I’ve spent three years running Casa Basilico and have personally stayed at or visited over a dozen colivings across four continents. This list isn’t a marketing roundup where everyone gets a gold star. These are the places I’d actually recommend to a friend — with honest notes about who each one is for and who should skip it.
Every coliving on this list is in our directory, where you can find detailed profiles, room types, and current pricing.
Europe
Europe has the densest concentration of quality colivings in the world. The infrastructure is reliable, the visa situation is increasingly friendly to remote workers, and the coliving scene here has had time to mature.
Sun and Co. — Javea, Spain
From 900 EUR/month | Max 15 guests | Min stay: 14 nights
One of the OGs. Sun and Co. has been running since 2015 out of a restored 19th-century house on Spain’s Mediterranean coast. The community is small (15 people max), which means you actually get to know everyone. The work focus is strong — this isn’t a party spot. Great for people who want a productive month with sunshine and a tight-knit group.
Best for: Focused workers who want a proven, no-surprises experience.
Mokrin House — Mokrin, Serbia
From 900 EUR/month | Max 35 guests | Min stay: 1 week
Possibly the best value in European coliving. Mokrin House is a massive, beautifully designed complex in a small Serbian village. The coworking space is genuinely excellent — standing desks, phone booths, fast WiFi. The price is absurdly reasonable for what you get. The only catch: Mokrin is remote. There’s no city nearby. If you want nightlife or cafes, look elsewhere. If you want to lock in and get work done in a beautiful space, this is hard to beat.
Best for: Deep workers on a budget who don’t need urban amenities.
Coconat — Bad Belzig, Germany
From 900 EUR/month | Max 60 guests | Min stay: 3 days
A countryside workation retreat 90 minutes from Berlin. Coconat occupies a historic estate with gardens, forests, and serious creative energy. It’s larger than most colivings (up to 60 people), which means you’ll always find someone interesting to talk to. They accept short stays from 3 days, making it accessible for people who want to test the coliving concept before committing to a month.
Best for: Creatives and nature lovers who want a countryside retreat near a major city.
Nine Coliving — Tenerife, Spain
From 882 EUR/month | Max 15 guests | Min stay: 15 days
Small, intimate, wellness-oriented. Nine Coliving in Tenerife includes yoga sessions, group workouts, and community breakfasts. The island itself gives you year-round mild weather and decent surfing. At 15 guests max, the community feels more like a shared house than a program.
Best for: Wellness-focused nomads who want sunshine and an active lifestyle.
Sende — Galicia, Spain
From 700 EUR/month | Max 15 guests | Min stay: 1 month
One of Europe’s earliest colivings, tucked into a tiny mountain village in Galicia. Sende is for people who genuinely want to disconnect from city life. No restaurants, no bars, no distractions — just mountains, community, and deep focus. Not for everyone, but the people who love it really love it.
Best for: Writers, developers, and anyone who craves quiet and nature.
Anceu Coliving — Galicia, Spain
From 882 EUR/month | Max 15 guests | Min stay: 15 days
Another Galician gem, Anceu is a restored stone house in the countryside. It sits between Sende’s total isolation and a typical coliving — there’s a small village nearby and the community has a creative, artistic bent. The rural Galician setting is genuinely beautiful, and the food culture in this region is underrated.
Best for: Creative types who want rural Spain without total isolation.
Chateau Coliving — Normandy, France
From 1,200 EUR/month | Max 20 guests | Min stay: 2 weeks
You live in a medieval castle. That’s the hook, and honestly, it works. Chateau Coliving runs themed programs (writing retreats, creative sprints) inside a real Normandy chateau. It’s a premium experience — the price reflects the location and the programming. If you’ve always wanted to write your novel in a French castle, here you go.
Best for: Creatives willing to pay premium for a unique setting and themed programs.
Fjord Coliving — Hardanger, Norway
From 1,800 EUR/month | Max 12 guests | Min stay: 16 days
The most dramatic setting on this list. Fjord Coliving runs 16-day retreats with glacier views in the Norwegian fjords. Meals are included, the group is tiny (12 people), and the landscape is jaw-dropping. This is the most expensive option on the list, but you’re paying for Norway prices plus an all-inclusive experience in one of the most beautiful places on earth.
