Compare

Two cities,
side by side.

City comparisons only work when you compare like-for-like. Both columns here use the same five line items — accommodation, food, local transport, activities and miscellaneous — and default to mid-range, shoulder season, which is the most honest baseline for a typical traveller.

Accommodation alone drives 50–60% of the gap between most city pairs. Food is the second largest swing, then activities. Transport and miscellaneous rarely move the overall total by more than 10%. If two cities look surprisingly close on this page, it's almost always because their accommodation markets are at the same price point.

City A
United States
$728
per person · per day · mid · shoulder
$492 vs Mexico City
City B
Mexico
$236
per person · per day · mid · shoulder
$492 vs New York
budgetshoulder season · per day
New York
$318
Mexico City
$103
midshoulder season · per day
New York
$728
Mexico City
$236
luxuryshoulder season · per day
New York
$2040
Mexico City
$661

Mexico City is about $492 cheaper per day than New York at mid-range in shoulder season — roughly 68% lower. Across a seven-day trip that's about $3444 back in your pocket per person before flights.

Most of the gap comes from accommodation: New York's nightly rates run materially above Mexico City's. Food and activities account for the rest. See the full breakdowns on the New York and Mexico City pages.

FAQ

Compare tool · how it works

How are these daily numbers calculated?
Each daily figure is the sum of five categories — accommodation, food, local transport, activities, and miscellaneous — modelled per city for budget, mid-range and luxury styles, then adjusted by a season multiplier (0.85× low, 1× shoulder, 1.25× peak). Flights and visas are excluded so the per-day number stays comparable across cities.
Why is shoulder season the default for comparisons?
Shoulder months are the most honest baseline: they smooth out summer peaks and dead-of-winter lows, and they're the season most travellers actually book. Switching to low or peak typically moves the delta by 15–30%, but the relative ranking between two cities almost never flips.
Do these numbers include flights?
No. Flight prices vary by an order of magnitude depending on origin city and booking window, so they're treated as a fixed trip-level cost — not a daily one. Add your flight estimate on top of the daily total multiplied by trip length.