Best Co-Living Spaces for Digital Nomads in Santiago
Words by
Valentina Diaz
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If you are hunting for the best coliving spaces for digital nomads in Santiago, you are looking at a city that has quietly turned itself into one of South America’s most practical bases for remote work. I have spent years moving between neighborhoods here, from the cobbled streets of Lastarria to the wide avenues of Providencia, and I have watched the nomad coliving Santiago scene shift from a handful of scrappy shared houses into a surprisingly diverse ecosystem of spaces built around reliable Wi-Fi, decent coffee, and a community that actually wants to see you again. Santiago works well for monthly stay Santiago arrangements because the city is compact, public transport is cheap and extensive, and landlords have become accustomed to foreign remote workers who pay on time and stay longer than a typical tourist. In this guide I will walk you through real coliving houses, apartments, and hybrid hostels where I have either stayed, worked, or spent enough time to know which elevator breaks down, which bakery saves you a marraqueta after 6 p.m., and which rooftop actually gets usable sun for a winter video call.
Selenta Coliving Providencia
Selenta sits in the heart of Providencia, on a quiet side street just a few blocks from Avenida Providencia and the Metro stations that make your life infinitely easier. The building is a converted early 20th century house with high ceilings, tall windows, and the kind of creaky wooden floors that remind you Santiago used to be a very different city before glass towers took over the skyline. Inside you will find a mix of private rooms and shared dorms, a communal kitchen that is actually used, and a small terrace where people gather for late afternoon mate or cheap red wine from the supermarket on the corner.
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What to Order / See / Do: Ask for a room facing the interior patio if you are sensitive to street noise, because the front rooms pick up morning traffic and the occasional colectivo horn. In the kitchen, look for the communal spice rack, which is usually stocked with merkén and ají cacho de cabra powder that someone’s last Chilean roommate left behind.
Best Time: Try to arrive on a Monday or Tuesday, because by Thursday the terrace starts filling up with weekend guests and people passing through on short stays, which can make it harder to meet people doing a monthly stay Santiago style.
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The Vibe: It feels like a student house that grew up and got a remote job. You will see people in slippers making espresso at 7 a.m., and others on calls in the hallway pretending they are in a New York co-working space. The Wi-Fi is generally solid, but the connection can wobble during peak evening streaming hours, so if you have a critical upload, do it before 6 p.m.
Most tourists do not realize that Providencia is one of the few Santiago neighborhoods where you can walk to both a proper supermarket and a feria libre, or street market, within ten minutes. On Tuesdays and Thursdays the feria on Avenida Italia sets up stalls with absurdly cheap fruit, and you can stock up on avocados and tomatoes for the week without touching a grocery app. Selenta’s location also puts you within walking distance of several old-school cafés that still serve coffee chileno, which is basically a cup of instant coffee with steamed milk, but somehow tastes better when you drink it while watching the city wake up from a sidewalk table.
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Casa CoWork Bellavista
Casa CoWork sits in Bellavista, the bohemial neighborhood wedged between the Mapocho River and Cerro San Cristóbal, and it is one of the more visible players in the nomad coliving Santiago circuit. The building is a narrow, multi-story house tucked into a street where graffiti changes every few months and the corner store owner knows everyone’s name by their second visit. Inside, the ground floor functions as a co-working space with desks, a meeting room, and a small kitchen, while the upper floors hold private rooms and shared dorms aimed at people staying a month or longer.
What to Order / See / Do: Head to the rooftop in the late afternoon. You get a direct view of Cerro San Cristóbal and the Andes behind it, and on clear winter days the snow line is sharp enough to make you forget you are in a city of six million people. In the kitchen, look for the jar of homemade pebre that someone always keeps near the stove, and spoon it over your eggs or avocado toast.
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Best Time: Mornings are best if you want to work downstairs without competing for desks. By early afternoon the space fills with people taking calls, and the small meeting room gets booked solid, especially by freelancers who treat it like their personal office.
The Vibe: It is social without being a party house. You will meet a lot of European and Brazilian remote workers here, plus a handful of Chileans who work for foreign companies and prefer not to work from their family apartments. The elevator is more decorative than functional, so if you are on the top floor with heavy luggage, consider dropping your bags at street level and making two trips.
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Bellavista itself is a good reminder that Santiago is not just finance and metro lines. This neighborhood was the center of the city’s counterculture in the 1970s and 1980s, and you can still see traces of that history in the old theaters, independent bookstores, and murals that survived multiple rounds of painting over. From Casa CoWork you can walk down to Pio Nono in ten minutes, where street food stalls sell churrasco sandwiches and sopaipillas, and where the weekend night crowd spills out of bars that have been open since your parents were in college.
