Comparison
SA · Saudi Arabia

Jeddah

4,697,000 residents21.54°, 39.17°
ZA · South Africa

Johannesburg

4,803,262 residents-26.20°, 28.04°

Jeddah and Johannesburg, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
4,697,000
4,803,262
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
5,460
1,644
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
12
1,753
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
Jeddah

Living in Jeddah comes across as a mix of old-city nostalgia, rapid change, and everyday practicality. People talk about the city as warm, social, and visually appealing, especially around Al Balad, the corniche, and newer leisure spots, but also full of small annoyances like parking fines, membership-only venues, and bureaucratic friction. The city feels busy in a commercial, port-side way, with many residents commuting, job-hunting, studying, or dealing with family responsibilities while still making time for coffee, beaches, and photography. Overall, the vibe is affectionate and proud, with locals often saying the city has become more developed while still keeping a relaxed Red Sea character.

Common complaints
  • Parking enforcement and fines2
  • Membership-only / exclusive places2
  • Traffic / getting around historic districts2
  • Jobs and delayed wages1
  • Social pressure around work and independence1
Common praises
  • Beauty of Al Balad and the old city5
  • Weather near the coast5
  • Friendly, kind people4
  • The city feels like it is improving4
  • Corniche / sea / relaxed outdoor vibe3

“It was so chill. I loved getting lost in there”

r/Jeddah· 3 votes

“The weather from now until morning feels unusually Western. Enjoy it while it lasts—it does not come often”

r/Jeddah· 168 votes
Johannesburg

Living in Johannesburg feels busy, layered, and a little uneven: people talk about it as a city with real soul, strong culture, and plenty of day-to-day movement. A lot of life seems to happen in malls, cafés, suburban neighborhoods, the CBD, and along routes like the Gautrain and Rea Vaya, with traffic and transit shaping the rhythm of the day. Locals are clearly proud of the city’s views, jacarandas, parks, sunsets, and the fact that it still feels more openly urban and less polished than some other South African cities. At the same time, people keep an eye out for weather swings, insects, parking oddities, and safety issues, which gives the city a practical, alert, sometimes humorous texture.

Common complaints
  • Heat and seasonal discomfort4
  • Crime/safety reputation and cautious movement3
  • Traffic and transit friction3
  • Uneven CBD condition3
  • Insects and spiders3
Common praises
  • Culture and authenticity4
  • Weather and outdoor light4
  • Parks, trees, and city scenery4
  • Improving or appealing neighborhoods3
  • Transport and infrastructure in select corridors2

“Are you happy now? I had sweated so much last night that when I climbed out of bed this morning the mattress was stuck to my back like a Ninja Turtle Shell. Mxm Take it back please 🙏”

r/johannesburg· 367 votes

“Wish all of town was this clean. It would be such a cool hangout spot”

r/johannesburg· 136 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Jeddah
Food

The food scene appears broad and casual, with a lot of interest in café culture, mall food, home cooking, and specific restaurant finds rather than a single signature cuisine. A few posts mention steak pizza, wagyu short ribs, cake experiments, and places like White Wood, suggesting residents like trying newer or trendy spots alongside everyday meals. The Reddit sample does not show a strongly unified food identity, but it does suggest people enjoy sharing individual restaurant discoveries and cooking projects. Overall, food in Jeddah seems tied to social outings, family gifting, and Instagrammable venues as much as to traditional eating.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Jeddah reads as low-key and socially segmented rather than club-centric. People talk more about evening coffees, corniche walks, photography, seaside outings, and meeting groups like Meetup than about bars or late-night party scenes. Some posts suggest the city has hidden or semi-private leisure spaces, but access can depend on membership or knowing someone. The result feels like a nightlife culture built around cafés, friends, sunsets, and organized social activities instead of open-ended all-night entertainment.

Johannesburg
Food

The food scene comes across as practical, urban, and unevenly priced rather than glamorous. People mention kotas, fast food that feels overpriced, restaurants that can be more cost-effective than chains, and local spots like Sadie’s in passing, which suggests a city where everyday eating is spread across malls, neighborhood cafés, and casual sit-down places. There is also a sense that Joburg leans into authentic South African food and mixed urban food culture, and locals can be opinionated when they think visitors are being served the wrong thing. The best food references are tied to specific neighborhoods or social hangouts, not to a single signature style.

Nightlife

Nightlife sounds tied to music, social energy, and neighborhood-specific going-out spots rather than one central party strip. The travel summary’s mention of Amapiano and house music fits the tone in the posts: Joburg is presented as vibrant, loud, and culturally current, with people valuing atmosphere and ‘vibes’ as much as formal nightlife venues. The city seems to have a strong after-work and weekend social culture in places like Rosebank, Sandton, Melville, and Parkhurst, but the source material here says more about energy than about clubs, so the nightlife picture is positive but thin on detail.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Jeddah
By the numbers

How locals feel

The weather sentiment is highly seasonal and emotionally charged. People do not describe Jeddah as pleasant in a steady, statistical sense; instead, they celebrate the rare moments when it feels unusually mild, rainy, or cool, as if everyone is collectively relieved. Posts about sunrise, rain, and especially the period from now until morning suggest the best weather is treated like an event. In other words, locals seem to love Jeddah’s weather when it cooperates, and complain or joke when it does not.

Johannesburg
By the numbers

How locals feel

The weather reads as one of Joburg’s biggest emotional anchors. People love the winter light, spring flowers, dramatic clouds, sunsets, hail storms, and the general sense that the sky is always doing something worth noticing. But the summer side is very different: locals talk about sweating, sticky beds, heat waves, and mosquito season with the kind of exhausted humor that suggests the climate can be intense. So while weather stats might tell you ‘mild highveld climate,’ locals describe a city of beautiful skies, sudden storms, and a hot season that demands complaint-posting and survival mode.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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