Best Cities for Digital Nomads in 2026: The Complete Guide to Work and Travel

Traveloka Team
18 min read

The global shift to remote work has given millions of people the freedom to choose where they live — and the world's best cities for digital nomads have responded with fast internet, thriving co-working scenes, affordable cost of living, and communities of like-minded remote workers that make arriving somewhere new feel less like relocating and more like joining a club. The right city for you depends on your budget, your timezone, the culture you want to be immersed in, and the kind of lifestyle you want to build around your work. This guide covers seven of the world's most proven digital nomad cities in 2026: what makes each one work, what it actually costs to live there, where to base yourself, and how to make the move. Book your flights, hotels, and activities to every destination on Traveloka, Southeast Asia's leading travel platform trusted by over 100 million users.

Discover flight with Traveloka

Mon, 6 Jul 2026

VietJet Air

Ho Chi Minh City (SGN) to Bali / Denpasar (DPS)

Start from 3.606.461 VND

Tue, 16 Jun 2026

VietJet Air

Hanoi (HAN) to Bali / Denpasar (DPS)

Start from 3.920.112 VND

Thu, 2 Jul 2026

VietJet Air

Da Nang (DAD) to Bali / Denpasar (DPS)

Start from 4.249.000 VND

1. Bali, Indonesia — The World's Most Famous Nomad Island

Why Digital Nomads Choose Bali

Bali has been a digital nomad destination since before the term existed, and in 2026 it remains one of the world's most complete nomad ecosystems. The island offers a rare combination of tropical beauty, rich Hindu-Balinese culture, world-class surf, extraordinary food at every price point, and a co-working infrastructure that has grown to match the demand of the hundreds of thousands of remote workers who pass through each year. Unlike many nomad hubs that feel transient or purely transactional, Bali has a genuine sense of place — ancient temples surrounded by rice terraces, colourful offering ceremonies, and a warm local culture that gives long-stay visitors more to engage with than just their laptop screen.

Best Neighbourhoods for Nomads

Canggu is the current epicentre of Bali's nomad scene — a beachside area of rice paddies, beach clubs, surf breaks, and the densest concentration of co-working spaces on the island. Echo Beach and Batu Bolong are the key streets, lined with cafes offering reliable WiFi alongside strong iced coffees and freshly made Indonesian breakfast plates. Seminyak, just south of Canggu, is more polished — better restaurants, stronger nightlife, and a slightly older demographic of nomads and expats. Ubud, 45 minutes inland, is the cultural heart of Bali and the choice of nomads who want focus, jungle atmosphere, and proximity to yoga studios and wellness centres rather than the beach. Ubud's co-working scene is smaller but solid, and the quality of life — rice terrace walks before work, temple ceremonies in the evenings — is hard to match anywhere in the world.

Cost of Living

A comfortable digital nomad budget in Bali ranges from USD 1,000 to USD 2,000 per month, covering a private villa or apartment, co-working membership, daily meals at warungs and cafes, motorbike rental, and leisure. Monthly villa rentals in Canggu run from USD 400 to USD 1,200 depending on location, size, and whether a pool is included. Co-working day passes cost approximately USD 10 to USD 15; monthly memberships at established spaces — Dojo, Outpost, Tribal Canggu — run USD 100 to USD 200. A proper sit-down meal at a mid-range restaurant costs USD 5 to USD 15. Street food and warung meals average USD 2 to USD 5. A monthly scooter rental costs USD 60 to USD 90.

Co-working Scene and Internet

Bali has one of the densest co-working ecosystems in Asia outside Singapore and Hong Kong. Established spaces include Dojo Bali in Canggu (pool, event space, community programming), Outpost Canggu (multiple locations, 24-hour access), and Tribal Canggu (community-focused, surf lifestyle). Beyond dedicated co-working, hundreds of cafes across Canggu, Seminyak, and Ubud serve as de facto offices with strong WiFi. Most co-working spaces deliver 50 to 200 Mbps; fibre connections are widely available. Mobile data (Telkomsel, Indosat) offers fast and affordable backup coverage.

Visa Situation and Getting There

Indonesia offers a Second Home Visa (valid 5 years, renewable) and a Remote Worker Visa for eligible digital nomads. Most nationalities enter on a 30-day visa-free arrival, extendable to a 60-day tourist visa or a longer social-cultural visa. Bali is served by Ngurah Rai International Airport (DPS), well connected to major Asian and Australian hubs. Book an airport transfer from DPS to your accommodation — the drive to Canggu or Seminyak takes 20 to 40 minutes depending on traffic, while Ubud is approximately 90 minutes.

