Comparison
CN · People's Republic of China

Changsha

10,047,914 residents28.20°, 112.97°
IR · Iran

Tehran

8,693,706 residents35.69°, 51.39°

Changsha and Tehran, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
10,047,914
8,693,706
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
11,815.96
686
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
63
1,179
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Changsha high low Tehran high low
Changsha vs Tehran monthly temperature-5°10°15°20°25°30°35°40°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
no data
17.9
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
no data
301.7
Sunny days per yearno data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

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

Changsha comes across as a lively, youth-oriented city where eating out, meeting people, and going out at night are part of the routine. Reddit posts skew heavily toward visitors and foreign residents asking for bar districts, hangout spots, English-friendly places, and social connections, which suggests the city feels active but can be hard to navigate casually if you do not know where to go. The food scene is a major draw, and people mention finding restaurants, seafood, foreign food, and the city’s spicy Hunan identity as everyday anchors. At the same time, the limited discussion of ordinary errands, transit, and neighborhood life suggests a place that is more often experienced through nightlife, campus life, and food outings than through quiet, suburban routines.

Common complaints
  • Hard to find bars/clubs without local guidance4
  • Difficulty making English-speaking social connections4
  • Information gaps for newcomers3
  • Crowded nightlife areas1
Common praises
  • Vibrant nightlife5
  • Good food culture5
  • Friendly local openness4
  • Walkable leisure spots and landmarks3
  • Foreigner-friendly pockets2

“There's a place called Schiller's where there's a lot of foreigner hanging out. Nice food and good selection of alcohol”

r/Changsha· 3 votes

“best one ,only one # Jiefang West Road Bar Street * **What it is**: Changsha’s vibrant nightlife hub, famous for its energetic clubs, pubs, and live music venues.”

r/Changsha· 3 votes
Tehran

Living in Tehran sounds like living in a huge, crowded capital that is equal parts ordinary city life and political tension. The city has the usual big-city perks—museums, parks, bazaars, restaurants, and mountain views—but Reddit threads from the past year are dominated by war scares, protests, evacuations, water cuts, and disrupted communications. Day to day, it comes across as a place where people still commute, shop, run, meet friends, and plan trips, but they do so with a constant background awareness of instability. The clearest portrait is of a city with deep cultural life and normal routines, yet one where those routines can be interrupted by shortages, unrest, and security fears.

Common complaints
  • War, strikes, and security anxiety5
  • Water shortages and utility stress4
  • Protests and political repression4
  • Communication and mobility disruptions3
  • Strict social rules / uncertainty around enforcement2
Common praises
  • Cosmopolitan scale and amenities3
  • Museums, palaces, and historic landmarks4
  • Parks and mountain access3
  • Running and outdoor recreation1
  • Friendly, warm people1

“The have vast underground bunkers built, probably he is not in Tehran . Most likely a smaller more discreet town . I’ve heard Ghom or Semnan , but probably many more possibilities. Mosaad agents probably know and are following his every move , corruption in the regime is rampant and spying is a dangerous but highly common and lucrative business.”

r/iran· 3 votes

“Trying to leave Tehran”

r/iran· 27 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Changsha
Food

Food seems to be one of Changsha’s biggest everyday pleasures. The posts mention people simply walking around and finding restaurants, looking for seafood, and asking about foreign restaurants, which suggests an eating-out culture that is broad enough to satisfy both local cravings and international tastes. Given Changsha’s Hunan setting, the city is likely experienced as spicy, bold, and snack-oriented, with food being a main reason people linger out in the evening rather than heading home early.

Nightlife

Changsha’s nightlife looks unusually prominent for a city of this size, with Jiefang West Road Bar Street singled out as the main hub. Redditors ask specifically about where to drink, party, and find clubs, and the replies point to a concentrated district rather than a scattered scene. The vibe sounds energetic and crowded, with clubs, pubs, live music, and craft beer spots, plus a fair number of foreigners and students mixing into the crowd. It seems easy to have a fun night out if you know the district, but less obvious if you arrive without local pointers.

Tehran
Food

Tehran’s food scene reads as broad and urban rather than narrowly local: visitors ask about fine dining, cafes, and practical restaurant recommendations, while itineraries center on the Grand Bazaar, central mosque area, and neighborhood markets like Tajrish. That suggests an everyday food culture that mixes market shopping, casual eateries, and higher-end city dining. The public conversation does not dwell much on signature dishes, but it does imply that eating out is a normal part of city life, with enough variety for both budget travelers and luxury visitors.

Nightlife

The nightlife picture is thin in the source material, but what comes through is not a club-heavy scene so much as an evening city culture shaped by constraints. One itinerary specifically includes Darband at night, which hints at dining, strolling, and mountain-side socializing rather than bars or late-night partying. Overall, Tehran seems to have after-dark life, but it is likely more centered on cafes, restaurants, and public gathering spots than on open nightlife in the Western sense.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Changsha
By the numbers

How locals feel

There is almost no direct weather discussion in the source material, so the safest reading is that weather is not a dominant topic in these posts. In travel terms, Changsha’s climate may matter on paper, but Redditors here talk far more about heat in the social scene than heat or rain in the sky. That makes the weather feel secondary to the city’s lifestyle identity, at least in how residents and visitors describe day-to-day life online.

Tehran
By the numbers

How locals feel

Weather is mentioned indirectly rather than described in detail, but the city’s climate seems to be understood less as a pleasant talking point and more through its consequences: drought, water shortages, and reservoir concerns. The available posts frame the environment as dry and stressed, not as a day-to-day comfort issue like rain or snow. At the same time, Tehran’s mountain setting and public parks suggest locals still value outdoor air and elevation as part of the city’s appeal. In short, the weather is less celebrated than endured, and recent discussion centers on scarcity rather than beauty.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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