Savannah
United States
Washington, D.C.
United States
Savannah
Washington, D.C.
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Savannah
The historic district is generally safe during the day and into the evening, with a heavy tourist-police presence and well-lit main streets. Savannah has a higher violent-crime rate than Charleston by raw numbers, mostly concentrated in neighborhoods north and west of the historic district that tourists rarely visit. The most common visitor issues are car break-ins, aggressive panhandling near River Street, and overdoing it on to-go cups.
Washington, D.C.
Tourist areas of DC β the National Mall, Capitol Hill, Downtown, Georgetown, Dupont Circle, and Foggy Bottom β are generally safe during the day and well into the evening. Like any major US city, DC has neighborhoods with higher crime, mostly in parts of Southeast and Northeast that tourists rarely visit. Petty theft, car break-ins, and occasional phone snatching are the main concerns.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Savannah
Savannah has a humid subtropical climate β mild winters, long pollen-heavy springs, and notoriously muggy summers where the heat index regularly crosses 105Β°F. Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, with highest risk in August-September. Spring (March-May) and late autumn (October-November) are the clear sweet spots.
Washington, D.C.
Washington, DC has a humid subtropical climate with four distinct seasons. Summers are famously hot and sticky (the city was built on reclaimed swampland), while winters are cold but rarely extreme. Spring and fall are glorious and are the best times to visit.
π Getting Around
Savannah
Savannah's historic district is small, flat, and gorgeously walkable β the entire square grid is about 1 mile by 1.5 miles. The DOT (Downtown Transportation) shuttle runs for free through the historic district, which solves most in-town needs. Rideshare fills the gaps, and a rental car is worth it only if you're doing Tybee Island or the plantations. Bikes are a great option in the flat, shaded squares.
Walkability: The historic district is one of the most walkable neighborhoods in the American South β designed in 1733 as a pedestrian grid, flat, deeply shaded by live oaks, with a square to rest in every 2-3 blocks. The main hazards are uneven brick sidewalks and the cobblestones on River Street. Outside the historic district and Starland, the city becomes car-dependent fast.
Washington, D.C.
DC has an excellent public transit system run by WMATA (Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority). The Metro (subway) and Metrobus cover the city and much of the Maryland and Virginia suburbs. A SmarTrip card (or contactless phone tap) works across all Metro, bus, and Capital Bikeshare. Driving downtown is frustrating and parking is very expensive β transit or walking is the way to go.
Walkability: Central DC is one of the most walkable cities in the US, with wide sidewalks, a clear street grid, and short blocks. The National Mall itself is longer than it looks on maps (roughly 3 km end to end), so plan accordingly. Georgetown and Capitol Hill are especially pleasant on foot, though some DC hills can be steep.
The Verdict
Choose Savannah if...
you want Spanish-moss cobblestones, open-container historic squares, and low-country cuisine in America's most perfectly preserved colonial grid
Choose Washington, D.C. if...
you want world-class museums (all free), iconic monuments, Metro convenience, and four seasons of American political history
Savannah
Washington, D.C.