Canggu and Seminyak have the widest range of digital nomad-friendly accommodation, from dedicated coliving spaces with built-in co-working desks to private villas with pools and fast WiFi. Browse and compare the full range on Traveloka — Canggu fills quickly during peak season (July to August and December to January), so booking ahead is essential.

Bali cultural tours, Ubud rice terrace visits, Tanah Lot sunset experiences, Canggu spa and wellness sessions, and full-day temple circuit tours are all bookable through Traveloka's activities platform to explore the island during your downtime.

2. Chiang Mai, Thailand — Southeast Asia's Most Established Nomad Hub

Why Digital Nomads Choose Chiang Mai

Chiang Mai has held its position as one of the world's top digital nomad cities for over a decade, and the fundamentals that built that reputation remain firmly in place in 2026: ultra-low cost of living, an exceptional food scene (Thai food in Chiang Mai is considered among the best in the country, with a distinct northern cuisine all its own), a large and well-organised international nomad community, and fast internet across the city's dozens of co-working spaces and independently owned coffee shops. The city sits in a mountain valley in northern Thailand, with a moat-enclosed Old City of 300 ancient temples at its heart, surrounded by modern commercial districts and a growing creative economy. The atmosphere is slower and more liveable than Bangkok — intentionally so — and the surrounding mountains, waterfalls, and jungle are accessible within an hour's drive.

Best Neighbourhoods for Nomads

Nimmanhaemin Road (Nimman) is the primary nomad district — a tree-lined street and surrounding grid of cafes, co-working spaces, Thai and international restaurants, independent boutiques, and a young, creative local population. It is compact enough to live car-free and has the widest choice of co-working options in the city. The Old City (inside the moat) offers the most cultural atmosphere and the most affordable accommodation, with dozens of boutique guesthouses steps from ancient temples. For longer stays, the Santitham area north of the Old City offers the most authentic, affordable local-neighbourhood experience without the tourist density. Hang Dong and Chinatown are emerging alternatives with new boutique properties and good road connections to the mountains.

Cost of Living

Chiang Mai consistently ranks as one of the most affordable cities in the world for a comfortable lifestyle. A monthly budget of USD 800 to USD 1,400 covers a furnished apartment, co-working membership, daily meals at local restaurants, motorbike rental, and leisure. Furnished studio apartments in Nimman or the Old City area rent for USD 200 to USD 500 per month. Co-working day passes cost approximately USD 5 to USD 10; monthly memberships at CAMP (24-hour, landmark cafe-style space inside Maya Mall), MANA co-working, Yellow, and other established dedicated spaces run USD 60 to USD 150. Street food meals cost USD 1 to USD 3. A restaurant meal at a mid-range local or international place runs USD 4 to USD 10. A scooter rental costs USD 50 to USD 80 per month.

Co-working Scene and Internet

Chiang Mai's co-working scene is mature and varied. CAMP (inside Maya Lifestyle Shopping Center) is the longest-running nomad gathering point in the city — open 24 hours, affordable, and with a consistent stream of regulars. MANA on Nimmanhaemin is a dedicated co-working space with strong community programming. Yellow offers a bright, comfortable working environment popular with creatives. Beyond dedicated spaces, dozens of cafes along Nimman and in the Old City operate as reliable working spots with WiFi speeds of 50 to 100 Mbps. Dedicated co-working spaces deliver 100 to 300 Mbps as standard. Mobile data on DTAC, AIS, and True Move is fast and very affordable.

Visa Situation and Getting There

Thailand offers a Long-Term Resident (LTR) Visa for remote workers earning USD 80,000 or more annually, valid for 10 years. Most nationalities receive a 30-day visa exemption on arrival, extendable once for an additional 30 days. The Thailand Elite Visa (5-year membership, approximately THB 500,000 or USD 14,000) is popular with long-term nomads wanting visa stability without income proof requirements. Chiang Mai is served by Chiang Mai International Airport (CNX), with direct connections to Bangkok and multiple international hubs in Asia. Check Traveloka promotions for deals on flights to CNX.

Chiang Mai has excellent accommodation across all price points — from budget guesthouses inside the Old City moat to boutique hotels in Nimman with weekly and monthly rates for longer-staying nomads. Browse and book the full range on Traveloka.

