Comparison
US · United States

College Park

34,644 residents38.99°, -76.94°
US · United States

Lynn

101,253 residents42.47°, -70.95°

Lynn is about 3× the size of College Park by population.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
34,644
101,253
Metro population
6,385,000
no data
Area (km²)
14.53
35.025875
Density (per km²)
2,384
no data
Elevation (m)
30
9
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
College Park high low Lynn high low
College Park vs Lynn monthly temperature-5°10°15°20°25°30°35°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
13.3
no data
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
1,036
no data
Sunny days per yearhigher is better
203
no data
03 · Cost

Cost of living

Benchmarked against New York City at 100. Higher = more expensive.
Rent · 1BR, city centerlower is better
1,851
no data
Rent · 1BR, outside centerlower is better
1,500
no data
Rent · 3BR, city centerlower is better
2,608
no data
Groceries indexno data
Inexpensive meallower is better
15
no data
Midrange meal for twolower is better
70
no data
Transit · monthly passlower is better
128
no data
Utilities per monthlower is better
180
no data
04 · Safety & health

Risk and well-being

Crime indexno data
Safety indexno data
Homicide rate / 100kno data
Air quality indexlower is better
48
no data
Life expectancyhigher is better
80
no data
Green space (%)no data
05 · Transit

Getting around

College Park
Metro1 lines
Car dependencymedium
Avg commute32 min
Lynn
MetroNo metro
Car dependency
Avg commute
Walk score (proxy)no data
Avg commute (min)lower is better
32
no data
Metro lineshigher is better
1
no data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
College Park

College Park feels first and foremost like a University of Maryland college town: student housing, Terps gear, and Route 1 define most of daily life, and the rhythm of the year tracks the academic calendar more than anything else. Proximity to DC via the WMATA Green Line and the Purple Line buildout gives residents real access to jobs, culture, and airports, which softens the otherwise suburban feel. The city is in the middle of a long redevelopment push along Baltimore Avenue, with newer apartment towers, chain restaurants, and food halls replacing older strip retail. The overall vibe is transient but improving, with a clear split between the student core and quieter residential neighborhoods like Old Town, Hollywood, and Berwyn.

Common complaints
  • Route 1 traffic and pedestrian safety5
  • Overpriced student housing5
  • Limited non-student dining and nightlife4
  • Property crime and car break-ins4
  • Town-gown tensions3
  • Construction and constant redevelopment3
Common praises
  • Metro and DC access5
  • University of Maryland energy5
  • Green space and trails4
  • Diverse food along Route 1 and Hollywood4
  • Walkable pockets and bike infrastructure3
  • Relative affordability vs. DC3
Lynn

Lynn is a dense, working-class North Shore city that feels more urban and rough-edged than the postcard version of coastal Massachusetts. Day-to-day life is shaped by its proximity to Boston, a lot of local commuting, and a mix of older neighborhoods, immigrant communities, and ongoing redevelopment. It can feel noisy and uneven block to block, with some streets busy and practical rather than scenic. At the same time, people who stay here tend to value the affordability relative to nearby coastal towns, the convenience of being close to Boston, and the strong sense that Lynn is a real city rather than a suburban extension.

07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

College Park
Food

The food scene is dominated by student-friendly cheap eats along Route 1 (pizza, burgers, bubble tea, Chipotle-tier chains) with a growing layer of better independent restaurants in mixed-use developments like The Hotel and the redeveloped downtown. Away from campus, the Hollywood and Berwyn neighborhoods and nearby Hyattsville and Langley Park add Ethiopian, Korean, Salvadoran, and Chinese options that locals will drive for. It is not a destination dining city on its own, but combined with the Route 1 corridor up to Hyattsville and down into DC, the range is actually quite good.

Nightlife

Nightlife centers on a handful of bars and restaurants near campus such as Cornerstone and the places along Baltimore Avenue, plus events and shows at The Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center and Xfinity Center. It is a student-driven scene that empties out noticeably on breaks and summer, and residents looking for denser nightlife generally hop the Green Line into DC.

Lynn
Food

There isn't enough source material here to describe a detailed local food scene from Reddit, but Lynn is generally understood as a place where the food landscape is practical and neighborhood-based rather than destination dining. In a city this size and density, daily options are more likely to come from local takeout spots, bakeries, Latin American and Caribbean restaurants, pizza shops, and simple comfort food than from polished, expensive restaurants. For someone living there, the useful takeaway is that food is probably varied enough for everyday life, but not the kind of scene people usually move to a city for.

Nightlife

The available material is too thin to give a confident read on nightlife. Based on Lynn’s size and its role as a working city north of Boston, nightlife is likely more about local bars, casual hangouts, and trips into Boston or nearby Salem for bigger options than about a dense club scene at home. If you live here, the city probably offers enough low-key evening activity for a regular weeknight, but not a wide range of late-night destinations.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

College Park
By the numbers

College Park has a humid subtropical climate typical of the Washington, DC area: hot, humid summers with thunderstorms and frequent 30C+ days, and cool winters that can swing between mild stretches and occasional snow. Spring and fall are the most comfortable seasons, and precipitation is fairly evenly distributed throughout the year, averaging about 1036 mm with roughly 1783 hours of sunshine annually (NOAA 1991-2020 normals for Reagan National, used as proxy).

How locals feel

Weather in College Park tracks the broader DC region: hot, sticky summers where humidity is the real story, and winters that are cold enough to snow occasionally but rarely brutal. Spring cherry blossoms and crisp fall days on campus are widely loved, while July and August humidity and the occasional ice storm are the most common complaints.

Lynn
By the numbers

How locals feel

There isn’t local discussion here, so the best read is the standard North Shore Massachusetts one: the stats are just New England cold, gray, and windy much of the year, with snowy winters and sticky summers, but locals usually describe it in more blunt, day-to-day terms than climate averages do. In practice, the weather is something you plan around, not something that defines the city’s identity as much as housing, transit, and proximity to the coast. People who live here are likely used to fast-changing conditions off the Atlantic and to winters that make commuting and parking more annoying than the thermometer alone suggests.

09 · Summary

In short

  • Lynn is about 3× the size of College Park by population.
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