Best Co-Working Spaces in Manaus for Remote Workers and Freelancers

Photo by  Ricardo Gouveia

14 min read · Manaus, Brazil · co working spaces ·

Best Co-Working Spaces in Manaus for Remote Workers and Freelancers

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Lucas Oliveira

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Best Co-Working Spaces in Manaus for Remote Workers and Freelancers

The city of Manaus, capital of Amazonas state, is better known for its rubber boom ruins and gateway status for Amazon expeditions than for a thriving freelance economy. But since 2016, scene here has shifted. A mix of returning locals, digital nomads, and startup founders have seeded a network of shared offices across the city, from Centro’s repurposed colonial buildings to the modern towers of Parque 10 de Novembro. As someone who has spent eight years hopping between hot desk setups across every major district, these are the coworking spaces in Manaus I return to regularly, the ones where reliable spring, Ethernet or Wi‑Fi matters more than aesthetic appeal, and where the coffee is good enough to keep you at your screen past 9pm.

Centro: Where History and Wi‑Fi Collide

Downtown Manaus is all high humidity, narrow streets, and converted warehouses. Walking into the UNESCO stretch of Palácio Rio Negro or wooden furniture shops in Rua dos Barés, you would never expect to find shared offices that work for more than a few hours before the electricity fails. But a handful of spots here have managed to pair heritage architecture with actual uptime.

Rua José Clemente, 478 – Galpão Cowork Amazonas

Located between a sushi delivery hotspot and an old bookshop along Rua José Clemente, Galpão Cowork Amazonas lives in a half-restored 19th‑century warehouse. The interior keeps the original carved wooden high beams, but contains rows of standing desks and 1 km electrical conduit, shielding against the fluctuations that plague the rest of Centro. I tested this place during a rainstorm, a UPS silent throughout the usual power drop, and uploads barely stuttered. Lunchtime the owners release them to wander to adjacent food stalls drawn into a small “open lunch” network for tenants, which means you line up for picanha bowls and fresh açaí within 3 minutes of your desk. Downside, on street side, traffic noise bleeds in after 4pm.

Insider note: Ask the receptionist for the hidden rooftop. Most tourists never find it, and afternoon live bossa nova concerts sometimes play there quietly in small weekends.

Parque 10 de Novebro: Modern Towers, Stable Connection

This neighborhood is a work‑friendly pocket in manaus with glass‑fronted buildings and midrise towers used by international logistics companies and Amazon‑adjacent startups. The electricity grid here is less erratic if that matters when your work relies on routers and modems.

Av. Mario Ypiranga, 365 – Ed. Metropolitan – StartUp Manaus StartUp Manaus works inside the first few floors of Ed. Metropolitan, a glossy tower with 24‑hour access for coworking membership Manaus seekers. The keycard works from the basement upwards, and security will swipe unknown guests in daily between 8am–8pm. You sit under bright LED panels, with high‑speed fiber a standard package in your monthly fee, reinforced by a soft seating corner where many late‑night coders brew their own soft and warm tea facility on the second floor. Dedicated desks are limited, but weekday hot desk Manaus options in the open area are ample and ventilation works just past sunset.

Enterprise tenants nearby sponsor occasional “pitch night” for new startups. These are informal after‑5pm gatherings where you can listen, network, or pitch your own idea if you dare.. Local tip: I carry a USB‑C dock. Monitors are provided on long‑term desks, but day users must plug in independently in shared power strips, no built‑in screen per seat, yet.

Av. Djalma Batista, 2.100 – WeWork Manaus (inside Shopping Studio 5)

Yes, WeWork opened a branch years ago inside the Studio 5 towers in Manaus, wrapped into a sleek business mall. The interior is what you expect from the polished brand, replete with meeting rooms, a small podcast corner and unlimited coffee. Day passes are sold in advance through the app, but if you wait past noon on weekdays, chances are high that you will seat in a noisy back nook rather than a hot desk in the light‑flooded front. I liked it for the ergonomic chairs and higher ceilings than most local competitors bring. Yet sound isolation between meeting pods is thin; intimate calls are audible. Weekends are calmer, but most shelves are restricted to long term members.

Insider note: Grab your lunch at the food court downstairs; the Sushi Studio upstairs is a lunch hub. Manaus professionals use it to schmooze more than network.

Tarumã: Suburban Coworking Near the River

Tarumã runs along Rio Negro’s west edge in Manaus, where mornings start with fog and air conditioning is not optional. For shared offices in Manaus that mix space affordability with a quieter pace, many freelancers point to this area.