3. Lisbon, Portugal — Europe's Leading Digital Nomad Capital

Why Digital Nomads Choose Lisbon

Lisbon has transformed from a relatively overlooked European capital into one of the world's most sought-after digital nomad cities, and in 2026 it continues to attract remote workers who want the combination of Western European quality of life, warm Atlantic climate (over 300 sunny days a year), English-friendly culture, a manageable cost of living relative to other Western European capitals, and a creative, international atmosphere that feels genuinely alive rather than manufactured. The city is compact — most of the neighbourhoods that nomads favour are within a 20-minute tram, metro, or walk of each other — and its hills, tiled facades, fado bars, and pastel de nata cafes give it a beauty that makes the daily commute to a co-working space feel like part of an experience rather than just logistics.

Best Neighbourhoods for Nomads

Mouraria and Alfama are the oldest neighbourhoods, hilly and atmospheric, full of fado venues, local restaurants, and tiled staircases. They appeal to nomads who want to feel immersed in genuine Lisbon culture. Príncipe Real is upscale and quiet, with beautiful garden squares, independent bookshops, antique dealers, and excellent restaurants — the preferred base of more established remote workers. Intendente is an up-and-coming neighbourhood with more affordable rents, a local feel, and a growing creative and international community. Parque das Nações (Oriente) is the modern eastern district — purpose-built for the 1998 World Expo, now home to tech companies, modern apartments, and Lisbon's major co-working campus near the Oriente train station. For nomads prioritising function over atmosphere, Oriente is the most practical base.

Cost of Living

Lisbon is more expensive than Southeast Asian nomad destinations but significantly cheaper than London, Paris, or Amsterdam. A monthly budget of EUR 2,000 to EUR 3,000 covers a comfortable furnished apartment, co-working membership, regular dining out, and leisure. Furnished studio apartment rentals range from EUR 900 to EUR 1,800 per month depending on location and condition — prices have risen significantly in recent years due to high demand. Co-working memberships at established spaces — Second Home Lisboa, Heden, Factory Lisbon, and many others — charge EUR 200 to EUR 350 per month for dedicated desks. A mid-range café meal costs EUR 8 to EUR 15. Coffee (espresso) at a local pastelaria costs EUR 0.90 to EUR 1.20. Public transport monthly passes cost approximately EUR 40.

Co-working Scene and Internet

Lisbon's co-working scene has matured into one of Europe's most diverse. Second Home Lisboa, located in the Mercado de Lisboa, is one of the most beautiful co-working spaces in Europe, operating in a historic market building with lush indoor planting and a strong community programme. Heden and Factory Lisboa serve the tech and startup communities. LACS (Lisbon Accelerator and Creative Space) has multiple locations across the city catering to freelancers and remote teams. Portugal consistently ranks in the top five countries globally for broadband speed and infrastructure — most co-working spaces deliver 200 to 500 Mbps, and apartment fibre connections are widely available and affordable.

Visa Situation and Getting There

Portugal introduced the D8 Digital Nomad Visa for non-EU remote workers, requiring proof of remote employment or self-employment and a minimum monthly income of approximately EUR 3,040 (four times the Portuguese minimum wage). The visa is valid for one year, renewable for up to two additional years. EU citizens have unrestricted residency rights. Lisbon is served by Humberto Delgado Airport (LIS), with direct connections to major European, North American, and South American hubs. Use a car rental to explore Portugal's Alentejo wine region, the Algarve coast, and Porto — all within three hours of the capital.

Lisbon has hotels ranging from charming tiled guesthouses in Alfama to modern aparthotels in Parque das Nações with long-stay discounts. Browse and compare the full range on Traveloka for the best available rates.

Lisbon sunset sailing tours, electric tuk tuk city tours, full-day Sintra and Fatima excursions, and coastal hiking experiences are all bookable through Traveloka's activities platform to make the most of Portugal's extraordinary landscape during your time off.

