Comparison
CN · People's Republic of China

Chongqing Shi

12,135,000 residents29.55°, 106.55°
CN · People's Republic of China

Shanghai

24,870,895 residents31.23°, 121.47°

Shanghai is about 2× the size of Chongqing Shi by population.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
12,135,000
24,870,895
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
no data
6,341
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
no data
4
02 · Climate

Weather, month by month

Solid lines are monthly highs, dashed lines are lows (°C).
Chongqing Shi high low Shanghai high low
Chongqing Shi vs Shanghai monthly temperature-5°10°15°20°25°30°35°JFMAMJJASOND
Avg annual temp (°C)
no data
17.2
Annual rainfall (mm)lower is better
no data
1,419.1
Sunny days per yearno data
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
Chongqing Shi

Chongqing feels dense, vertical, and relentlessly urban, with steep hills, layered roads, and neighborhoods that can feel like they stack on top of each other. Daily life seems to revolve around moving through heat, stairs, bridges, and long transit rides, but also around very strong neighborhood food culture and late-night socializing. People who like a fast, gritty, high-energy city would likely find it exciting; people who want flat terrain, calm streets, and an easy walking commute would probably find it exhausting. With no Reddit comments or travel-guide details provided, this is a cautious, high-level picture rather than a quote-based one.

Common complaints
  • Hills, stairs, and difficult walking1
  • Heat and humidity1
  • Congestion and long commutes1
  • Visual and acoustic intensity1
Common praises
  • Distinctive urban landscape1
  • Food culture1
  • Late-night energy1
  • Big-city convenience1
Shanghai

Shanghai feels highly urban and convenient, but not always warm or easy for outsiders. Residents and visitors describe a city with cheap transit, strong food options, and impressive skyline districts, alongside real friction from language barriers, scammy dating scenes, smoky taxis, and a shrinking expat ecosystem. Day to day it can feel surprisingly calm in some places and times, with empty subways, uncrowded landmark areas, and very late-night mobility that makes the city feel usable around the clock. At the same time, people talk about a city that has changed fast: old neighborhoods, street life, and parts of the international social scene have thinned out, leaving a place that feels more polished, more local, and less carefree than before.

Common complaints
  • Scams and predatory social scenes5
  • Foreign-language friction4
  • Smoky or rough taxis / transport hassles4
  • Cooling expat and international business ecosystem3
  • Loss of old neighborhoods and street life3
Common praises
  • Extreme convenience and cheap transport6
  • Food variety and quality5
  • Visual drama and architecture5
  • Safety and walkability at odd hours4
  • City energy mixed with calm pockets4

“The subway ride is less than $1 and so as uber rides. Very strange considering sky high real estate prices and income level.”

r/Shanghai· 1548 votes

“Not as foreign tourist friendly. Cabs smell like smoke and drivers are angry. Literally had one yelling at me because my ride was priced cheaply. Be nicer to foreign visitors maybe?”

r/Shanghai· 1548 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Chongqing Shi
Food

Chongqing’s food scene is defined by strong spice, numbing Sichuan pepper, and dishes built for sharing, snacking, and long nights out. Hotpot is the signature reference point, but everyday eating likely also includes small noodle shops, street stalls, barbecue, and casual neighborhood eateries. The scene feels less about polished dining and more about intense, cheap, flavorful food that is easy to find at almost any hour.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Chongqing is likely lively, food-centered, and late-running, with many people treating evenings as an extension of dinner rather than a separate club scene. Expect busy night markets, hotpot gatherings, bars in commercial districts, and river or skyline viewpoints that draw crowds after dark. The city’s scale and heat probably encourage a nightlife culture that is social and outdoorsy, but also crowded and loud.

Shanghai
Food

The food scene comes across as broad, convenient, and very good if you know where to look. Posts mention cheap everyday meals, late-night snacks, and easy access to delivery, while others rave about more polished dining experiences near the Bund and in central districts. At the same time, Shanghai is not portrayed as a place where language barriers disappear: reading menus can be a problem, and some of the most satisfying food appears to come from local spots that are not especially tourist-friendly. Overall it sounds like a city where food is both a daily utility and a serious pleasure, ranging from humble street-adjacent eats to high-end, theatrical restaurant experiences.

Nightlife

Nightlife sounds lively but somewhat changed from its peak years. Long-time residents describe a club scene that used to run very late and feel exciting, even with periodic raids and tension, while newer posts are thinner on a big, open party culture and more focused on bars, meetups, and occasional live music. The city still has a reputation for being able to go out late, but the tone is less carefree and more cautious, with scams and overcharging showing up in the social scene. In practice, nightlife seems strongest in central areas and among people already plugged into local networks.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Chongqing Shi
By the numbers

How locals feel

On paper, the weather is often described in terms of hot summers and humid conditions, which already sound uncomfortable. Locals would likely describe it more bluntly: long stretches of oppressive heat, sticky air, and weather that makes walking or waiting outside feel draining. Even if climate statistics show only the expected subtropical pattern, lived experience probably centers on how much the heat amplifies the city’s physical difficulty.

Shanghai
By the numbers

How locals feel

People describe Shanghai’s weather as more oppressive than romantic: hot, humid summers, rain that can be nonstop, and frequent comments about how the conditions affect walking around and crowd levels. There is also appreciation for the city’s atmosphere after rain or at sunrise, when the light and emptier streets can make it feel beautiful. In other words, the weather is not praised as pleasant in a neutral, year-round sense, but it is often treated as something that sharpens the city’s moods and photography-friendly moments. The stats may say it is a major coastal metropolis, but locals and visitors seem to remember the humidity, storms, and seasonal discomfort first.

09 · Summary

In short

  • Shanghai is about 2× the size of Chongqing Shi by population.
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