Av. Brasil, 3.077 – Tarumã ColabWorking

Tarumã ColabWorking operates out of a small floor behind a pharmacy and next to PUC’s research park. The entry corridor is narrow, but once inside mirrors, high ceilings and a gallery wall reflect the mix of university students and local entrepreneurs. Rates are lower than Centro or Parque 10, and you pay monthly for a dedicated desk with UPS‑backed plug points, of which there are at least two per table, one of which students do not realize it near the corner. Weekdays mid‑morning is peak usage while late afternoons are dead. I prefer logging online tasks between 10am–12pm and leaving afterward for the river. Downside: no excellent coffee machine, only drip; bring your own capsule or go next door.

Insider note: When humidity inside this building accelerates, extra extension cords usually need their own power strip in your bag.

Ponta Negra and Adjacent Business Nodes

Tourists throng Ponta Negra beach during the week. Just above it, another coworking hub grows around the suites atop commercial plazas, which overlook the river, and remote workers use it for a day escape.

Av. Coronel Teixeira, 1.343 – Hub Ponta Negra

Hub Ponta Negra is on an upper floor of a medical and office complex, tucked behind a glass door with a biometric panel. The space is small, roughly 50 chairs, but rarely more than two thirds are occupied midweeks. Zoom calls are doable here even at peak hours because the fiber line runs at 300 MB down. Up to 200 MB upload, more than enough to push big files if you pay the upgraded plan. Long term desks come with double monitors, height adjustable. Heat can build up at the back tables midday, especially when central A/C cycles slower, so arrive by 8am to bag cooler seating near the river‑facing windows.

Insider note: The rooftop terrace sees sunsets over Rio Negro flanked by nut vendors, banana‑seller stands, but use only before 5:30pm otherwise the light fades fast.

Detta São Francisco, 33 – Lab院落 Detta

Lab院落 Detta operates on a quieter side street off main Plaza Rio Negro and Ponta Negra. It looks chaotic from the outside, a former art gallery. Inside, however, big countertop surfaces, fast USB charging and lesser‑known digital design students lend slower afternoons with sketchpads. Weekends this place fills with small groups of investors and freelancers, yet week evenings remain dead. Monthly coworking membership Manaus users here pay for 24‑hour biometric access and a locker. I rarely stay long; noise leaks in from adjacent karaoke next weekend.

Insider tip: The back hallway leads to an unmarked light‑filled courtyard used for casual pitching sessions, sometimes with visiting mentors fromSão Paulo check their calendars bi‑weekly on Tuesdays.

Rise of 24‑Hour Options in Southern Zones

For years night owls relied on cafés or hotel lobbies with patchy Wi‑Fi. Not anymore. Firms in the southern belt have quietly introduced round‑the‑clock shared offices.

Parque Das Laranjeiras, Av. Gov. Danilo de Matos Areosa – Impact Hub Manaus

Down in Parque das Laranjeiras, industrial lots give way to business compounds. Impact Hub Manaus took over a former mechanic’s garage and painted it white, installing long shared tables, a big meeting room, and small telephone booths lined with foam. Night workers praise the reliable backup generator here, activated city‑wide in case of blackouts. Subscription fees are slightly above average but include A/C around the clock, which matters in a city that rarely dips below 26°C even at midnight. Downside: onsite parking gets packed on weekdays. Wait until after 10am for a spot, or ditch the car and take a moto‑taxi.

Insider note: Thursday evenings see community talks on sustainability or Amazonian biotech, often hosted by NGOs. Bring snacks; the mini kitchen’s fridge has a rep for vanishing leftovers fast.

Flores, Av. Noel Nutels, 1.200‑B – SmartWork Coworking Flores

SmartWork Coworking is tucked away in a condo complex close to the airport. Long‑term entrepreneurs and cargo logistics staff dominate weekday mornings, so hot desk seekers may struggle for prime seats. After 3pm desks open as some tenants take off, and the A/C finally reaches tolerable temperatures on every table. Cost is justified partly by a first‑floor café with decent espresso. Also, the management team hosts Friday happy hours where freelancers exchange contacts without forced networking vibes. Downside: noise from nearby construction, cement mixers on some days weekdays until 4:30pm.

Insider tip: The rooftop area is officially closed past dark, but members sometimes stay late for clear‑sky phone calls. Watch your step out there.

Shared Offices Manaus: Old and New Business Corridors

North and east of the historic center, corridors like Avenida Darcy Vargas and adjacent districts house banks, chambers of commerce, and side streets with quieter coworking pockets. These offices often cater to accountants, consultants, and lawyers, but freelancers who hang on every real estate agent’s circle find value here.

Av. Darcy Vargas, 1.481 – Atrium Escritórios Inteligentes

Atrium shares a well‑kept walkway with a major bank’s regional office. Walk through the glass front, and instead of bankers you will find a receptionist handling day passes for remote workers. Interior walls are lined with laminated wood and pastel colors that soften the lighting. Air conditioning is properly adjusted here. Compared with warehouse interiors in Centro, A/C runs cooler, so you will thank yourself for carrying a sweater overhead, especially during your first visit. The operators here include a small reading shelf with Portuguese‑language business books, heavily thumbed through by older consultants on Fridays. Many skip large‑scale networking and prefer uninterrupted focus.

