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Many cities have areas that are best avoided (or best avoided after dark). Often these less desirable areas also happen to offer cheaper hotels and so people looking for an affordable hotel might accidentally be lead to these areas.

I find it hard to quickly identify these areas and in particular the areas relevant for my visits. Googling will often lead to a list of names of areas which are best avoided (provided for example by someone on reddit). However, since I don't know these cities it would take a lot of time to figure out where all these areas actually are and whether they are relevant for my stay. For example the list might contain the names of a lot of areas that could much more quickly be identified as "out of the center"/"you will probably never go there anyway" while others might be very close to downtown and important to know about but they get drowned out in the presented format. I have tried looking for crime maps e.g. https://crimegrade.org/safest-places-in-washington-dc-metro/ but this seems to be quite useless. It shows the tourist area to be the most dangerous part of the city. I don't think this has anything to do with this really being an area that should be avoided and just to do with the fact that it is normalized per resident and these areas will obviously have many more people visiting them per resident than other areas.

Is there any way to visually (without knowing the names of areas) learn what areas to avoid?


I have this question in general not just for Washington DC. For example I have to find out the same for Sao Paulo. I think it would be useful if an answer includes a general strategy perhaps with Washington DC as an example case of how the strategy works out.

Kvothe
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    I have a cruise around with Google Streetview to get a feel for the location of a proposed hotel, and the nearby amenities. – Weather Vane May 29 '23 at 16:04
  • Avoid the places with no coverage. It could be because the camera car was vandalised. – badjohn May 29 '23 at 18:04
  • @badjohn, so you do not go to Germany? Almost no Streetview there. – Willeke May 30 '23 at 08:07
  • @Willeke Yes though I know that is for a different reason. – badjohn May 30 '23 at 09:17
  • Opinions on the internet may be quite unreliable. Until I fixed it, wikivoyage described the city where I live as life-threatening dangerous where you should get out ASAP after dark, which is a ludicrous hyperbole. – gerrit May 31 '23 at 14:49
  • @gerrit, getting reliable information is of course difficult and I think that especially when asking for safety you get some subjective interpretation (and different people have really very different safety standards). However, I guess the internet errs more often on calling something dangerous when it may not/no longer be which for many travelers at least is the side they prefer to err on. – Kvothe May 31 '23 at 14:58
  • True. Unless it's blogs of free solo climbers ;-) – gerrit May 31 '23 at 15:06

1 Answers1

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Here are few things that my help

  1. Check where the large international chains have hotels (Marriott, Hilton, IHG, Accor, etc). If an area doesn't have any of these at all, it's either not very attractive or not safe.
  2. Before booking a hotel, read reviews on Tripadvisor (or equivalent). If the neighborhood is unsavory, it will show up there.
  3. Google "Travel safety Washington DC" . There is generally good info on the first view links

Of course, there are always exceptions, but I found this works fairly well

Hilmar
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    There are many safe parts of the world where chain hotels do not have hotels, I would not name that as the best/first search item. – Willeke May 30 '23 at 08:06
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    Sure, but if you are worried about safety, sticking with a name brand is good strategy that's easy to implement. – Hilmar May 30 '23 at 08:38