Comparison
US · United States

Ontario

175,265 residents34.05°, -117.63°
US · United States

West Palm Beach

117,415 residents26.71°, -80.06°

Ontario and West Palm Beach, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
175,265
117,415
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
129.488843
149.427017
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
306
6
06 · Vibes

What locals say

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

Ontario is a huge province with a big-city core in Toronto and a capital-city feel in Ottawa, so daily life varies a lot depending on where you are. In the largest cities, life is fast, diverse, and transit-dependent, while smaller towns and exurban areas feel slower and more car-oriented. People benefit from strong institutions, lots of jobs in major metro areas, and easy access to culture, but they also deal with high housing costs, traffic, and winter that can make routines feel harder. Overall, living here tends to mean trading convenience and opportunity for expense, congestion, and seasonal weather that can be a real factor in everyday planning.

Common complaints
  • housing costs5
  • traffic and commuting4
  • winter weather4
  • urban sprawl3
  • uneven affordability of daily life3
Common praises
  • jobs and opportunity5
  • cultural diversity5
  • food variety4
  • parks and outdoor access4
  • public institutions and city amenities3
West Palm Beach

West Palm Beach feels like a city split between beauty and pressure: people love the palm-lined water, walkable downtown pockets, and easy access to beaches and parks, but they also complain that it has become unaffordable and more corporate-feeling. Daily life seems to revolve around cars, traffic, and short trips to favorite spots like Clematis, CityPlace, the GreenMarket, the beach, and neighborhood parks. Residents talk about the city as lively and scenic, but also more stressful than it used to be, with constant construction, changing neighborhoods, and a sense that fun local places keep disappearing. The result is a place that can feel gorgeous and active on the surface while still being frustrating, expensive, and a little rough around the edges for long-term residents.

Common complaints
  • Housing costs and affordability4
  • Traffic and aggressive driving4
  • Loss of local businesses and entertainment3
  • Development and neighborhood change4
  • Hostile or unfriendly social atmosphere2
Common praises
  • Beauty and scenery5
  • Parks, beaches, and outdoor access4
  • Community and civic activity3
  • Walkable downtown moments3
  • Local pride and nostalgia3

“I’m a hobbyist photographer. Born in Lake Worth, moved elsewhere at 13, moved back when I could. Glad to see it’s still as beautiful as I remember.”

r/WestPalmBeach· 182 votes

“Lifelong West Palm Beach resident — for the first time, I can’t afford rent. What’s going on?”

r/WestPalmBeach· 166 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Ontario
Food

Ontario's food scene is strongest in Toronto and Ottawa, where immigrant neighborhoods and dense urban markets create a huge range of options: South Asian, East Asian, Middle Eastern, Caribbean, Italian, and more. In everyday life that means you can usually find whatever cuisine you want, though the best meals are often concentrated in specific neighborhoods rather than evenly spread across the province. Smaller cities and towns tend to have a more limited restaurant mix, but they still benefit from the province's broad supermarket selection and familiar chains. Overall, the scene feels diverse and reliable, with standout food available if you're willing to explore by neighborhood.

Nightlife

Nightlife is concentrated in the big cities, especially Toronto, where people can choose between bars, clubs, live-music venues, comedy rooms, and late-night food spots. Ottawa has a more restrained after-work and student-driven scene, while smaller cities and suburbs usually quiet down early. A lot of social life happens around patios, breweries, and neighborhood bars rather than all-night club culture. Compared with some major world cities, the scene can feel spread out and expensive, so many residents treat nightlife as occasional rather than constant.

West Palm Beach
Food

The food scene reads as solid and very local rather than flashy: people mention taquerias, Irish pubs on Clematis, and grabbing breakfast after the GreenMarket, with food often woven into a morning or beach outing. There isn’t a lot of detailed restaurant discussion in the source material, but the comments suggest a city where casual, dependable spots matter more than destination dining. A few references imply that good food is one of the few things people still universally like about living in South Florida.

Nightlife

Nightlife seems centered on downtown/Clematis and a few recognizable bars and event spaces, with the tone more casual than glamorous. People talk about walking downtown at night, seeing celebrities at venues, and missing old nightlife anchors like the AMC theater and comedy club, which suggests that the scene has thinned out or changed shape over time. The vibe is social but not especially polished, and several comments imply that the area can be crowded, awkward, or frustrating even when it is active.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Ontario
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

On paper, Ontario's climate looks manageable because the province gets warm summers and enough seasonal variety to make outdoor life appealing. In practice, locals often talk more about the long winter stretch, the freezing wind, slush, and the way snow and gray skies complicate commuting and mood. Summer is usually welcomed as a payoff, but it can come with humidity in the south. The common feeling is not that the weather is unbearable year-round, but that winter is a serious, recurring inconvenience that shapes how people plan their days.

West Palm Beach
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

The weather itself is mostly treated as a given rather than a topic of excitement: sunshine, sunrise walks, beach days, and outdoor events are part of the local rhythm. When weather comes up, it is usually in the context of heat, sun protection, storms, or planning around long summer daylight rather than in any romantic sense. Locals seem to experience the climate as useful for outdoor life but demanding, with sunscreen, storms, and humidity shaping routines more than postcard-perfect beach imagery would suggest.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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