Hub Santiago Lastarria
Hub Santiago is located in Lastarria, one of the most walkable and visually striking neighborhoods in central Santiago, and it has positioned itself as a base for people who want remote work accommodation Santiago with a cultural edge. The building sits within walking distance of the Gabriela Mistral Cultural Center, the Santa Lucía Hill staircase, and a cluster of independent theaters and galleries that give the area its slightly artsy, slightly touristy character. Inside, you will find a co-working area, private rooms, and a steady calendar of community events aimed at connecting nomads with locals.
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What to Order / See / Do: Take advantage of the organized neighborhood walks and museum visits. Lastarria is dense with small museums and galleries that most visitors skip, and the staff here often know when free exhibitions or film screenings are happening. In the communal kitchen, check the shelf of half-used olive oils and soy sauces left by previous guests, and add your own before you leave.
Best Time: Evenings are when Lastarria comes alive for nomads. Many people finish work around 6 p.m. and head to nearby cafés or bars, and you will find it easier to strike up conversations then than during the structured co-working hours.
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The Vibe: It is polished but not corporate. The interior design leans toward exposed brick, hanging plants, and reclaimed wood, which fits the neighborhood’s aesthetic. The Wi-Fi is strong, but the air conditioning can struggle during peak summer, so if you are here in January or February, ask for a desk near a window that actually opens.
Lastarria is one of those neighborhoods that shows you how layered Santiago really is. You can stand on a street corner and see a 19th century church, a brutalist cultural center, and a glass fronted co-working space all at once. The area used to be a residential quarter for professors and artists, and you can still find old bookstores and record shops tucked between brunch spots and boutique hotels. Hub Santiago benefits from that mix, because you are never more than a few blocks from a decent espresso, a quiet bench in a small park, or a bus stop that will take you across the city for less than a dollar.
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The Loft Providencia
The Loft is a smaller, more understated coliving option in Providencia, occupying a converted apartment building on a side street that most tourists never see. It is not as heavily branded as some of the larger nomad coliving Santiago spaces, which is part of its appeal. The building has a handful of private rooms, a shared kitchen, and a rooftop terrace that gets good morning light. The co-working setup is informal, with people working from the living room, the kitchen table, or the terrace depending on their mood.
What to Order / See / Do: Spend your first morning walking the surrounding blocks. This part of Providencia is full of small bakeries, corner shops, and old apartment buildings that show you how middle class Santiago actually lives. In the kitchen, look for the communal tea stash, which usually includes mint and chamomile brought back from the central market by someone who knows their way around.
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Best Time: Early mornings are the sweet spot. The terrace gets good light from about 7:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., and you will often have it to yourself before people drift down for breakfast. After noon it can get warm, and the shade is limited.
The Vibe: It feels like staying with a friend who works online. People cook together, share playlists, and occasionally organize group trips to the coast or the mountains. The Wi-Fi is decent, but the router is tucked into a corner of the living room, so if you need a rock solid connection for video calls, sit nearby rather than relying on the signal in the far bedroom.
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One detail most visitors miss is how much this part of Providencia changes between day and night. During the day it is all school kids, office workers, and people walking dogs. After 8 p.m. the streets quiet down fast, and you hear more birds than cars. If you are the kind of person who likes to work late and then take a walk to clear your head, this neighborhood is ideal. You are also a short walk from the Costanera Center area, where you can see how Santiago’s financial district contrasts with the low rise residential streets around The Loft.
WorkFrom Santiago Centro
WorkFrom Santiago Centro is a co-working and coliving hybrid located in the city’s historic center, a few blocks from the Plaza de Armas and the Mercado Central. The building sits on a street that still has some of the old balconies and tile work you associate with early 20th century Santiago, even though many structures around it have been rebuilt after earthquakes and redevelopment. Inside, the space is set up for remote work accommodation Santiago style, with hot desks, private call booths, and a small number of rooms for longer stays.
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What to Order / See / Do: Use the private call booths whenever you can. They are small but soundproofed enough that you can take a client call while someone else is making a smoothie in the kitchen. In the communal area, check the whiteboard where people post weekend trip ideas, co-working meetups, and recommendations for monthly stay Santiago deals.
Best Time: Mornings are busy with people starting their workday, and you will get a better sense of the community energy then. By late afternoon the space thins out, and it can feel a bit empty if you are hoping for spontaneous collaboration.
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The Vibe: It is practical and unpretentious. You will see a mix of freelancers, startup founders, and a few corporate remote workers who prefer the city center over the more residential neighborhoods. The Wi-Fi is strong, but the building’s older wiring means occasional brief outages, so keep a mobile hotspot handy if you have a critical deadline.
