Comparison
SD · Sudan

Khartoum

5,345,000 residents15.60°, 32.53°
AU · Australia

Melbourne

5,350,705 residents-37.81°, 144.96°

Khartoum and Melbourne, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
5,345,000
5,350,705
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
30,000
9,993
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
382
31
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Khartoum high low Melbourne high low
Khartoum vs Melbourne monthly temperature10°15°20°25°30°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
no data
15
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
no data
726.9
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
2,454.5
Rent · 1BR, outside centerlower is better
no data
1,842.36
Rent · 3BR, city centerlower is better
no data
4,753.14
Groceries indexno data
Inexpensive meallower is better
no data
25
Midrange meal for twolower is better
no data
120
Transit · monthly passlower is better
no data
196
Utilities per monthlower is better
no data
308.44
06 · Vibes

What locals say

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

Khartoum comes across as a wide, river-shaped capital where the Nile is part of the city’s daily geography and identity. Life is likely organized around long distances, heat, and the need to cross between Khartoum, Omdurman, and Bahri rather than around a single dense center. The city probably feels more functional than polished, with routine life shaped by markets, transport, and neighborhood ties. With no Reddit posts or comments provided, this summary is based on the travel-guide structure alone, so it should be treated as a cautious, high-level sketch rather than firsthand resident testimony.

Common praises
  • Nile geography1
  • Scale and distinct districts1
Melbourne

Living in Melbourne means moving through a city that feels big, busy, and oddly personal at the same time: trams, trains, laneways, parks, and constant weather talk shape the day. People take pride in the city’s coffee, food, sport, multicultural life, and public-facing culture, but they also complain loudly about traffic, housing prices, and public transport headaches. There’s a strong sense of community underneath the cynicism, whether it shows up in a lost-pet rescue, a kind note on a train, or people rallying around strangers in emergencies. The mood is resilient and self-aware: locals joke about the chaos while still defending the idea that Melbourne is a genuinely livable place.

Common complaints
  • Traffic and driving chaos3
  • Public transport delays and discomfort3
  • High cost of living and price gouging3
  • Weather extremes2
  • Housing and urban messiness2
Common praises
  • Community kindness and solidarity4
  • Coffee and food culture3
  • Multicultural everyday life3
  • Livability and public amenities3
  • Sports, arts, and civic culture2

“My wollies had the free bottles on ice.”

r/melbourne· 745 votes

“People can talk all they want about the supermarkets' price gouging or that the water isn't ice cold, but the fact is, someone took the initiative to put this out and help a community in need. If I saw this at my local store, I'd feel a lot more welcome on a day like this than if there was nothing at all.”

r/melbourne· 491 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Khartoum
Food

No Reddit material was provided to describe the food scene in lived-in detail. Based on the city’s capital status and river-city layout, everyday food would likely revolve around markets, street snacks, and simple local meals rather than a heavily international restaurant scene, but that is only a cautious inference from the travel summary.

Nightlife

There is no source material here describing nightlife, so it would be misleading to invent one. A conservative expectation for Khartoum is that social life may be quieter and more locally centered than in nightlife-heavy global capitals, but no direct evidence was provided in the prompt.

Melbourne
Food

Melbourne’s food scene is intense, opinionated, and woven into identity. Coffee is almost a civic religion, with flat whites and café standards treated seriously, and local pride shows up in jokes about Melbourne inventing the flat white and in posts praising coffee quality. People also care a lot about bakery culture, specialty treats, and supermarket bargains, while price-sensitive comments show that the city’s appetite often collides with rising costs. The broader food culture feels multicultural and neighborhood-based: migrants and international students are framed as a major reason the city eats the way it does.

Nightlife

Nightlife reads as lively but messy, with King Street and the CBD showing the classic mix of bars, intoxication, security, and occasional stupidity. There’s a lot of attention to public drinking behavior, people getting thrown out of clubs, and the social theater around who can hold their liquor. At the same time, the city’s nighttime culture extends beyond partying into late trams, station life, and the general after-dark energy of a large inner city. It feels less like sleek glamour and more like a sprawling, well-used nightlife scene with plenty of local lore.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Khartoum
By the numbers

How locals feel

The travel summary gives no direct weather commentary, so there is no resident-style evidence to contrast statistics with lived experience. Khartoum is widely associated with intense heat and dryness, but without Reddit comments that would be a general climate note rather than a sourced description of how locals talk about it. In other words, the weather is likely a major everyday factor, yet this prompt does not supply firsthand phrasing about it.

Melbourne
By the numbers

How locals feel

Locals talk about Melbourne weather as extreme, changeable, and emotionally overhyped in the best and worst ways. The climate can swing from scorching heat to cool sunny winter days, and there’s an undercurrent of fire awareness that sits behind summer discussions in a way visitors might not expect. Statistically it may be praised as one of the world’s most livable cities, but the lived experience is often more like ‘too hot today,’ ‘freezing this morning,’ or ‘blinded by sunshine and annoyed by wind.’ People don’t describe the weather as mild so much as character-building, with heatwaves, storms, and fire danger all part of the mental map.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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