Best for: Nature lovers with budget flexibility who want a once-in-a-lifetime setting.
Latin America
Latin America is where coliving gets interesting for budget-conscious nomads. Lower costs of living, growing nomad infrastructure, and visa-friendly policies make this region increasingly popular.
Casa Basilico — Pop-up (Italy, Portugal, Mexico, Brazil)
From 800 EUR/month | Max ~15 guests | Min stay: 1 month
Full disclosure: this is ours. Casa Basilico runs pop-up coliving chapters focused on food and community. We cook together, eat together, and build friendships that last well beyond the chapter. Each destination is chosen for its food culture — think Puglia, Madeira, Oaxaca, northeast Brazil. We’re not the cheapest and we’re not the fanciest. We’re the ones where you’ll eat the best and laugh the most.
Best for: Foodies and social nomads who value deep community over luxury amenities.
Selina CoLive — Multiple locations worldwide
From 325 EUR/month | Max 50 guests | Min stay: 1 month
The biggest name in coliving by far, with properties across Latin America, Europe, and Asia. Selina is essentially a hostel chain that added coliving floors. The upside: global network, low prices in some locations (Medellin from 325 EUR), and you can hop between cities. The downside: the community is more transient, the vibe varies wildly by location, and you won’t get the tight-knit feeling of a smaller coliving. Think of Selina as coliving with training wheels.
Best for: Budget nomads who want flexibility and don’t mind a hostel-ish vibe.
Outsite — Multiple locations (Lisbon, Amsterdam, etc.)
From 750 EUR/month | Max 20 guests | Min stay: 1 week
A network of remote-work properties with community programming. Outsite sits in the middle of the market — not as budget as Selina, not as premium as WiFi Tribe. The properties are well-designed and work-friendly. The weekly minimum stay makes it more flexible than most. Good for people who want to try different cities without committing to a month.
Best for: Nomads who want a reliable, work-friendly base in multiple cities.
Pop-up programs (multi-destination)
These colivings don’t have a fixed home. They move to a new destination every month or season, bringing a curated group along for the ride.
WiFi Tribe — Global pop-up
From 1,300 EUR/month | Max 20 guests | Min stay: 1 month
The gold standard for pop-up coliving. WiFi Tribe has been running monthly chapters across the globe since 2016. The community is highly curated — you apply, and they’re selective. The result is a consistently high-quality group of remote professionals. The price is premium but includes accommodation, coworking, and a full program. Alumni often return for multiple chapters, which says a lot.
Best for: Experienced nomads who want a premium, well-organized pop-up with a strong alumni network.
Hacker Paradise — Global pop-up
From 1,200 EUR/month | Max 18 guests | Min stay: 2 weeks
Originally built for developers and designers, Hacker Paradise has broadened to include any remote professional, but the tech DNA remains. The programs are work-focused with structured skill-sharing sessions. Destinations lean toward interesting cities (Oaxaca, Sri Lanka) rather than obvious beach spots. Smaller groups than WiFi Tribe, which some people prefer.
Best for: Tech workers and creatives who want structured skill-sharing alongside coliving.
Noma Collective — Global pop-up
From 1,550 EUR/month | Max 25 guests | Min stay: 2 weeks
Premium pop-up coliving in beautiful locations — Costa Rica, Bali, that kind of thing. Noma leans more toward the retreat end of the spectrum: wellness activities, group excursions, surfing. If you want a coliving that feels like a premium vacation with a work element, Noma is your pick. If you’re heads-down focused on work, the activity-heavy schedule might be distracting.
Best for: Nomads who want a premium, activity-rich experience in paradise-type destinations.
Banama — Fuerteventura, Spain
From 1,540 EUR/month | Max 12 guests | Min stay: 1 month
Surf and remote work in the Canary Islands. Banama has a permanent base in Fuerteventura with pop-up chapters elsewhere. The community is tiny (12 people), which creates strong bonds fast. The surf focus is real — if you don’t surf, you’ll be in the minority. Year-round warm weather and consistent waves make this a magnet for surf-oriented nomads.
Best for: Surfers and ocean lovers who want a small, tight community.