Santiago Centro is a good place to understand the city’s history beyond the postcards. The area around WorkFrom has been the political and commercial heart of Santiago since the colonial period, and you can still see traces of that in the old government buildings, the cathedral, and the market stalls that have been there for decades. From here you can walk to the Museo Histórico Nacional in ten minutes, or take the metro to other neighborhoods without changing lines. The tradeoff is that the streets can feel gritty at night, and you learn quickly which blocks to avoid after 10 p.m., but during the day the central location is hard to beat.
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Wayra by Telefónica Providencia
Wayra is Telefónica’s startup accelerator space, and while it is not a traditional coliving house, it functions as a hub for nomads and founders who are in Santiago for a monthly stay Santiago or longer. The space is in Providencia, close to the border with Las Condes, and it is surrounded by coworking offices, cafés, and the kind of infrastructure that remote workers rely on. Some people combine a room in a nearby apartment with a desk at Wayra, creating their own DIY coliving setup.
What to Order / See / Do: Attend one of the public events or meetups if you can. Wayra regularly hosts talks, pitch nights, and workshops that are open to people outside the resident startups, and they are a good way to meet other nomads and local entrepreneurs. In the café downstairs, order a cortado and a hallulla with avocado, which is a Chilean twist on toast that will keep you going until lunch.
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Best Time: Late afternoon is when the space feels most alive. People finish their focused work and start mingling, and you will find it easier to introduce yourself then than during the morning rush.
The Vibe: It is more professional than social. You will meet people building serious companies, not just freelancing between trips. The Wi-Fi is excellent, but the seating can be tight during big events, so arrive early if you want a good spot.
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Providencia and Las Condes together show you the side of Santiago that appears in business magazines. The streets are wider, the buildings taller, and the coffee shops more likely to have oat milk on the menu. Wayra sits at the intersection of that corporate world and the more creative, startup oriented side of the city. If you are in Santiago to build something, not just to work remotely, this area gives you a clearer view of the local tech and entrepreneurship scene than the more touristy neighborhoods.
La Chimba Coliving and Co-Work
La Chimba is a smaller coliving and co-working space in the Recoleta neighborhood, just north of Bellavista and the Mapocho River. The building is on a street that still has a lot of the old residential character that Santiago is slowly losing, with corner houses, small plazas, and neighbors who sit on their front steps in the evenings. Inside, La Chimba has a handful of rooms, a shared kitchen, and a co-working area that attracts a mix of nomads, students, and local freelancers.
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What to Order / See / Do: Walk to the nearby feria libre on Wednesdays or Saturdays. The fruit and vegetable stalls are some of the cheapest in the city center, and you can buy enough fresh produce for a week for what you would spend on two smoothies in Providencia. In the kitchen, look for the communal jar of peanut butter, which is a staple for late night snacks.
Best Time: Late morning is a good time to work from the co-working area, because the light is good and the space is usually quiet. By early afternoon it fills up with people taking calls, and the small meeting area can get crowded.
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The Vibe: It is relaxed and slightly chaotic. You will see people cooking group meals, sharing memes, and occasionally organizing weekend trips to Cajón del Maipo or the beach. The Wi-Fi is generally reliable, but the connection can slow down during peak hours, so if you have a big upload, do it in the morning.
Recoleta is one of those neighborhoods that shows you how Santiago’s history and present collide. You can see the old cemeteries, the colonial churches, and the modern apartment blocks all within a few blocks. La Chimba sits in a part of the neighborhood that is still mostly residential, which means you get a more realistic sense of how people live here than in the more polished tourist areas. The downside is that some streets feel less safe at night, so you learn to plan your routes and avoid walking alone in poorly lit areas after 10 p.m.
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Outsite Santiago (Cerro Alegre Concept in Valparaíso Influence)
While Outsite is better known in Valparaíso, the concept has influenced several small coliving projects in Santiago that borrow its model of combining short term stays with co-working and community events. In Santiago, you will find a few independent houses in Providencia and Lastarria that operate in a similar way, offering rooms by the week or month, shared workspaces, and a calendar of activities aimed at remote workers. These spaces are often listed on coliving platforms and are popular with people doing a monthly stay Santiago arrangement.
What to Order / See / Do: Look for houses that organize weekly dinners or skill shares. These are often the best way to meet other nomads and locals, and you will usually find someone willing to show you their favorite hidden café or viewpoint. In the kitchen, check the communal shelf for leftover pasta, rice, and spices, and contribute your own when you can.
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Best Time: Evenings are when the community aspect is strongest. People finish work and gather in the kitchen or living room, and you will find it easier to join conversations then than during the structured work hours.
The Vibe: It varies from house to house, but the Outsite inspired model tends to attract a slightly more design conscious, community oriented crowd. The Wi-Fi is usually good, but the quality of the workspace can be inconsistent, so ask for photos of the actual desks before you book.
