Miami vs Orlando: Walkability Compared
Miami, FL and Orlando, FL, side by side. Tier labels describe the average; specific addresses can vary block by block.
Miami
Walkability tier: Moderate
A rapidly growing city with improving Metrorail and Metromover, walkable districts like Brickell and Wynwood, and unique heat and flooding challenges.
What works:
- Brickell and downtown have seen massive residential density growth, creating genuine walk-to-work neighborhoods
- Free Metromover people mover circulates through downtown and Brickell with 21 stations
- Wynwood and Design District have transformed into walkable arts and retail destinations
- Miami Beach's Art Deco district and Lincoln Road Mall are iconic pedestrian environments
Transit: Miami-Dade Transit operates Metrorail (2 lines, 23 stations), the free Metromover downtown circulator, and Metrobus. Brightline high-speed rail connects to Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach from MiamiCentral station.
What pulls walkability down:
- Extreme heat and humidity from May through October make walking uncomfortable and potentially dangerous without shade and hydration
- Sea-level rise and tidal flooding increasingly inundate sidewalks and streets in low-lying areas like Miami Beach and Brickell
Orlando
Walkability tier: Car-dependent
Orlando is a fast-growing Florida metro built around theme parks and a wide car-oriented road network, with walkable pockets in the Mills 50, Thornton Park, College Park and downtown core neighborhoods.
What works:
- Downtown Orlando + Lake Eola Park form a continuously walkable civic and dining core
- Mills 50, Thornton Park and College Park are dense, sidewalk-rich neighborhoods with independent shops
- SunRail commuter rail provides north-south rail service from DeBary through downtown to Poinciana
- Brightline higher-speed rail now connects Orlando to South Florida (Miami, Fort Lauderdale, West Palm Beach)
Transit: LYNX bus network (90+ routes), SunRail commuter rail (north-south spine), LYMMO downtown BRT loop, Brightline higher-speed rail to South Florida.
What pulls walkability down:
- Orange County roads are among the deadliest in the US for pedestrians; many arterials lack continuous sidewalks or safe crossings
- Theme-park-driven sprawl puts most residential growth far from any walkable core or transit line
Miami walkability → · Orlando walkability →
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