Asia
Asia remains the budget king for coliving, with excellent options in Thailand, Bali, and India.
KoHub — Koh Lanta, Thailand
From 400 EUR/month | Max 20 guests | Min stay: 1 week
The best budget coliving in the world, full stop. KoHub on Koh Lanta gives you a beach-adjacent coworking and coliving setup for prices that feel like a glitch. The island is relaxed, the food is incredible, and the community attracts a mix of longtime nomads and first-timers. At 400 EUR/month, there’s genuinely nothing comparable.
Best for: Budget-conscious nomads who want a tropical base without spending much.
Alt Coliving — Chiang Mai, Thailand
From 500 EUR/month | Max 20 guests | Min stay: 1 month
Two properties sharing one community in Chiang Mai — the undisputed capital of digital nomadism. Alt Coliving is well-run, affordable, and plugged into Chiang Mai’s massive nomad infrastructure (hundreds of cafes, coworking spaces, and meetups). If you’re new to nomad life and want to test the waters somewhere easy, Chiang Mai with Alt Coliving is a safe bet.
Best for: First-time nomads or anyone who wants Chiang Mai’s infrastructure with a built-in community.
Outpost — Ubud, Bali
From $600/month | Max 25 guests | Min stay: 1 week
Open-air coworking and coliving in Bali’s spiritual and creative heartland. Outpost Ubud was one of the first coworking spaces in Bali and has expanded into coliving. The setting is stunning — rice terraces, temples, and that particular Ubud magic. The community leans creative and wellness-oriented. Bali’s visa situation requires some planning, but Outpost makes the logistics easy.
Best for: Creatives and wellness seekers who want the Bali experience with reliable work infrastructure.
NomadGao — Goa & Dharamkot, India
From 250 EUR/month | Max 15 guests | Min stay: 1 week
The cheapest coliving on this list by a wide margin. NomadGao runs community spaces across India’s top nomad spots. The experience is more basic than European or Latin American colivings — don’t expect designer furniture or artisanal coffee. But the community is genuine, the prices are unbeatable, and India itself is an intense, rewarding place to live and work. Not for everyone, but those who try it often stay longer than planned.
Best for: Adventurous nomads on a tight budget who want an authentic India experience.
Africa
Coworking Safari — Cape Town & Kruger, South Africa
From 650 EUR/month | Max 15 guests | Min stay: 4 nights
The most unique concept on this list: remote work combined with African wildlife. Coworking Safari runs programs in Cape Town (city base) and the Kruger region (literal safari lodge). You work during the day and go on game drives in the afternoon. The short minimum stay (4 nights) makes it accessible as an add-on to a longer trip. Cape Town itself is one of the best nomad cities in the world.
Best for: Adventure seekers who want something genuinely different from every other coliving.
How to choose
Twenty options is a lot. Here’s how to narrow it down:
Start with your budget. If you’re under 700 EUR/month, your options are Southeast Asia (KoHub, Alt Coliving, NomadGao), Selina’s cheaper locations, or Coworking Safari in Cape Town. If you have 1,000-1,500 EUR, most European colivings open up. Above 1,500 EUR, you’re in pop-up territory (WiFi Tribe, Noma Collective, Fjord Coliving).
Then pick your vibe. Work-focused? Mokrin House, Coconat, Sun and Co. Social and community-driven? WiFi Tribe, Casa Basilico. Surf? Banama, Nine Coliving. Nature and quiet? Sende, Anceu, Fjord Coliving. Adventure? Coworking Safari, Hacker Paradise.
Consider the community size. Small colivings (10-15 people) create deeper bonds but less diversity. Larger ones (25-60) give you more people to connect with but relationships stay more surface-level. Neither is better — just different.
Check the minimum stay. If you’re not sure coliving is for you, start with a place that accepts weekly stays (Outsite, Coconat, KoHub). If you’re ready to commit, the month-long programs (WiFi Tribe, Hacker Paradise, Casa Basilico) deliver a much deeper experience.
The coliving world in 2026 is mature enough that you can find something for almost any budget, work style, and personality. The worst decision is spending six months researching instead of just booking one and seeing how it feels. Pick the one that sounds 70% right and go.