Comparison
MX · Mexico

Greater Mexico City

21,905,000 residents19.43°, -99.13°
CN · People's Republic of China

Hangzhou

11,936,010 residents30.25°, 120.17°

Greater Mexico City and Hangzhou, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
21,905,000
11,936,010
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
741,000
16,853.57
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
—
no data
19
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Greater Mexico City high low Hangzhou high low
Greater Mexico City vs Hangzhou monthly temperature5°10°15°20°25°30°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
17.3
—
no data
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
1,107.3
—
no data
Sunny days per yearno data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

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

Greater Mexico City feels dense, busy, and deeply layered, with neighborhood-by-neighborhood differences that can change the experience a lot. Daily life often means planning around traffic, long commutes, and crowding, but also having easy access to transit, street life, museums, parks, and an enormous range of food and services. Many residents enjoy the city’s energy and convenience while accepting that noise, pollution, and bureaucratic friction are part of the tradeoff. It can feel overwhelming at first, but for people who like a big-city pace and constant activity, it offers a rich and very lived-in urban environment.

Common complaints
  • Traffic and long commutes4
  • Air pollution and smog3
  • Noise and crowding3
  • Safety and petty theft3
  • Bureaucracy and uneven public services2
Common praises
  • Food variety and quality5
  • Cultural life4
  • Transit and walkable pockets3
  • Neighborhood character3
  • Cost relative to major global capitals2
Hangzhou

Hangzhou feels like a city where everyday life is built around scenery: West Lake, tea hills, temple areas, and wooded trails are all close enough to become part of a normal weekend. It has a polished, modern side—new skyline, big malls, strong e-commerce energy, fast digital services—but people repeatedly describe it as quieter and less socially loose than Shanghai. The city seems especially good for people who like outdoor time, seasonal changes, tea culture, and wandering through local markets instead of constantly chasing nightlife. The tradeoff is that it can feel socially closed or hard to break into, especially for newcomers looking for an expat scene or an easy place to make friends.

Common complaints
  • Hard to make friends / social circles feel closed4
  • Quieter than expected3
  • Crowds at major scenic spots3
  • International scene is limited3
  • Distance between nightlife nodes / not many easygoing bar areas2
Common praises
  • Natural beauty everywhere6
  • Tea and seasonal culture5
  • Good outdoor access5
  • Food markets and local eats4
  • Modern convenience and digital services4

“Hangzhou lives in Shanghai's shadow when it comes to the international scene... it's easy to live here for years without interacting with each other.”

r/China· 10 votes

“This city has been a difficult city to meet friends.”

r/China· 12 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Greater Mexico City
Food

The food scene is one of the clearest reasons people love living here: street stands, taquerĂ­as, markets, casual fondas, bakeries, and destination restaurants all coexist in the same city. You can eat very well on an ordinary budget, and neighborhood food culture matters as much as formal dining. The range is huge, from classic CDMX staples like tacos al pastor and quesadillas to regional Mexican cooking and strong international options in wealthier districts. For many residents, grabbing food out is part of daily life rather than a special occasion.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Greater Mexico City is varied and neighborhood-specific rather than centralized into one uniform scene. Some areas lean toward bars, mezcalerĂ­as, live music, and late dinners, while others quiet down early and feel residential at night. The city can stay active very late in selected districts, but getting home safely and cheaply matters, so people often plan around transit, rideshares, or familiar routes. Overall, it is a big-city nightlife scene with plenty of options, but not something that feels effortless everywhere.

Hangzhou
Food

Hangzhou’s food scene comes across as a mix of polished urban bakeries, local market eating, tea-house culture, and very specific neighborhood finds. The strongest “this is where locals actually live” signal is the cai shichang: commenters point to food markets as the real center of daily flavor, not supermarket chains or tourist restaurants. There are also a lot of niche, quality-driven recommendations—Japanese-style bakeries, croissant shops, bagels, canelés, and fusion bakeries—suggesting a city with surprisingly strong middle- and upper-middle-end casual food options. At the same time, the posts lean more toward specialty snacks, breakfast breads, tea, and market produce than toward a loud, sprawling late-night street-food culture.

Nightlife

Nightlife seems present but somewhat fragmented: there are pockets of raves, DJ sets, bars, and club nights, but not a citywide party atmosphere on the level of Shanghai. One post about a rooftop rave says the underground scene is “alive and well,” which suggests there is real energy if you know where to look. But several other comments imply that people have to ask around for chill bars, foreigners, or events, and some expats even make apps or WeChat groups to recreate the social infrastructure that other cities already have. In practice, nightlife feels more like a network of scenes than a single obvious district.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Greater Mexico City
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

On paper, the weather often looks mild and pleasant, with springlike temperatures for much of the year. Locals, though, tend to talk more about microclimates, dry seasons, rainy-season downpours, and the way air quality can make a nice-temperature day feel less comfortable. Sunshine is common, but so are sudden storms in the wet months and cool evenings at higher elevations. The result is a climate that sounds ideal in statistics but is experienced more through pollution, seasonality, and neighborhood-by-neighborhood variation than by temperature alone.

Hangzhou
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

The weather is described more emotionally than statistically: locals and regular visitors seem to experience Hangzhou through seasons, fragrance, and atmosphere rather than just temperature. Autumn gets especially strong praise—osmanthus bloom, crisp air, golden light, and scenic walks—while spring is framed around blossoms and tea-green hillsides. Summer and winter are implied to be less pleasant; one long-time resident comments that a particular winter was unusually harsh, and outdoor guides repeatedly warn about heat, mosquitoes, or snakes on hiking routes. So the climate reads as highly seasonal and mood-driven: beautiful in the right months, uncomfortable enough in the wrong ones that people actively plan around it.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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