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These smaller, independent coliving houses show you a side of Santiago that the bigger brands do not. They are often located in older buildings that have been renovated but still retain some of the original architecture, like high ceilings, tile floors, and big windows. They also tend to be in neighborhoods where you are more likely to interact with Chilean neighbors, which gives you a better sense of how people actually live and work here. The tradeoff is that they can be less predictable in terms of amenities and community, so you need to do a bit more research before you commit.
When to Go / What to Know
Santiago is a year round destination for remote workers, but the experience changes noticeably with the seasons. Summer, from December to February, brings long days, intense heat, and a city that feels more relaxed as many locals head to the beach. Winter, from June to August, is cold and gray, but the skies often clear by midday, and the Andes look spectacular from your co-working window. Spring and fall are mild and pleasant, with fewer tourists and a more predictable rhythm to daily life.
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If you are planning a monthly stay Santiago arrangement, try to avoid booking during major holiday periods like the last two weeks of September, when Chile’s national holidays bring fireworks, asados, and a city that feels half empty as people leave for the coast or the countryside. January is also tricky if you need anything done in person, because many businesses operate on reduced hours and some co-working spaces are quieter than usual.
Transportation is one of Santiago’s strengths for nomads. The metro and bus system is extensive, cheap, and easy to navigate with a bip card, which you can buy and load at any metro station. Most coliving spaces are within walking distance of a metro stop, and you can cross the city for less than a dollar each way. Taxis and ride sharing apps are widely available, but traffic can be heavy during peak hours, so plan accordingly if you have a meeting across town.
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Safety is a practical concern, not a reason to avoid the city. Santiago is generally safe during the day, but petty theft is common on public transport and in crowded areas, and some neighborhoods feel less secure at night. Most nomads quickly learn which streets to avoid after dark and which plazas are safe for a late walk. Keep your phone out of sight on the bus, avoid flashing expensive gear in quiet areas, and trust your instincts if a street feels off.
Internet quality in Santiago is good by regional standards, but it can vary between neighborhoods and buildings. Most coliving spaces and co-working hubs have fiber connections with speeds that support video calls and large uploads, but older buildings may still rely on copper lines that are more prone to outages. It is worth asking for a speed test screenshot before you commit to a long term stay, and always have a backup plan like a mobile hotspot for critical work.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the most reliable neighborhood in Santiago for digital nomads and remote workers?
Providencia is the most reliable neighborhood for digital nomads and remote workers, with consistent infrastructure, multiple metro lines, and a high concentration of co-working spaces and cafés. Lastarria and Bellavista are strong alternatives if you prefer a more cultural or bohemian atmosphere, while Santiago Centro works well if you need to be close to government offices or historic institutions. Las Condes is better suited for corporate remote workers and startup founders who want a more business oriented environment.
Is Santiago expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.
For mid-tier travelers, a realistic daily budget in Santiago ranges from about 60,000 to 90,000 Chilean pesos, or roughly 65 to 100 USD, not including accommodation. A decent lunch menu, known as menú del día, at a local restaurant costs between 6,000 and 10,000 pesos, while a coffee at a standard café is around 2,500 to 4,000 pesos. Public transport costs about 700 pesos per ride with a bip card, and a mid-range coliving or private room typically runs from 450,000 to 800,000 pesos per month depending on location and amenities.
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How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Santiago?
It is relatively easy to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power in neighborhoods like Providencia, Lastarria, and Bellavista, where remote work culture is more established. Many newer cafés and co-working spaces have outlets at or near each table, and some even provide power strips or USB ports. Older, more traditional cafés may have fewer sockets and less reliable power, so it is worth carrying a fully charged power backup and asking staff where the best work spots are before you settle in for a long session.
Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Santiago?
True 24/7 co-working spaces are rare in Santiago, but several hubs and cafés offer extended hours that cover most late-night work needs. Some co-working spaces stay open until 10 p.m. or midnight, and a few cafés in Providencia and Lastarria are open until 9 p.m. or 10 p.m. with Wi-Fi and power available. For work after that, most nomads rely on their coliving or apartment space, and it is common to see people on calls from kitchen tables or rooftops well into the night.
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What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Santiago's central cafes and workspaces?
In Santiago’s central cafés and co-working spaces, average download speeds typically range from 50 to 150 Mbps, while upload speeds are usually between 20 and 80 Mbps depending on the connection quality and number of users. High end co-working hubs in Providencia and Las Condes often advertise speeds above 200 Mbps down and 100 Mbps up, but real world performance can drop during peak hours. It is common for nomads to test speeds on site before committing to a long term workspace, and many keep a mobile data plan as a backup for critical uploads or video calls.
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