Comparison
TH · Thailand

Bangkok

5,676,648 residents13.75°, 100.52°
ES · Spain

Madrid Metropolitan Area

5,682,111 residents40.42°, -3.70°

Bangkok and Madrid Metropolitan Area, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
5,676,648
5,682,111
Metro populationno data
Area (kmÂČ)
1,568.737
—
no data
Density (per kmÂČ)no data
Elevation (m)
2
—
no data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
Bangkok

Living in Bangkok feels like being inside a huge, fast-moving city that never really switches off, with constant traffic, dense neighborhoods, and a skyline that can look cinematic at sunset. Day to day, people rely on the BTS, MRT, Grab, motorbikes, and walking short distances between malls, markets, offices, condos, and food stalls, while occasional scams and rude service moments are part of the urban friction. At the same time, many residents describe strangers as unexpectedly helpful, the city as visually beautiful, and everyday routines as full of little scenes worth noticing. It is a place of sharp contrasts: heat and chaos, convenience and annoyance, temple calm and shopping-mall excess, all packed into one city.

Common complaints
  • traffic and transport friction8
  • scams and dishonest service6
  • tourist chaos and disrespectful behavior5
  • heat and harsh outdoor conditions4
  • noise or neighborhood tension3
Common praises
  • visual beauty and photogenic streetscapes10
  • public transit and connectivity4
  • kindness of ordinary people4
  • food and cafĂ© culture4
  • urban energy and variety5

“Bangkok has always been one of my favorite cities for photography. I shot these over the last 2 years or so.”

r/bangkok· 3545 votes

“This Grab scam needs to end!”

r/bangkok· 1676 votes
Madrid Metropolitan Area

Madrid feels like a big, busy capital that still runs on neighborhood life: long lunches, late dinners, evening walks, and parks filled with people when the weather is good. People who like a city with energy tend to value its centrality, transit, and the fact that many districts are easy to live in day to day. The tradeoffs are the usual ones for a major European metropolis: heat in summer, crowds in the center, and the cost of living rising in the most desirable areas. Overall, it comes across as a place that is lively and practical rather than polished, with a strong social rhythm and a habit of staying out late.

Common complaints
  • Summer heat1
  • Housing costs1
  • Crowding in central areas1
  • Late hours1
  • Bureaucracy and friction1
Common praises
  • Walkable neighborhood life1
  • Strong transit connectivity1
  • Public spaces and parks1
  • Food and drinking culture1
  • Energetic but livable capital1
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Bangkok
Food

Bangkok’s food scene comes across as abundant, convenient, and woven into daily life rather than reserved for special outings. The travel-guide framing of markets and cosmopolitan variety matches the Reddit tone: people casually mention coffee runs, first meals, and eating well while moving through the city. There’s also a strong sense that food is everywhere, but the city’s food experience is not just restaurants—snacks, street stalls, mall food courts, and quick grab-and-go meals feel like part of the routine. The downside is that crowded areas can make the whole food-and-transit experience feel hectic, so eating out is often tied to navigation and timing as much as appetite.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Bangkok is presented as lively and broad rather than niche, with the guide’s ‘something for everyone’ feeling reflected in comments about bars, meetup scenes, rooftop spots, and busy districts like Sukhumvit and Chinatown. At the same time, it doesn’t read as purely party-oriented; plenty of people seem equally interested in sunset views, late cafĂ©s, and social drinking without going hard. Some of the nightlife energy is visual and social—rooftops, city lights, and busy streets—more than just club culture. The main caution is that nightlife exists inside a city that can be chaotic, so getting around late and dealing with transport or scams remains part of the experience.

Madrid Metropolitan Area
Food

Madrid’s food scene is built around routine more than novelty: coffee in the morning, menu del día lunches, tapas and vermouth later in the day, and a steady neighborhood bar culture that makes eating out feel casual and frequent. The best day-to-day version is often local, affordable, and social rather than destination dining, with markets, bakeries, tortilla, bocadillos, and fried seafood showing up constantly. There is also plenty of international food and higher-end dining, but residents usually talk about the reliability of the everyday options and how easy it is to find a place for a drink and a bite almost anywhere. The city can be especially appealing if you like sitting at terraces and stretching meals into a social habit.

Nightlife

Madrid is known for late nightlife, and that reputation seems tied to how the city actually operates after dark: people go out late, stay out late, and treat bars and clubs as a normal extension of the day. The scene is broad, with neighborhood bars, music venues, cocktail places, and club nights all available, so it is not just one kind of nightlife. For many residents, the main feature is not glamour but endurance: dinner can start late, pubs fill up slowly, and the night often peaks well after midnight. That said, the same late rhythm can be tiring if you want quiet streets or an early morning routine, especially in the more active central neighborhoods.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Bangkok
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

The weather is mostly understood as hot, intense, and part of the city’s identity rather than a surprise. Even when people are celebrating sunsets, greenery, and dramatic skies, the underlying assumption is that Bangkok is a place you adapt to, not a place that feels mild. The travel-guide summary’s ‘intense heat’ matches the lived tone: the climate is a real daily factor, especially when moving around outdoors. People don’t usually describe the weather as pleasant in an abstract sense, but they do seem to accept it as one of the tradeoffs for the city’s energy and beauty.

Madrid Metropolitan Area
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

On paper, Madrid’s weather can look appealing: lots of sun, relatively low rainfall, and a climate that seems bright for much of the year. In lived experience, people usually talk less about the sunshine and more about the extremes, especially the intense summer heat and dry air that can make the city feel harsh for weeks at a time. Winters are generally manageable and not the main concern, so the overall sentiment is that the weather is good for light and outdoor life but demanding in summer. Locals often describe it as a city where you plan around the heat rather than around rain.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

Compare another pair
Plan a trip

Book your visit

Partner links — CityDiff may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

More

Related comparisons

Profiles

Full city profiles