Comparison
EG · Egypt

Greater Cairo

21,381,869 residents30.05°, 31.37°
JP · Japan

Greater Tokyo Area

37,900,000 residents35.69°, 139.69°

Greater Cairo is much warmer than Greater Tokyo Area; Greater Cairo is noticeably drier than Greater Tokyo Area.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
21,381,869
37,900,000
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
—
no data
13,500
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)no data
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Greater Cairo high low Greater Tokyo Area high low
Greater Cairo vs Greater Tokyo Area monthly temperature-5°0°5°10°15°20°25°30°35°40°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
22.4
15.8
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
38.6leads
1,588.9
Sunny days per yearno data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
Greater Cairo

Greater Cairo feels vast, loud, and intensely lived-in, with everyday life shaped by long commutes, crowded streets, and a constant mix of old neighborhoods and new development. It offers huge practical variety—jobs, universities, street food, markets, riverfronts, and services—but getting anywhere can take time and patience. The city can feel socially warm and communal in daily interactions, while also demanding a lot of tolerance for traffic, noise, pollution, and bureaucracy. For many residents, Cairo is less a place of calm comfort than a place of momentum, improvisation, and constant negotiation.

Common complaints
  • Traffic and commuting5
  • Noise and density4
  • Air pollution and dust4
  • Bureaucracy and service friction3
  • Infrastructure inequality3
Common praises
  • Food and street life5
  • Scale and opportunity4
  • Social warmth4
  • Historic character3
  • Constant activity3
Greater Tokyo Area

Greater Tokyo feels densely organized and relentlessly functional: trains are frequent, neighborhoods are distinct, and most daily errands can be handled without a car. Life is convenient but busy, with a constant tradeoff between tiny living spaces, long commutes, and the payoff of having almost anything you need within reach. The city rewards people who enjoy structure, order, and variety, but it can feel impersonal and expensive if you want room, quiet, or casual spontaneity. For many residents, the appeal is less about a single downtown and more about choosing a neighborhood that matches your pace, budget, and routine.

Common complaints
  • High housing costs and small apartments5
  • Crowding and commuter pressure4
  • Long commutes despite good transit4
  • Language barriers for non-Japanese speakers3
  • Humidity and uncomfortable summers3
Common praises
  • Exceptional transit network5
  • Convenience and neighborhood completeness5
  • Safety and general order4
  • Food variety and quality4
  • Varied neighborhoods and amenities3
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Greater Cairo
Food

Cairo's food scene is deeply practical and everyday-focused: affordable falafel, koshary, shawarma, ful, ta'ameya, grilled meats, fresh bread, sweets, and a huge spread of neighborhood bakeries and takeout counters. Eating out ranges from tiny street stalls to polished cafes and international chains, but the strongest daily-food identity comes from simple, filling meals that are easy to find and cheap enough to become routine. Delivery culture and late-night snack options are also a major part of urban life, especially in denser districts where food is never far away.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Greater Cairo is uneven and neighborhood-specific rather than uniformly intense. In wealthier or more central areas you can find cafes, shisha spots, hotel bars, lounges, live music, and late-running restaurants, while many districts become quieter or more family-oriented at night. For a lot of residents, the social night scene is less about clubs and more about sitting out late with tea, coffee, or food, because the city’s traffic, cost, and social norms shape where and how people go out.

Greater Tokyo Area
Food

The food scene is one of Greater Tokyo’s strongest daily-life advantages: you can eat cheaply and well almost anywhere, and the quality floor is unusually high. Ordinary meals are easy to find at train-station shops, small family restaurants, ramen counters, curry shops, izakaya, bakeries, and department-store food halls, while the city also has an unmatched spread of specialty places, from tiny sushi bars to very formal kaiseki. Seasonal ingredients matter, and even convenience-store food is often better than outsiders expect. The main practical challenge is not finding good food, but choosing among an overwhelming number of options and, in some neighborhoods, dealing with lines or limited seating.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Greater Tokyo is highly neighborhood-specific rather than centered on one all-night district. Some areas are packed with izakaya, karaoke, small bars, clubs, and late ramen shops, while many residential neighborhoods become quiet surprisingly early. The scene can feel more polished and segmented than chaotic: after-work drinking, group gatherings, and train-based trips home are common, and people often plan the evening around the last train. For residents, nightlife is plentiful if you know where to go, but it is not always spontaneous, and late nights can be constrained by transit schedules and the cost of frequent drinking out.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Greater Cairo
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

On paper, Cairo's weather is often described as hot and dry, with mild winters and very little rain, which sounds manageable compared with more extreme climates. In practice, locals often talk less about the numbers and more about the lived effects: harsh summer heat, sun exposure, dust, occasional humidity, and poor air quality that can make the city feel more tiring than the thermometer suggests. Winter is usually a relief, but even then the weather conversation often includes dust storms, pollution, and the discomfort of being outdoors in traffic-heavy streets for long stretches.

Greater Tokyo Area
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

On paper, the weather looks manageable: winter is usually not extreme, and the city avoids the kind of severe cold or snow that dominates daily life in some other capitals. In practice, locals often talk much more about the oppressive summer—hot, sticky, and exhausting—and about how the humidity can make even short walks unpleasant. Rainy periods, typhoon season, and sudden downpours also affect routines more than the annual averages suggest. The general sentiment is that Tokyo’s climate is livable, but summer and humidity are the seasons people complain about most.

09 · Summary

In short

  • Greater Cairo is much warmer than Greater Tokyo Area.
  • Greater Cairo is noticeably drier than Greater Tokyo Area.
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