Updated April 2026 | 4 min read
TL;DR — Quick Picks
- Do: Lisbon has the best all-around balance: 80-150 Mbps WiFi, Schengen visa access, and a massive expat community
- Do: Mexico City is cheapest with the most culture per dollar — 180 days visa-free with no special paperwork
- Skip: Bali during rainy season (Dec-Mar) for remote work. We went in April and still dealt with reduced visibility and afternoon storms
In This Post
Working remotely from another country sounds glamorous until your video call drops because the cafe WiFi cannot handle Zoom, or your visa only allows 30 days and you just signed a 3-month apartment lease.
Here is an honest ranking of cities for remote work based on the factors that actually matter, informed by places I have spent time in and 2026 research.
The Scoring System
I rank each city on five factors:
- Internet: Average WiFi speed in cafes and coworking spaces (Mbps)
- Monthly cost: Apartment + food + transport + coworking for one person
- Visa: How easy it is to stay legally for 1-6 months
- Livability: Safety, food quality, English friendliness, social scene
- Time zone: Overlap with US Eastern and Western business hours
1. Lisbon, Portugal
Internet: 80-150 Mbps (excellent). Portugal has some of the best internet infrastructure in Europe.
Monthly cost: $1,800-2,500. Apartment: $1,000-1,500. Food: $400-600. Coworking: $150-200.
Visa: Schengen zone — 90 days visa-free for US citizens. Portugal’s D7 visa extends to 1 year for remote workers.
Livability: Outstanding. Safe, walkable, excellent food, strong English, massive expat community. The Alfama, Bairro Alto, and Santos neighborhoods all have coworking-cafe culture.
Time zone: GMT+0/+1. Excellent overlap with US East (5 hours ahead), workable for US West (8 hours ahead).
Best for: First-time remote workers abroad. Lisbon has the lowest barrier to entry of any European nomad city.
2. Mexico City
Internet: 50-100 Mbps (good). Inconsistent in older buildings but reliable in modern coworking spaces.
Monthly cost: $1,200-1,800. Apartment: $600-1,000. Food: $300-500. Coworking: $100-150.
Visa: 180 days visa-free for US citizens. No digital nomad visa needed — the standard tourist stamp covers 6 months.
Livability: Excellent. Roma Norte and Condesa are walkable, safe, and have every amenity. The food scene is extraordinary. The altitude (2,240m) means mild weather year-round.
Time zone: CST (GMT-6). Same time zone as Chicago. Perfect overlap with US business hours.
Best for: US-based workers who need same-timezone hours. The cost savings over US cities are dramatic.
3. Bangkok, Thailand
Internet: 60-120 Mbps (good to excellent). True Digital Park and other coworking hubs have fiber.
Monthly cost: $1,000-1,600. Apartment: $400-700. Food: $200-350. Coworking: $80-120.
Visa: Thailand’s DTV (Destination Thailand Visa) launched in 2024 — 180 days for remote workers, extendable once for another 180 days. Requires proof of employment or freelance income.
Livability: High. Cheap, incredible food, excellent healthcare, good transit (BTS/MRT). The Bangkok food scene alone justifies a multi-month stay.
Time zone: GMT+7. 12 hours ahead of US Eastern. Very difficult for real-time collaboration during US business hours. Best for async workers.
Best for: Budget-focused workers with async schedules. Your dollar goes further here than almost anywhere.
4. Bali, Indonesia
Internet: 30-80 Mbps (inconsistent). Canggu’s cafes range from excellent to unusable depending on the day. Coworking spaces (Dojo, Outpost) are more reliable at 50-100 Mbps.
Monthly cost: $1,200-2,000. Apartment: $500-900. Food: $250-400. Coworking: $150-200. Scooter rental: $60-80.
Visa: Indonesia’s B211A visa allows 60 days, extendable to 180 days. The new digital nomad visa (2024) allows 1 year but requires proof of $60,000+ annual income. Tourist visa-on-arrival gives 30 days, extendable once.
Livability: Mixed. Bali is beautiful and the social scene for nomads is unmatched. But Canggu traffic is terrible, infrastructure is basic, and you need a scooter to function — which comes with real safety risk.
Time zone: GMT+8. Same problem as Bangkok — minimal overlap with US business hours.
Best for: Nomads who want community. Bali has the densest concentration of remote workers in the world. You will meet people.
5. Split, Croatia
Internet: 60-100 Mbps (good). Croatia’s internet infrastructure has improved dramatically.
Monthly cost: $1,500-2,200. Apartment: $700-1,100. Food: $400-600. Coworking: $100-150.
Visa: Croatia’s digital nomad visa allows 1 year for remote workers. No Croatian income tax during that period. Schengen zone entry from 2023.
Livability: Excellent. Mediterranean climate, walkable old town, ferry access to islands, good food. Smaller community than Lisbon or Bali but growing. The Dalmatian Coast is stunning for weekend trips.
Time zone: GMT+1/+2. Good overlap with US East (6-7 hours ahead).
Best for: Workers who want European lifestyle without Lisbon prices or crowds.
6. Tbilisi, Georgia
Internet: 40-80 Mbps (adequate). Improving rapidly but still behind Portugal or Thailand.
Monthly cost: $800-1,300. The cheapest livable option on this list. Apartment: $300-600. Food: $200-350. Coworking: $50-80.
Visa: 1 year visa-free for US citizens. No digital nomad visa needed — just show up and stay for up to 365 days. The simplest visa situation of any country on this list.
Livability: Rising fast. The food (khinkali, khachapuri, wine) is excellent and cheap. Sulfur baths are a unique perk. The city is safe. English is limited outside tourist areas but improving.
Time zone: GMT+4. 9 hours ahead of US Eastern. Difficult for real-time calls but workable with morning meetings.
Best for: Budget maximizers who want something different from the usual nomad circuit.
Essential Remote Work Gear
The gear that makes working abroad actually viable:
- Sony WH-1000XM5 noise-canceling headphones — non-negotiable for cafe work. Blocks traffic, music, and conversation. The best investment for remote work.
- Anker 10,000mAh power bank — cafe outlets are fought over. A power bank means you never need to hunt for a plug.
- USB-C hub with ethernet port — when cafe WiFi fails, plug into ethernet if available. Also adds HDMI for external monitors at Airbnbs.
- Portable laptop stand — saves your neck and back during 8-hour cafe sessions. Folds flat for travel.
Connectivity: Get an Airalo eSIM for your destination country — it gives you a backup data connection when WiFi fails, which it will. For VPN (required for some work tools and banking apps), NordVPN has servers in all six cities above.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest city to work remotely?
Tbilisi, Georgia — under $1,200/month for a furnished apartment, coworking, food, and transport. Bangkok and Mexico City are next at around $1,500. Mexico City has the added advantage of 180 days visa-free for US citizens with no paperwork.
Do I need a special visa to work remotely abroad?
Most countries now offer digital nomad visas for 6-12 months. Portugal, Croatia, and Indonesia all have official programs. For stays under 90 days, a tourist visa usually works — technically a gray area, but widely tolerated. Bali launched its Digital Nomad Visa in late 2024.
What internet speed do I need to work remotely?
Minimum 25 Mbps for video calls. All cities on this list average 50+ Mbps in coworking spaces. Always have a backup — a local eSIM with 4G/5G data saves you when cafe WiFi drops. Airalo works in all six cities listed.
Travel Tools We Use
- Compare flights on Skyscanner
- Find hotels in Lisbon on Booking.com
- Get travel insurance with SafetyWing
- Get an eSIM with Airalo
These are affiliate links — we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
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