Comparison
BR · Brazil

Greater São Paulo

20,850,000 residents-23.60°, -46.63°
US · United States

New York City

8,804,190 residents40.71°, -74.01°

Greater São Paulo is much warmer than New York City; Greater São Paulo is about 2× the size of New York City by population.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
20,850,000
8,804,190
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
no data
1,213.37
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
no data
25
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Greater São Paulo high low New York City high low
Greater São Paulo vs New York City monthly temperature-10°-5°10°15°20°25°30°35°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
20.3
12.7
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
1,221.3leads
1,278
Sunny days per yearno data
03 · Cost

Cost of living

Benchmarked against New York City at 100. Higher = more expensive.
Rent · 1BR, city centerlower is better
no data
4,280.72
Rent · 1BR, outside centerlower is better
no data
2,861
Rent · 3BR, city centerlower is better
no data
9,425
Groceries indexno data
Inexpensive meallower is better
no data
25
Midrange meal for twolower is better
no data
140
Transit · monthly passlower is better
no data
133
Utilities per monthlower is better
no data
201.76
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
New York City

New York City feels intensely public, political, and always in motion, with everyday life spilling onto sidewalks, subways, and parks. People seem used to friction—crowds, transit delays, scams, protests, construction, weather chaos—but they also normalize moments of mutual aid, from CPR by strangers to neighbors showing up for rallies, pickets, and community work. The city’s personality in these posts is unusually civic-minded and expressive: residents argue about elections, labor, and immigration while also making art on the subway, in museums, and on the street. Even with the noise and stress, there’s a strong sense that the city rewards being outside, paying attention, and joining in.

Common complaints
  • Transit and infrastructure chaos6
  • Scams and petty urban hustles3
  • Political corruption / bad governance5
  • ICE / policing / public safety tensions4
  • Crowding and urban strain4
Common praises
  • Civic energy and political engagement6
  • Mutual aid and everyday heroism5
  • Public art and visual culture5
  • Resilience and grit4
  • Neighborhood and street-level energy4

“Share it wide and loud.”

r/newyorkcity· 1135 votes

“Yeah ranked voting just feels like such a better system. Maybe I'm too optimistic, but there actually are a good number of candidates that I would be fine voting for and I love not having to make the business decision of choosing a candidate I don't like as much because it would otherwise be wasted. A bit unfortunate for me that the two leading candidates are probably my bottom two, but at least I can still vote for who I want.”

r/newyorkcity· 332 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.

New York City
Food

The food scene comes across as cheap, fast, globally mixed, and deeply tied to neighborhood identity. Halal food is singled out as broadly appealing, and the city’s everyday eating seems to include corner stores, dollar-store-type spots, coffee chains, street vendors, and late-night grab-and-go meals rather than only destination restaurants. There’s also a strong undercurrent of worker politics around food, especially the Starbucks strike boycott, which makes even coffee feel local and political. Food in NYC is not portrayed as polished luxury so much as fuel for a city that eats on the move.

Nightlife

Nightlife here feels less like a single scene and more like an extension of the city’s public life: protests in Times Square, holiday subway gimmicks, walking around after dark, and crowds that keep spilling into the night. The posts suggest a city where being out late can mean bars and clubs, but also rallies, transit rides, street noise, and impromptu spectacle. There’s a playful, chaotic energy to it—costumes on the subway, pumpkins on the M line, people circulating through dense public spaces. The vibe is social and performative, but also restless and political.

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.

New York City
By the numbers

How locals feel

The weather seems less like a background condition than an event people react to collectively. A 24-hour blizzard is the kind of thing that becomes a timelapse, a snow corps operation, and a shared reference point, while hot weather appears in the form of overheated birds and general summer strain. Statistically, New York has all the usual Northeast weather, but locals talk about it through disruption, spectacle, and adaptation rather than averages. The city’s weather identity is basically: you plan around it, joke about it, and keep moving anyway.

09 · Summary

In short

  • Greater São Paulo is much warmer than New York City.
  • Greater São Paulo is about 2× the size of New York City by population.
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