grid is confusing.
Walkability: The French Quarter, Marigny, CBD, and Warehouse District are highly walkable. The Garden District, Bywater, and Mid-City are walkable once you've arrived, but you'll want a streetcar or rideshare to get between districts. Sidewalks in the Quarter can be uneven β watch for broken flagstones, especially at night.
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 New Orleans if...
you want America's most culturally distinct city β Creole and Cajun food, jazz on Frenchmen Street, and French Quarter magic
Los Angeles
New Orleans