🏆 Samarkand wins 81 OVR vs 77 · attribute matchup 5–3
Uzbekistan
81OVR
Mongolia
77OVR
Samarkand
Uzbekistan
Ulaanbaatar
Mongolia
Samarkand
Ulaanbaatar
💰 Budget
🛡️ Safety
Samarkand
Samarkand is a safe city for tourists. Violent crime against visitors is extremely rare. The main risks are petty theft in crowded areas and scams from overeager guides or souvenir sellers.
Ulaanbaatar
Ulaanbaatar is generally safe for tourists, with violent crime against foreigners rare. The primary concerns are pickpocketing in crowded areas (Naran Tuul, State Department Store, metro-era bus stations), traffic — UB has some of the most aggressive and congested driving in Asia — and winter air pollution, which reaches hazardous levels November through February. Rural travel is extremely safe in terms of crime but demands serious preparation for weather and isolation.
⭐ Ratings
🌤️ Weather
Samarkand
Samarkand has a continental climate similar to Tashkent but slightly cooler due to its higher elevation (700m). Summers are hot and dry; winters are cold.
Ulaanbaatar
Ulaanbaatar has one of the most extreme continental climates of any capital on Earth — short, pleasant summers and long, brutal winters with temperatures routinely below -30°C. Elevation (1,350 m), inland location, and Siberian-air dominance combine to produce January averages colder than Anchorage or Reykjavik. The tourist window is essentially June through mid-September; Naadam in mid-July is the festival peak.
🚇 Getting Around
Samarkand
Samarkand's main tourist sights are relatively concentrated and can be covered on foot with occasional taxis. The city is much more compact than Tashkent.
Walkability: Good in the historic center — the main monuments are within a walkable area. Gur-e-Amir is about 1.5 km south of the Registan.
Ulaanbaatar
Ulaanbaatar has no metro — a long-discussed system remains unbuilt — and the city is served by buses, trolleybuses, and an explosion of ride-hailing cars. Traffic congestion is legendary; the downtown grid clogs solid in the 8-9 am and 5-7 pm peaks. The city centre (Sükhbaatar Square, museums, Gandan Monastery) is walkable in fair weather, but ride-hailing is the practical default for most tourist journeys.
Walkability: The central 1–2 km grid around Sükhbaatar Square is comfortably walkable in summer. Beyond the core, distances become impractical on foot — Zaisan is 4 km south, Gandan is a 25-minute walk from the square, and the airport or Terelj require vehicles. Winter drops walkability to near zero for anyone without heavy boots and windproof layers.
The Verdict
Choose Samarkand if...
you want the Silk Road's showpiece — Registan Square's blue-tiled madrasas, Shah-i-Zinda necropolis, Gur-e-Amir (Timur's tomb), and Bibi-Khanym Mosque
Choose Ulaanbaatar if...
you want Chinggis Khaan's legacy — Gandan Monastery, the 40m Chinggis Equestrian Statue, Gorkhi-Terelj ger camps, and the Gobi gateway
Samarkand
Ulaanbaatar