π Tallinn wins 82 OVR vs 80 Β· attribute matchup 3β3
Finland
80OVR
Estonia
82OVR
Rovaniemi
Finland
Tallinn
Estonia
Rovaniemi
Tallinn
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Rovaniemi
Rovaniemi is exceptionally safe β Finland consistently ranks in the top 5 most peaceful countries in the world on the Global Peace Index. Violent crime against tourists is extraordinarily rare, theft is minimal, and the social trust level is among the highest on Earth. As in all Arctic destinations, the genuine risks are environmental: extreme cold, icy surfaces, winter driving, and the particular dangers of self-driving snowmobiles and walking on frozen lakes.
Tallinn
Tallinn is one of the safer capitals in Europe. Violent crime against tourists is rare. The main nuisances are pickpockets in the Old Town during peak summer months and drunk Finnish and Swedish ferry tourists on summer weekends. The city is well-lit, well-policed, and extremely walkable at night. Solo female travelers consistently rate it as comfortable.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Rovaniemi
Rovaniemi has a subarctic continental climate β colder and drier than coastal TromsΓΈ despite sitting at almost the same latitude. Winters are long, dark, and genuinely cold: reliable snow cover from November through April, with January averages around β12Β°C and lows occasionally reaching β30Β°C during cold snaps. Summers are short but surprisingly mild β temperatures regularly hit 20β25Β°C during the midnight-sun weeks of June and July. Autumn (ruska) brings brilliant tundra colour in September.
Tallinn
Tallinn has a humid continental climate moderated by its Gulf of Finland coastline. Summers are mild and pleasantly long with up to 18 hours of daylight in June. Winters are cold, dark, and occasionally dramatic β the sea can partially freeze and the Old Town under snow is spectacular but icy. The transitional seasons are short. Northern lights are visible on clear nights from November through March.
π Getting Around
Rovaniemi
Rovaniemi's city centre is compact and walkable β the main hotel district, Arktikum, Lordi Square, and the main shopping street Koskikatu are all within a 15-minute walk. Santa Claus Village (8 km) and the airport (10 km) are connected by regular city bus. Most activities beyond the city β husky kennels, reindeer farms, aurora tours β include hotel pick-up in the tour price. A rental car is useful for independent aurora chasing but not essential.
Walkability: Rovaniemi city centre is compact and entirely walkable in all seasons with appropriate footwear. The Kemijoki river bridge separates the main centre from Ounasvaara hill; both sides are walkable. Santa Claus Village and the airport are 8β10 km away and require the bus, taxi, or car.
Tallinn
Tallinn has excellent public transport covering the whole city by tram, trolleybus, and bus. Public transport is completely free for registered residents β one of only a handful of cities in the world to have made this permanent policy since 2013. Tourists pay, but fares are very cheap. The Old Town is entirely walkable. Bolt (founded in Tallinn) makes taxis among the cheapest and most transparent in Europe.
Walkability: The Old Town and adjacent districts are highly walkable on flat ground, though Toompea Hill involves a moderate climb. Cobblestones in the Old Town can be tough with luggage β rolling bags struggle. Winter icing significantly affects walkability. Overall the city is compact and pedestrian-friendly for its size.
The Verdict
Choose Rovaniemi if...
you want Santa Claus Village on the Arctic Circle, husky + reindeer safaris, aurora over Lapland, and sleeper-train romance from Helsinki
Choose Tallinn if...
you want the best-preserved medieval Old Town in Northern Europe, Skype-birthplace digital-republic vibes, and great value for Europe
Rovaniemi
Tallinn