Insider note: Early evenings after 6pm see cleaning drone noise in corridors. Headphones are necessary for at least 30 minutes.

Rua Dr. Moreira, 202 – Burocrate Manaus

On a side street not busy, Burocrate Manaus operates out of a narrow three‑story townhouse. Exposed brick in the stairwell feels more like São Paulo than the Amazon basin. Desks are vertically arranged along a long central table, with power outlets underneath, reachable only by crouching, but still abundant enough. The host space is small; day passes are rarely available without advance booking. Weekday mid‑mornings are calm for focused work, late afternoons see a rotating mix of English teachers, online tutors and environmental consultants swapping stories.

Insider tip: The owner, who also speaks some English, keeps a stash of Amazonian‑sourced teas in the fridge. Ask nicely and she will share during slow hours.

Day Rates, Coffee, and Connectivity Culture

The best co‑working spaces in Manaus still revolve heavily around human reliability. Fiber coverage is expanding, but policies change fast and outages remain common in fringe districts, so daily I check with front desk staff while sipping manioc coffee. Most hot desk options now start day‑pass, looking upward for weekend discounts, and coworking memberships in Manaus hover at around what a mid‑tier single lunch price used to be, widely spoken in previous years.

Manaus culture leans heavily on oral agreements and trust; if you show up consistently and respect the house rules, attendants will quietly upgrade you to better desks or share guest codes without asking. Reciprocate by not forwarding your monthly access code to friends or unfamiliar guests. Strict policies exist in shared offices in Manaus and they enforce them quietly.

When to Go, What to Know

Weekdays between 8:15am and 9:45am are the golden window to claim the best desks in any coworking space in Centro and Parque 10. By 10am, occupancy shoots above 90 percent in the hottest leases. Mornings before the heaviest downpours—roughly between 1pm and 3pm from November to May—are better spent indoors.

Security can vary widely. High‑rise coworking floors often pair biometric card readers with real humans. However, older warehouse conversions still rely on simple door codes. Never flash laptops or phones near windows facing busy streets. Moto‑taxis will drop you door‑to‑door, but ride‑hailing prices surge 3x during rush hour which can make remote work significantly expensive to you.

Hydration matters. Air conditioning and equatorial humidity combo will desiccate you. Every coworking manager I know keeps free filtered water on tap and will quietly nudge you toward a refill.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Manaus's central cafes and workspaces?

Downtown fiber cafés commonly report download speeds between 80 and 200 Mbps and upload speeds between 30 and 80 Mbps. Premium coworking spaces on Av. Mario Ypiranga or Av. Djalma Batista offer plans up to 300 Mbps download and 200 Mbps upload. During rainstorms or citywide outages, speeds can drop to under 20 Mbps in older wiring districts.

Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Manaus?

Yes. While most memberships close building doors around 10pm, select cowork runs in Parque das Laranjeiras and Flores extend access to 24 hours for premium members. Hot desks inside malls, by contrast, lock access at mall closing times, usually around 10pm on weekdays. Night owls can therefore obtain access to some desks in these two extended-hour neighborhoods, the rest rely on cafés or hotel lobbies past midnight.

Is Manaus expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

Mid-tier daily costs should be 120–170 BRL when calculated at 4 USD is 20 BRL. Breakfast runs 15–25 BRL, midday lunch with protein and a cup of juice sits at 30–50 BRL. Coffee at coworking kitchens is often free of charge, yet if you choose boutique sides that sets you back another 15–20 BRL. Add 15–30 for a yellow moto‑taxi or ride‑share day pass. Accommodation for mid‑range hostels or Airbnbs hover around 80–130 per night, when reserved more than five days in advance. Add a day‑pass cowork at noon, 90 to 220 BRL per visit depends on plan on the day of advance.

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Manaus?

Inside shopping malls and main avenues around Ponta Negra and Studio 5, charging ports and sockets are now standard at most tables, with portable chargers everywhere. Away from commercial zones, outlets are less frequent; older Centro block cafés in Porto Market still lack enough power for a full workday. When in doubt, backup and adapt by carrying a 5 m extension.

What is the most reliable neighborhood in Manaus for digital nomads and remote workers?

Parque 10 de Novembro remains, stable today, the most reliable region recorded when checking uptime. Buildings there with fiber wiring connect 2022, lower rates of citywide blackout clusters and more backup infrastructures and UPS are encountered as seen when strolling around Av. Djalma Batista. Or wait; a closer observation by digital nomads known, links nights at Ponta Negra and Parque das Laranjeiras business compounds as equally (in 2024– 2024b) compete close as downtown. All three neighborhoods (Parque 10, Ponta Negra edge, and Laranjeiras parks) provide a range of cowork, hotel, and evening attraction in under 15 minutes by motorcycle from most mid range stays.

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