Comparison
IN · India

Kolkata

4,496,694 residents22.57°, 88.37°
IN · India

Pune

6,200,000 residents18.52°, 73.86°

Kolkata and Pune, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
4,496,694
6,200,000
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
206.08
710
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
9
561
06 · Vibes

What locals say

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

Living in Kolkata feels intensely local, layered, and often sentimental: people talk about the city as if its streets, festivals, buildings, and food are part of their personal history. The city’s biggest daily strengths are its cultural life, neighborhood-level warmth, and the way ordinary public spaces can still feel communal, whether that means a pujo lane, a ferry ride, or a crowd gathering around a ritual or performance. At the same time, residents repeatedly complain about grime, infrastructure decay, chaos in high-profile events, and an overall sense that the city could be far better maintained. The result is a place that can feel beautiful and emotionally rich in one moment, then frustrating, crowded, and poorly managed the next.

Common complaints
  • Infrastructure decay and poor upkeep4
  • Crowding and public disorder4
  • Event mismanagement and civic frustration3
  • Safety, harassment, and scam anxiety3
  • Social tension and intolerance in pockets3
Common praises
  • Festival culture and public celebration5
  • Cultural warmth and emotional attachment to the city4
  • Progressive, community-minded attitudes3
  • Food and home-style hospitality3
  • Historic charm and scenic moments3

“I love my Bengal! ❤️ ”

r/kolkata· 95 votes

“Bengal is tryna heal 🫀”

r/kolkata· 138 votes
Pune

Living in Pune sounds like living in a city of contradictions: a strong educational and IT hub with a lively social scene, but also a place where bad roads, traffic, and patchy civic services regularly intrude on daily routines. People seem proud of the city’s energy, volunteer spirit, and helpful strangers, yet frustrated by infrastructure that breaks down, slow public systems, and recurring safety issues in some neighborhoods. Everyday life looks practical and commuter-heavy, with metro use, airport runs, cafe meetups, and office-crowd neighborhoods like Viman Nagar, Kalyani Nagar, Kharadi, Hadapsar, and Hinjewadi shaping the rhythm. The overall vibe is urban and active, but with a constant undercurrent of “we manage despite the city, not because of it.”

Common complaints
  • Roads and infrastructure6
  • Traffic and commute friction4
  • Civic disorder and cleanliness4
  • Safety and street crime4
  • Scams and overcharging3
Common praises
  • Community helpfulness5
  • Volunteer and civic action4
  • Metro and transit improvements2
  • Food and cafe options3
  • Diverse, lively urban neighborhoods3

“Working in government contracts, I can confirm this mentality. I made something so good, I never got called again.”

r/IndiaSpeaks· 578 votes

“Can't have lasting roads, how will people pocket money”

r/IndiaSpeaks· 147 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Kolkata
Food

The food scene feels broad, affordable in many everyday spots, and deeply tied to identity rather than trendiness. Reddit posts mention everything from students’ home-cooked meals and pujo feasting to iconic drinking-and-snacking institutions like Oly Pub, where people care about steaks, beef, pork, fish, biryani, and the difference between local staples. There is a strong sense that food is social and opinionated: people argue about authenticity, caste/religion, and what belongs on a menu, but they also love neighborhood eateries, tea stalls, and the simple pleasure of eating at home during festivals.

Nightlife

Nightlife comes across as less about a glossy club scene and more about cafés, pubs, late conversations, and festival-night crowds. Some posts mention going to cafes or pubs for dating and socializing, while others frame nightlife through public cultural events, riverfront views, ferries, and the after-dark atmosphere around pujo grounds and illuminated bridges. The city seems livelier in outdoor and semi-public spaces than in a purely club-centered way, but it also carries caution around scams, harassment, and over-loud crowd behavior.

Pune
Food

The food scene seems broad and city-appropriate: malls, cafes, airport counters, small ice-cream parlors, and neighborhood eateries all show up in the conversation. Pune has the reputation of being culturally and gastronomically varied, and the posts support that with references to date cafes, dessert shops, and casual local food spots, but there is also anxiety about hygiene and food handling. People notice when a place gets food safety wrong, which suggests residents are eating out often enough to have strong expectations. Overall, it feels like a city where you can find plenty of options, but trust and consistency matter a lot.

Nightlife

Nightlife appears active but uneven, with bars, lounges, late-night rides, and party scenes concentrated in upscale or central neighborhoods. At the same time, the tone of the posts suggests that late-night fun can slide into nuisance fast: loud music, drunk groups, firecrackers, and police intervention are recurring themes. Some people clearly use the city’s nightlife for dates or social outings, but others see it as a source of scams, noise, and trouble. The result is a nightlife culture that feels energetic and modern, yet closely watched and often contentious.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Kolkata
By the numbers

How locals feel

Locals often describe the weather in terms of atmosphere rather than exact numbers: rain can make the city look like ‘London,’ and humid or post-rain streets can feel romantic, breezy, and cinematic. Statistically it is a hot, humid, monsoon-prone city, but the conversation here focuses less on discomfort and more on how weather transforms the city’s mood—soft light, wet roads, cool ferry winds, and the smell and sound of festivals. Even when heat or dampness is implied, people seem to treat it as part of Kolkata’s sensory identity rather than just a hardship.

Pune
By the numbers

How locals feel

The posts don’t talk about weather as a defining advantage, but they do make clear that rain is a major disruptor. When it rains, traffic becomes harder, rides become more stressful, and even urgent errands can feel precarious. So while Pune may have a milder or more manageable reputation than some Indian metros, locals seem to experience the weather through its impact on roads and movement rather than as a pleasant statistic. In daily life, weather is less about climate identity and more about whether the city can keep functioning when conditions worsen.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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