Quito
Ecuador
São Paulo
Brazil
Quito
São Paulo
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Quito
Quito has improved significantly in safety over the past decade but remains a city where vigilance is necessary. Petty theft, express kidnappings (short taxi robberies), and bag snatching are the primary concerns for travelers. The Old Town and La Mariscal (gringo district) require extra care, especially after dark. Sticking to well-lit, busy streets and using only app-based taxis dramatically reduces risk.
São Paulo
Sao Paulo requires street smarts but is generally manageable for experienced urban travelers. Petty crime like phone snatching and pickpocketing is common, especially around transit hubs. Affluent neighborhoods like Jardins and Pinheiros are considerably safer than peripheral areas.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Quito
Quito's climate is often called "eternal spring" — temperatures stay remarkably stable year-round due to its equatorial location and high elevation. Days hover between 18-22°C (64-72°F), nights between 7-10°C (45-50°F). The city has two main seasons: a dry season (June-September) and a wet season (October-May) with afternoon showers most days. UV radiation is extremely intense at this altitude — sunscreen is essential even on cloudy days.
São Paulo
Sao Paulo sits at about 760m elevation, giving it a milder subtropical climate than coastal Brazil. Summers are warm and wet with frequent afternoon downpours. Winters are dry and cool. The city can experience dramatic temperature swings within a single day.
🚇 Getting Around
Quito
Quito is a long, narrow city stretched 50 km north to south along a mountain valley. The Old Town, La Mariscal (hotel/restaurant district), and La Carolina park are the main visitor zones and are reasonably close together. Public transit is cheap and extensive; app-based taxis are the safe alternative to walking after dark.
Walkability: Quito's Old Town and La Mariscal district are moderately walkable during the day with good footwear — streets are steep and cobblestoned. The city as a whole is not walkable due to its 50 km length. App-based taxis fill the gaps safely. Altitude makes any walking more tiring than expected — allow extra time.
São Paulo
Sao Paulo has a growing Metro system supplemented by an extensive bus network. Traffic is notoriously bad — the city regularly records traffic jams exceeding 200 km in length during rush hour. The Bilhete Unico transit card works across Metro, trains, and buses.
Walkability: Sao Paulo is walkable within individual neighborhoods — Jardins, Vila Madalena, and Avenida Paulista are excellent on foot. However, the city is enormous and spread out, so you'll need transit between districts. Sunday closures of Avenida Paulista create the best pedestrian experience.
The Verdict
Choose Quito if...
you want a colonial Andean capital on the equator — UNESCO Old Town, the TelefériQo above 4,000m, and a launchpad to Galápagos and the Amazon
Choose São Paulo if...
you want Brazil's world-capital of immigrant food — Liberdade (Japan), Bixiga (Italy), São Paulo Art Museum (MASP), Avenida Paulista, and the continent's wildest nightlife
São Paulo