4. Medellín, Colombia — Latin America's Most Dynamic Nomad City

Why Digital Nomads Choose Medellín

Medellín's transformation from one of the world's most dangerous cities in the early 1990s to one of its most liveable and innovative — earning it the Urban Land Institute's "Most Innovative City" title in 2013 — is one of the most remarkable urban stories of the past three decades. Today, the city is a genuine global digital nomad hub, popular for its spring-like climate year-round (Medellín sits at 1,495 metres above sea level, with an average temperature of around 22°C every month — earning it the nickname "City of Eternal Spring"), its extraordinary food and coffee culture, its lively arts and nightlife scene concentrated in El Poblado and Laureles, and its status as the best Spanish-language immersion city in the world for nomads who want to improve their language skills while they work. The city also has one of the most innovative public transport systems in Latin America, including a metro, cable car lines into hillside comunas, and electric escalators connecting steep neighbourhoods — all clean, safe, and inexpensive.

Best Neighbourhoods for Nomads

El Poblado is the primary digital nomad and expat district — a leafy, uphill neighbourhood with the highest concentration of co-working spaces, cafes, international restaurants, hostels, and boutique hotels in the city. Parque Lleras (the central park) and the streets surrounding it form the social heart. Laureles is the preferred base for nomads who want a more authentic, local neighbourhood experience with fewer tourists — it has a strong café culture, excellent bakeries, and a more residential, relaxed atmosphere. Envigado, just south of El Poblado (and technically a separate municipality), offers the most local and authentic lifestyle with lower rents and excellent access to the metro.

Cost of Living

Medellín offers one of the best value-for-money propositions of any major digital nomad city. A monthly budget of USD 1,000 to USD 1,800 covers a furnished apartment in a good neighbourhood, co-working membership, regular dining out including restaurants and local markets, and leisure with room to spare. Furnished apartments in El Poblado rent from USD 400 to USD 900 per month. Co-working memberships at established spaces — Selina Medellín, Tinkko, WeWork, and many independent spaces — run USD 80 to USD 150 per month. A restaurant meal in El Poblado costs USD 5 to USD 15; at a local market or traditional restaurant it falls to USD 2 to USD 5. A monthly metro pass costs under USD 30.

Co-working Scene and Internet

Medellín's co-working scene is among the most developed in Latin America. Selina Medellín (El Poblado) is a popular coliving and co-working hybrid, combining accommodation with a strong community programme. Tinkko has multiple locations across the city with competitive pricing and good fibre connections. Atom House and Espacio Co round out the options for dedicated, community-focused working environments. Internet infrastructure in El Poblado and Laureles is reliable — most co-working spaces deliver 100 to 200 Mbps, and apartment fibre is widely available through EPM (the city's municipal utility company).

Visa Situation and Getting There

Citizens of many countries — including most of Europe, North America, and Southeast Asia — can enter Colombia visa-free for up to 90 days (extendable to 180 days per calendar year). Colombia introduced a Digital Nomad Visa in 2022, valid for two years and renewable, for remote workers who can demonstrate a minimum monthly income of approximately USD 684 (three times the Colombian minimum wage) — one of the most accessible income thresholds of any nomad visa globally. Medellín is served by José María Córdova International Airport (MDE), approximately 35 kilometres from the city, with good connections to North American and Latin American hubs.

Medellín has a growing and diverse accommodation scene from boutique hotels and hostels in El Poblado to fully furnished apartment hotels designed for longer stays. Browse available options on Traveloka for the best rates during your stay.

5. Tbilisi, Georgia — Europe's Most Affordable Hidden Gem for Nomads

Why Digital Nomads Choose Tbilisi

Tbilisi has emerged as one of the most genuinely surprising digital nomad cities of the past five years. The capital of Georgia — the country at the crossroads of Eastern Europe and Western Asia, not the US state — sits in a dramatic Caucasian landscape, with a distinctive architecture that blends Persian, Soviet, Art Nouveau, and contemporary influences across a setting of steep hills, a river canyon carved through the city's heart, and one of the most photogenic and undervisited old towns in the world. What has driven the nomad surge to Tbilisi is simple arithmetic: Georgia offers 365 days per year visa-free for citizens of most countries (including all EU nations, USA, UK, Australia, and much of Asia), combined with an extremely low cost of living, fast improving co-working infrastructure, and a culture — food, wine, hospitality, music — that rewards longer stays in a way that few cities do.

