
New Orleans
United States

San Diego
United States
New Orleans
San Diego
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
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.
San Diego
San Diego is one of the safer large cities in the US for visitors. The main tourist areas β Gaslamp Quarter, Balboa Park, La Jolla, Coronado, and the beaches β are generally safe and well-policed. The East Village and parts of downtown near the trolley station have some street homelessness and petty crime, but serious violent crime targeting tourists is rare. Exercise normal urban precautions.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
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.
San Diego
San Diego has the best year-round climate of any major city in the continental United States β a Mediterranean climate with warm, dry summers and mild, occasionally rainy winters. Average temperatures stay between 57Β°F and 77Β°F all year. The main quirk is "May Gray" and "June Gloom" β a marine layer of coastal fog that rolls in from the Pacific each morning, usually burning off by noon but sometimes persisting all day along the beach.
π Getting Around
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.
San Diego
San Diego is primarily a car-dependent city, though downtown, the Gaslamp Quarter, and Balboa Park are very walkable. The San Diego Trolley connects downtown with Mission Valley, Old Town, and the Mexican border. Getting to La Jolla, the beaches, and Coronado is most convenient by car or ride-hail. The Coaster commuter rail connects downtown to North County beaches.
Walkability: Downtown San Diego and the Gaslamp Quarter are highly walkable. Balboa Park, Little Italy, and the Embarcadero are all connected by foot. However, San Diego is a sprawling metro β getting between neighborhoods like La Jolla, Mission Beach, and Old Town requires wheels or a ride.
The Verdict
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
Choose San Diego if...
you want Southern California's laid-back beach city β La Jolla sea lions, Balboa Park + Zoo, Coronado, the Gaslamp Quarter, craft beer, and a Tijuana border hop
New Orleans
San Diego