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San Diego vs Yellowstone National Park

Which destination is right for your next trip?

San Diego

San Diego

United States

Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone National Park

United States

San Diego

Safety: 78/100Pop: 1.4M (city), 3.3M (metro)America/Los_Angeles

Yellowstone National Park

Safety: 82/100Pop: No permanent residents; ~4M visitors/yearAmerica/Denver

πŸ’° Budget

budget
San Diego: $80-130Yellowstone National Park: $70-130
mid-range
San Diego: $200-350Yellowstone National Park: $250-450
luxury
San Diego: $450+Yellowstone National Park: $700+

πŸ›‘οΈ Safety

San Diego80/100Safety Scoreβœ“82/100Yellowstone National Park

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.

Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone is extremely safe from a crime perspective. The real hazards are natural β€” thermal features that can kill you in seconds, bison that gore more visitors than bears each year, grizzly bears, sudden weather changes, and thin ice on Yellowstone Lake. The park has a strong ranger presence, but help can be hours away in remote areas. Respect wildlife distances, stay on boardwalks near thermal features, and always carry bear spray in the backcountry.

⭐ Ratings

San Diego5/5English Friendly5/5Yellowstone National Park
San Diego4/5βœ“Walkability1/5Yellowstone National Park
San Diego3/5βœ“Public Transit1/5Yellowstone National Park
San Diego5/5βœ“Food Scene2/5Yellowstone National Park
San Diego4/5βœ“Nightlife1/5Yellowstone National Park
San Diego4/5βœ“Cultural Sites3/5Yellowstone National Park
San Diego5/5Nature Access5/5Yellowstone National Park
San Diego5/5βœ“WiFi Reliability2/5Yellowstone National Park

🌀️ Weather

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.

Spring (March - May)14-22Β°C
Summer (June - August)18-27Β°C
Autumn (September - November)16-26Β°C
Winter (December - February)10-19Β°C

Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone has a high-elevation continental climate dominated by its altitude β€” most of the park sits at 7,000-8,500 feet, which means summer highs are pleasant but nights are cold year-round, and winters are genuinely severe. Snow is possible in every month. Weather varies enormously across the park: Mammoth (lowest elevation) can be 15Β°F warmer than Old Faithful on the same day. Always pack layers and rain gear.

Spring (April - May)-5-15Β°C
Summer (June - August)5-27Β°C
Autumn (September - October)-5-18Β°C
Winter (November - March)-30 to -5Β°C

πŸš‡ Getting Around

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.

San Diego Trolley β€” $2.50 per ride; $6 day pass
MTS Bus Network & Coaster Rail β€” $2.50 bus; $5-10 Coaster depending on distance
Uber & Lyft β€” $10-20 short trips; $20-35 airport to La Jolla

Yellowstone National Park

A private vehicle is essentially required β€” there is no public transit into or through Yellowstone, no reliable rideshare inside the park, and the Grand Loop Road (142 mi figure-8) connects the major sights with distances that demand a car. Xanterra operates in-park shuttle bus tours from the lodges that can supplement but not replace a personal vehicle. In peak summer, expect bison traffic jams that can stop traffic for 30+ minutes, a 45 mph park-wide speed limit, and parking lots that fill by 8-9am at popular features.

Walkability: Yellowstone is not walkable between areas β€” distances are too great and there are no sidewalks along park roads. Within villages (Old Faithful, Canyon, Mammoth, Lake) you can walk between lodges, restaurants, and visitor centers. Boardwalk systems around geyser basins (Upper, Midway, Lower, Norris, Mammoth) are extensive and allow hours of thermal feature exploration on foot.

Car Rental β€” USD 60-150/day from major airports; fuel ~USD 3.90/gallon in-park
Xanterra In-Park Bus Tours β€” USD 95-200 per person per tour
Gateway-Town Shuttles (Seasonal) β€” USD 75-150 per person one-way (Bozeman to West Yellowstone)

The Verdict

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

Choose Yellowstone National Park if...

you want the world's first national park β€” wolves + bison in Lamar Valley and half the planet's geysers on a figure-eight drive

Yellowstone National Park