Comparison
BR · Brazil

Greater São Paulo

20,850,000 residents-23.60°, -46.63°
PE · Peru

Lima

9,943,800 residents-12.06°, -77.04°

Greater São Paulo is about 2× the size of Lima by population.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
20,850,000
9,943,800
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
no data
2,672.28
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
no data
154
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Greater São Paulo high low Lima high low
Greater São Paulo vs Lima monthly temperature10°15°20°25°30°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
20.3
no data
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
1,221.3
no data
Sunny days per yearno data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

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

Greater São Paulo is a huge, work-driven metropolis where daily life is defined by distance, traffic, and the need to plan ahead. For many residents, the appeal is practical rather than scenic: jobs, services, shopping, and almost anything you need can be found somewhere in the sprawl. The city feels fragmented into neighborhoods and routines, with many people living a very local life even inside a giant urban region. It can be exhausting and expensive to move around, but it also offers the scale, diversity, and opportunity that smaller Brazilian cities often cannot match.

Common complaints
  • Traffic and long commutes5
  • Transit complexity and crowding4
  • Cost of living3
  • Safety concerns3
  • Sprawl and fragmentation3
Common praises
  • Jobs and opportunity5
  • Food variety4
  • Cultural diversity4
  • Services and convenience3
  • Constant activity3
Lima

Living in Lima feels like being in a small, car-dependent city that still has pockets of activity, history, and community events. People talk a lot about practical life here: traffic quirks, housing costs, job pay, and whether it’s easy to make friends or find niche interests. At the same time, there’s civic pride in old buildings, local museums, the remodeled mall-hospital area, and a steady stream of fundraiser, music, and arts events. The overall vibe is workaday and unglamorous, but not dead; it seems like a place where you have to build your own social life and know the roads, neighborhoods, and local institutions to feel settled.

Common complaints
  • Traffic and aggressive driving3
  • Housing affordability vs wages2
  • Social isolation / hard to find your crowd3
  • Petty crime and property theft2
  • Confusing infrastructure and transit2
Common praises
  • Community events and mutual aid5
  • Local history and distinctive landmarks4
  • Affordable enough to consider moving to2
  • Nature and wildlife nearby2
  • Small but real arts/music scene4

“You all have a really confusing bus system by the way.”

r/Lima· 19 votes

“Why is traffic here so terrible? So I don’t know if anyone else besides me has noticed how progressively worse traffic seems to get in this town.”

r/Lima· 11 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Greater São Paulo
Food

Greater São Paulo is one of Brazil’s strongest food cities, with an everyday food culture built around bakeries, kilo restaurants, botecos, Japanese and Korean spots, pizza, pastries, and very strong delivery infrastructure. Eating out ranges from cheap weekday lunch menus to destination dining, and many neighborhoods have their own reliable local staples. The city is especially good for variety: immigrant food traditions, regional Brazilian dishes, and serious restaurant cooking all sit side by side. For daily life, the practical side matters most—there are countless places to grab a good meal quickly, and people often rely on neighborhood spots they trust rather than chasing trends.

Nightlife

Nightlife is broad rather than centralized, with everything from low-key bars and samba houses to clubs, live music venues, and late-night restaurant scenes spread across the metro area. Because distances are large, people often go out within their own neighborhood cluster instead of crossing the whole city for one night. The scene can be vibrant and sophisticated, but it is also tied to logistics: ride-hailing, safety planning, and choosing where to return home from matter a lot. In practice, São Paulo nightlife is often more about specific scenes and neighborhoods than about one single citywide vibe.

Lima
Food

The food scene comes across as practical and local rather than trend-driven, with people asking for the best pizza, mentioning neighborhood restaurants, and organizing community events at bars or cafés. There are a few places that seem to function as social anchors, like historic-building bars and restaurant spaces in reused mall or downtown properties. It does not read like a major destination city for dining, but it sounds like there are dependable local favorites and enough variety for residents to argue about pizza and where to meet up.

Nightlife

Nightlife looks small-scale and niche, centered on theme nights, live music, metal shows, goth events, and occasional drag or benefit nights rather than big club culture. Several posts suggest that people who want alternative scenes can find them, but they may need to know where to look or build it themselves. The scene feels more community-driven than flashy, with venues doubling as gathering spots for specific subcultures.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Greater São Paulo
By the numbers

How locals feel

On paper, the weather looks mild compared with many global megacities: no extreme cold, no harsh winters, and temperatures that are often comfortable for much of the year. Locals, though, usually talk about the weather less as ideal and more as changeable, humid, and occasionally frustrating, with fast shifts between sunshine and rain. The wet season can make commutes worse, and summer heat can feel sticky in a city already burdened by traffic and concrete. So while the statistics may make the climate seem easy, residents experience it as manageable rather than luxurious.

Lima
By the numbers

How locals feel

Weather talk is sparse here, but the little that shows up is about seasonal annoyances rather than dramatic climate: storm damage, tick season, and yard care. That suggests locals experience the weather as something to manage in everyday routines, not as a defining attraction. The mood is less about beauty or extremes and more about preparation, maintenance, and the occasional nuisance that comes with Midwest seasons.

09 · Summary

In short

  • Greater São Paulo is about 2× the size of Lima by population.
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