Comparison
PE · Peru

Lima metropolitan area

10,740,153 residents-12.01°, -76.85°
RU · Russia

Moscow metropolitan area

17,125,000 residents55.67°, 37.50°

Lima metropolitan area and Moscow metropolitan area, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
10,740,153
17,125,000
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
2,819.26
5,698
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)no data
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Lima metropolitan area high low Moscow metropolitan area high low
Lima metropolitan area vs Moscow metropolitan area monthly temperature-15°-10°-5°10°15°20°25°30°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
no data
6.2
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
no data
635.1
Sunny days per yearno data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
Lima metropolitan area

Lima metropolitan area feels like a huge, complicated coastal city where everyday life is shaped by traffic, distance, and the need to plan around congestion. At the same time, it offers one of Latin America’s strongest food cultures, a dense mix of neighborhoods, and a steady urban rhythm that many people find livable once they learn where to stay and how to move around. The city can feel gray and humid much of the year, but the ocean, parks, and neighborhood-specific identities give it a distinct texture rather than a single uniform mood. Living here often means trading convenience and walkability in some areas for access to jobs, services, and an unusually deep restaurant scene.

Moscow metropolitan area

Living in the Moscow metropolitan area usually means dense, highly serviced city life with strong public transit, major employers, and a lot of built infrastructure around you. The center feels polished and fast-moving, while outer districts and surrounding commuter towns can feel more residential, car-oriented, and dependent on long rides into work. People who like a big-city rhythm tend to value the scale of the metro, the late-night convenience, and the sheer amount of services packed into everyday life. The tradeoff is frequent congestion, expensive central housing, bureaucratic hassles, and weather that makes long stretches of the year feel gray and hard-edged.

Common complaints
  • Traffic and commuting4
  • Housing cost and uneven quality4
  • Bureaucracy and paperwork3
  • Winter darkness and seasonal gloom3
  • Crowds and urban intensity3
Common praises
  • Public transit scale5
  • Big-city convenience4
  • Cultural life and institutions4
  • Urban polish in the center3
  • Opportunities and scale3
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Lima metropolitan area
Food

Lima is widely known for food, and that reputation is tied to everyday life rather than just destination dining: good ceviche, pollerías, seafood spots, chifa, nikkei, and neighborhood menu del día places are part of the city’s normal routine. The range is broad, from inexpensive lunch counters to internationally recognized restaurants, so eating well does not have to mean spending a lot every time. People who live here tend to talk about the variety, the quality of ingredients, and the way entire districts organize around food, with some neighborhoods clearly stronger than others.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Lima is uneven and neighborhood-dependent: in the livelier zones it can be busy, social, and restaurant-driven, while in residential areas evenings are quieter and more car-oriented. The scene tends to start late compared with many U.S. cities, and a lot of going out revolves around bars, clubs, and long dinners rather than a single compact downtown nightlife core. Safety, transport, and distance matter a lot, so people often choose where to go out based on how they will get home as much as on the venue itself.

Moscow metropolitan area
Food

The food scene is broad and practical rather than hyper-local: you can find everything from canteens and bakeries to upscale restaurants, international chains, and delivery-heavy convenience dining. Everyday eating tends to mix Russian staples, Caucasian and Central Asian food, sushi, pizza, kebab, and modern café culture, with plenty of places that cater to office workers and families. Grocery shopping is generally strong, and the city supports a lot of quick, decent meals on the go. It is less about one signature local cuisine and more about access, variety, and the ability to eat well at many price points.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Moscow is typically big, varied, and neighborhood-specific: there are cocktail bars, clubs, live music venues, late cafes, and restaurant-heavy streets that stay active well into the night. The scene can be stylish and energetic, especially in the center, but it is also segmented by budget and social scene, so a lot of residents pick their area rather than treating the whole city as one nightlife district. Transit availability matters because people often go out across town and then rely on the metro, rideshares, or a late-night cab home. For many locals, nightlife is less a wild all-city party than a mix of after-work drinks, dinners, and occasional big nights out.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Lima metropolitan area
By the numbers

How locals feel

On paper, Lima’s weather can look mild and even pleasant: coastal temperatures are relatively stable, extreme heat and cold are rare, and rain is scarce. In everyday conversation, though, locals often describe it as gray, humid, and overcast for long stretches, especially in the winter months when the sky can stay a dull misty white. The lack of bright sun is a real emotional factor for many residents, so the weather is less about dramatic storms and more about a persistent marine gloom that shapes mood and outdoor habits.

Moscow metropolitan area
By the numbers

How locals feel

On paper, the climate is a mix of cold winters, warm summers, and a lot of in-between shoulder seasons, but locals often talk more about the feeling of the weather than the numbers. Winter is not just cold; it is dark, wet-snowy, slushy, and long enough to shape clothing, commuting, and mood. Summer can be genuinely pleasant and green, but it is not enough to erase the memory of gray months, so people often describe the weather with endurance rather than affection. The result is a city where the forecast matters less than how much light, dryness, and clean pavement people are getting that week.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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