Best Neighbourhoods for Nomads

Vera is the most popular nomad neighbourhood — a central, leafy district with a mix of Soviet-era apartment buildings and newer boutique hotels, close to Rustaveli Avenue (the main cultural boulevard) and the Vake Park. Vake, just west of Vera, is the most upscale residential area, with wide streets, embassies, restaurants, and a quieter atmosphere favoured by established expats and remote workers on longer stays. The Old Town (Kala), draped over a hillside above the Mtkvari River, is the most atmospheric part of the city — ancient churches, sulphur bath houses, ornate balconied houses — and has a growing number of boutique guesthouses and small co-working cafes. Didube and Saburtalo offer the most affordable apartments for longer-term renters who want to live more locally.

Cost of Living

Tbilisi is among the most affordable capital cities in the world for the quality of life it delivers. A monthly budget of USD 700 to USD 1,200 covers a comfortable furnished apartment, co-working membership, daily restaurant meals, public transport, and leisure. Furnished apartments in Vera or Vake rent from USD 300 to USD 700 per month. Co-working day passes cost USD 5 to USD 10; monthly memberships at spaces like Impact Hub Tbilisi and Terminal run USD 60 to USD 120. A sit-down restaurant meal at a local Georgian restaurant costs USD 5 to USD 12. A bottle of excellent Georgian natural wine from a wine shop costs USD 5 to USD 15. Public transport (metro) is priced at under USD 0.25 per journey.

Co-working Scene and Internet

Tbilisi's co-working scene is smaller than Bali or Chiang Mai but growing rapidly. Impact Hub Tbilisi is the most established dedicated co-working space, with a strong community of local entrepreneurs and international nomads. Terminal is a popular tech-focused space in Vera. Many cafes in Vera, Vake, and the Old Town serve as reliable working spots, and Georgia's improving broadband infrastructure means most co-working spaces now deliver 50 to 100 Mbps. SIM cards from MagtiCom or Geocell provide affordable and reliable mobile data backup. Georgia's government launched the Remotely from Georgia work programme in 2020 — one of the first in the world — offering remote workers simplified residency in exchange for spending and contributing to the local economy.

Getting There and Day Trips

Tbilisi is served by Tbilisi International Airport (TBS), with growing direct connections to European, Middle Eastern, and Central Asian hubs. The city is within day-trip or weekend-trip distance of extraordinary destinations: the Kakheti wine region (Georgia produces wine using 8,000-year-old qvevri clay vessel methods — some of the oldest winemaking traditions on earth), the medieval cave city of Vardzia, the mountain town of Kazbegi with its iconic Gergeti Trinity Church, and the ancient capital Mtskheta. Georgia's landscape diversity — from subtropical Black Sea coast to Caucasus peaks — is one of the most compelling reasons nomads extend their stays far beyond their original plans.

Tbilisi has a broad range of accommodation from atmospheric boutique guesthouses in the Old Town to modern international hotels in Vera and Vake. Browse and book on Traveloka for the best available rates.

6. Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam — Asia's Most Energetic Nomad Base

Why Digital Nomads Choose Ho Chi Minh City

Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) is the economic and entrepreneurial capital of Vietnam — a relentlessly energetic city of 9 million people that operates at a pace and intensity unlike almost anywhere else in Asia. For digital nomads, it delivers an extraordinary combination of ultra-low cost of living, an exceptional and incredibly diverse food scene (Vietnamese cuisine in its home city is one of the great food experiences in the world), fast internet, a growing co-working ecosystem, and the unique stimulation of a city that is simultaneously modernising at breakneck speed while maintaining the narrow streets, French colonial architecture, and deeply local market culture of its past. The rooftop bars, riverside cafes, and street food carts that define daily life here make even the lunch break feel like an event.

Best Neighbourhoods for Nomads

District 1 is the central business district and the starting point for most nomads — the highest density of co-working spaces, international restaurants, and transport connections, with Nguyen Hue Walking Street and Bui Vien Street (the backpacker hub) at its core. Thao Dien (District 2) is the most popular neighbourhood for longer-stay nomads and expats — an upscale, green, and genuinely liveable area across the river from District 1, with great international schools, supermarkets, cafes, and a quieter residential atmosphere. District 3 sits between the two and offers a more local Vietnamese character at lower rents than District 1. Binh Thanh is a less-visited but increasingly popular option for nomads who want local life and affordability without sacrificing connectivity.

