I'm going out on a limb here because I pretty much agree with everyone, and can see their arguments.
My opinion? The question, while asking for opinions, IMHO deserved being reopened.
I don't "frequent" the Swift tag - I restrict myself to it. To those that frequent it, I ask, how many dups do we get about "unexpectedly found nil"? How many others should have been marked as a dup? Bottom line, this is a core feature and - three years later, almost four - still confuses everyone.
Forget about that. Just focus on the core issue. The OP didn't ask for opinions (at least that I can see, I can't actually see the unedited OP) it asks for salient differences. (We need emoji so I can find the duck-behind-couch one now.)
Bottom line for me is that there are salient differences between declaring a something as (a) is right now nil, (b) could be nil later, (c) have the compiler help me to make sure I check if it's still nil, and (d) cannot ever be nil. (I'm sure you can come up with more possibilities than these four.)
Are their opinions on what is the best way to handle nil? Absolutely. Are there best practices that, depending on language, matter? You bet. Are there "pros and cons" to how a specific language handles nil? Definitely.
But as I see the question currently (the only way I know how I can view it on SO), the question is not asking that.