Cost of Living

Ho Chi Minh City offers some of the best value of any city of its size and quality in the world. A monthly budget of USD 800 to USD 1,500 covers a comfortable furnished apartment, co-working membership, daily restaurant meals, scooter rental, and leisure. Furnished studio apartments in District 1 or Thao Dien rent from USD 400 to USD 900 per month. Co-working memberships at established spaces — Toong, Nest by AIA, Dreamplex, Circo, and WeWork — charge USD 80 to USD 180 per month for dedicated desks. A bowl of pho at a local restaurant costs USD 1.50 to USD 3.00; a sit-down meal at a good mid-range Vietnamese restaurant runs USD 4 to USD 10; international restaurant meals average USD 10 to USD 25. A monthly scooter rental costs USD 50 to USD 80.

Co-working Scene and Internet

The co-working scene in Ho Chi Minh City has matured significantly in recent years. Toong has multiple locations across Districts 1, 3, and 7, with a strong Vietnamese entrepreneurial community. Nest by AIA in District 1 is centrally located and professionally managed. Dreamplex has multiple premium locations targeting international companies and remote teams. Circo is a design-forward space popular with creatives. Café co-working is also extremely common — venues like The Workshop, Saigon Oi, and dozens of independent spots offer reliable WiFi and comfortable working environments. Internet quality in Ho Chi Minh City has improved dramatically — most co-working spaces offer 100 to 300 Mbps fibre, and mobile data on Viettel and Vietnamobile is fast and inexpensive.

Visa Situation and Getting There

Vietnam offers an e-Visa for citizens of most countries, valid for 90 days (single or multiple entry), available online before departure at a cost of approximately USD 25. Vietnam does not yet have a dedicated digital nomad visa, but the 90-day e-Visa is straightforward to obtain and combine with border runs or regional travel for extended stays. Ho Chi Minh City is served by Tan Son Nhat International Airport (SGN), approximately 7 kilometres from District 1, one of the busiest airports in Southeast Asia with excellent regional connections. From Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang, Hoi An, Hanoi, Ha Long Bay, and Phu Quoc Island are all accessible by domestic flight in under two hours — making it one of the best gateway cities in Southeast Asia for combining a base with regular travel.

District 1 is the most convenient base for nomads new to the city. Thao Dien (District 2) is preferred for longer stays. Serviced apartments with fibre internet and co-working floors are increasingly available across both areas. Browse and book on Traveloka for the best available rates.

Saigon hop-on hop-off bus tours, Mekong Delta day trips, Ho Chi Minh City walking tours with Vietnamese street food, and 3-day Mekong River exploration packages are all bookable through Traveloka's activities platform.

7. Barcelona, Spain — Europe's Most Liveable Nomad City

Why Digital Nomads Choose Barcelona

Barcelona is the city that has everything: year-round good weather (warm from April to October, mild in winter with rarely more than a few cold weeks), a walkable and beautifully planned urban layout (Ildefons Cerdà's 1860 Eixample grid is one of the most liveable city designs ever executed), exceptional food and coffee culture, world-class Modernista architecture, direct beach access in summer, a thriving startup and creative economy anchored by the 22@ innovation district, and a nightlife and cultural scene that makes the hours outside work feel as rewarding as the hours inside it. Barcelona's combination of quality of life, infrastructure, and connectivity has made it the most popular destination city in Europe for long-term digital nomads and remote workers.

Best Neighbourhoods for Nomads

Eixample (both left and right sides) is the most functional nomad neighbourhood — central, flat, walkable, with the highest density of co-working spaces, supermarkets, gyms, and restaurant options. Poblenou, east of the city centre, is Barcelona's answer to Silicon Valley — the 22@ technology and innovation district has transformed a former industrial neighbourhood into the most tech-forward area of the city, with co-working campuses, startup offices, and a growing number of nomad-friendly cafes and restaurants. El Born and Gothic Quarter offer the most atmospheric urban experience, with medieval lanes, tapas bars, and independent bookshops, though apartments are smaller and rents higher per square metre. Gràcia, just north of Eixample, is the most genuinely local and community-focused neighbourhood — village squares, long-running local bars, and a strong independent creative culture.

Cost of Living

Barcelona is more expensive than Southeast Asian or Eastern European nomad bases but remains significantly cheaper than London, Zurich, or Amsterdam. A monthly budget of EUR 2,200 to EUR 3,500 covers a comfortable furnished apartment, co-working membership, regular dining out including restaurants and tapas bars, and leisure. Furnished studio apartments in Eixample or Poblenou rent from EUR 1,000 to EUR 1,800 per month — prices have increased in recent years due to high demand. Co-working memberships at established spaces — MOB (in El Born and Badajoz), Coworking Palau de Mar, Almogavers, WeWork Poblenou, and many others — run EUR 200 to EUR 400 per month for dedicated desks. A restaurant lunch (menú del día, two courses plus drink) costs EUR 10 to EUR 15. A coffee at a local bar costs EUR 1.20 to EUR 1.80. Monthly public transport pass costs approximately EUR 80.

Co-working Scene and Internet

Barcelona has the largest co-working ecosystem in Spain and one of the most developed in Europe. The 22@ district is home to multiple large co-working campuses including WeWork Poblenou, Aticco, and Cloudworks, each offering large floor plates, private offices, and strong community programming. In the city centre, MOB (Members Only Barcelona) operates three locations with a strong creative and startup community. Espai Joves and dozens of smaller independent spaces fill out the market. Internet in Barcelona is among the best in Europe — Spain's fibre rollout has been one of the most comprehensive on the continent, and co-working spaces regularly deliver 200 to 500 Mbps. Mobile data coverage on Movistar, Vodafone, and Orange is reliable across the city and the wider metropolitan area.

Visa Situation and Getting There

Spain introduced a Digital Nomad Visa in 2023, designed specifically for non-EU remote workers. The visa requires proof of remote employment or self-employment and a minimum monthly income of approximately EUR 2,763 (200% of the Spanish minimum wage), plus health insurance. It is valid for one year, renewable for up to five. EU citizens have unrestricted residency rights. Non-EU citizens from many countries can enter Spain visa-free for 90 days within any 180-day period under the Schengen Agreement. Barcelona is served by El Prat Airport (BCN), one of the busiest airports in Europe, with direct connections to destinations across Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and the Americas. Use a car rental to explore the Costa Brava coast, Tarragona, Montserrat, and the wine regions of Penedès and Priorat from your Barcelona base.

Barcelona has hotels from boutique properties in the Gothic Quarter to modern aparthotels in Poblenou and Eixample that offer weekly and monthly rates for longer-staying nomads. Browse and book on Traveloka for the best available rates.

Plan Your Digital Nomad Journey with Traveloka

Choosing a digital nomad base is one of the most personal decisions in travel — the right city depends on your budget, your timezone requirements, the culture you want to be immersed in, and the kind of lifestyle you want to build around your work. What all seven cities on this list share is a proven track record: reliable internet, a welcoming international community, a quality of life that makes the workday feel like part of an adventure, and accommodation that ranges from backpacker-budget coliving to boutique luxury.

The most practical way to test a new nomad base before committing is to book a two-week stay and treat it as a trial — arrive, find your co-working space and local coffee shop, cook or eat locally, and see whether the city fits how you work and live. Traveloka makes every part of that process simpler. Search hotels by longer-stay filters, compare neighbourhoods, read verified guest reviews from travellers who have stayed weeks rather than days, and book flights from across Asia and beyond to any of these seven cities in a single session.

Southeast Asia's largest online travel platform, trusted by over 100 million users and available across Asia and beyond — from Indonesia to Japan, Korea, and Australia — Traveloka covers flights, hotels, activities, car rentals, eSIM, travel insurance, and more all in one app. Download the Traveloka app today, explore deals on flights and hotels to the world's best digital nomad cities, and start planning the base that works for your life and your work.

Tags:

digital nomad

Flights Featured in This Article

Mon, 6 Jul 2026
VietJet Air
Ho Chi Minh City (SGN) to Bali / Denpasar (DPS)
Start from 3.606.461 VND
Book Now
Tue, 16 Jun 2026
VietJet Air
Hanoi (HAN) to Bali / Denpasar (DPS)
Start from 3.920.112 VND
Book Now
Thu, 2 Jul 2026
VietJet Air
Da Nang (DAD) to Bali / Denpasar (DPS)
Start from 4.249.000 VND
Book Now

Explore the Best of World

World

Hotels
Flights
Things to Do
Always Know the Latest Info
Subscribe to our newsletter for more travel & lifestyle recommendations and exciting promos.
Subscribe

Traveloka Vietnam Co., Ltd. Enterprise Reg.: 0313581779 | An Phu Building, 117-119 Ly Chinh Thang, Xuan Hoa Ward, HCMC | Legal Representative: Nguyen Thi Thu Huong | Email: cs@traveloka.com | Tel: +84 28 3861 4699
Copyright © 2026 Traveloka. All rights reserved