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

Photo by  Leonhard Niederwimmer

17 min read · Athens, Greece · co working spaces ·

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

KA

Words by

Katerina Alexiou

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I have been working remotely from Athens for the better part of three years now, and I can tell you that finding the best co-working spaces in Athens is not just about fast Wi Fi and a decent chair. It is about the neighborhood energy, the coffee, the people you end up sharing a table with at 2pm on a Tuesday. Athens has quietly become one of Europe's most compelling cities for freelancers and remote workers, and the shared offices Athens scene has exploded in ways that even surprised me when I first started exploring them. This guide is the result of months of trial, error, and far too many frappes.

1. Impact Hub Athens on Karaiskaki Square

I walked into Impact Hub Athens on a rainy Thursday morning in October, expecting the usual sterile open plan setup. Instead, I found a converted industrial building near Karaiskaki Square in Metaxourgeio where the walls still carry traces of the neighborhood's old textile factory past. The space sits on the second floor of a building that once housed garment workshops, and you can still see the original iron support columns running through the open workspace. They offer a hot desk Athens option that runs about 150 euros per month for unlimited access, which is reasonable by European standards. The community here skews toward social entrepreneurs and people working on sustainability projects, so the conversations at the communal table tend to be more interesting than your average startup pitch. I ordered a freddo espresso from the small ground floor cafe and worked through a full afternoon without once feeling the need to leave. The best time to visit is midweek, Monday through Thursday, because Fridays tend to be quieter and some members use the day for field work.

Local Insider Tip: "Ask the front desk about the Thursday evening community dinners. They happen once a month and are not advertised online. You get to meet the most connected people in the Athens impact economy, and the food is always home cooked by one of the members."

The only real complaint I have is that the single window facing the interior courtyard does not open fully, and by mid afternoon on warm days the back corner of the hot desk area gets noticeably stuffy. Bring a light layer you can remove. This place connects to the broader story of Metaxourgeio itself, a neighborhood that went from industrial decline to creative revival, and Impact Hub is one of the anchors of that transformation.

2. Stone Soup on Kolokotroni Street

Tucked into a narrow street in the Plaka area just below the Acropolis, Stone Soup is one of those places that most tourists walk right past without noticing. I found it by accident while looking for a quiet spot to take a video call, and it became one of my regular spots for focused solo work. The coworking membership Athens options here are flexible, with day passes around 15 euros and monthly plans starting at 120 euros. The interior is small, maybe 25 seats, with exposed stone walls that date back to the 19th century building's original construction. They serve a homemade lentil soup that changes daily and pairs perfectly with their sourdough toast. The best time to arrive is before 10am because the space fills up quickly with freelancers who treat it as their daily office. What most visitors do not know is that the building was once a small printing press during the 1960s, and the owner has kept one of the old letterpress frames mounted on the back wall as a decoration.

Local Insider Tip: "Sit at the table near the back wall if you need to take calls. The stone walls block sound from the street, and there is a power outlet hidden behind the letterpress frame that most people do not notice."

The downside is that the Wi Fi can be unreliable during peak hours, especially between noon and 2pm when everyone is streaming or on video calls. I learned to download anything important in the morning. Stone Soup captures something essential about Athens, the way old and new coexist without apology, a 200 year old wall next to a MacBook Pro.

3. Onassis Stegi on Syggrou Avenue

The Onassis Cultural Center, known locally as Stegi, is not a traditional coworking space, but its ground floor public areas and the surrounding Syggrou Avenue corridor have become an unofficial working zone for a surprising number of freelancers. I spent several weeks working from the Stegi lobby cafe, which has free Wi Fi, ample seating, and a rotating art installation that keeps things visually stimulating. There is no formal hot desk Athens membership here, but the cafe prices are reasonable, a cappuccino freddo runs about 4.50 euros, and nobody rushes you. The building itself is a Renzo Piano design completed in 2010, and its marble and glass facade reflects the Athenian light in a way that makes even a Monday morning feel cinematic. The best time to work from here is during one of their exhibition openings, usually on Wednesday or Thursday evenings, when the energy shifts and you end up in conversations with artists and curators. What most people do not realize is that the Stegi hosts a free coworking pop up twice a year during their Open Calls program, where they open dedicated workspace areas for artists and researchers.

Local Insider Tip: "Check their events calendar on the first Monday of each month. They release new programming then, and the best coworking adjacent events, the ones with free lunch and networking, tend to fill up within hours."

The obvious limitation is that this is not a dedicated workspace, so you are sharing the cafe with visitors and families, which can get loud on weekends. Weekday mornings are your best bet. The Stegi represents Athens' push to position itself as a cultural capital, and working from its lobby feels like being inside that ambition.

4. HUB 33 on Pireos Street

Pireos Street has been Athens' creative spine for over a decade, and HUB 33 sits right in the middle of that energy. I visited on a Tuesday in March and ended up staying for six hours because the space was that well designed. The coworking membership Athens pricing here is competitive, around 130 euros per month for a hot desk, and the space includes access to a small meeting room and a phone booth for private calls. The interior is all white walls, concrete floors, and industrial lighting, a deliberate nod to the street's history as a manufacturing corridor. They have an in house barista who makes a killer flat white, and the avocado toast with chili flakes is the kind of thing you order three days in a row. The best time to visit is between 9am and 1pm, when the natural light from the floor to ceiling windows on the east side floods the workspace. Most tourists have no idea this street even exists, they stick to Ermou and the Plaka, but Pireos is where Athens' creative class actually works and gathers.

Local Insider Tip: "If you are here on a Friday, walk two doors down to the small gallery that opens its courtyard for drinks at 6pm. It is not listed on Google Maps, but every creative professional on Pireos knows about it, and it is the best networking event in Athens that nobody talks about."

Parking is essentially nonexistent on Pireos, so take the metro to Kerameikos and walk five minutes. The street's transformation from abandoned factories to creative offices mirrors Athens' own post crisis reinvention, and HUB 33 is a living piece of that story.

5. Six Dogs on Agisilaou Street in Monastiraki

Six Dogs is technically a bar and event space, but during weekday daytime hours it functions as one of the most relaxed informal coworking spots in central Athens. I have worked from their outdoor courtyard more times than I can count, especially during spring and autumn when the weather cooperates. There is no formal coworking membership Athens structure here, you just buy a drink and sit. A beer costs about 5 euros and a coffee around 3.50, and the Wi Fi password is written on a chalkboard near the bar. The courtyard is shaded by a massive tree that has probably been there longer than the bar itself, and the atmosphere is the opposite of a corporate shared office Athens environment. The best time to work here is between 10am and 3pm on weekdays, before the evening crowd arrives. What most visitors do not know is that Six Dogs hosts a weekly board game night on Tuesdays that draws a mix of locals and expats, and it is one of the easiest ways to build a social circle in Athens within your first month.

Local Insider Tip: "Bring your own power bank. There are almost no outlets in the courtyard, and the ones inside are reserved for the bar equipment. Also, the kitchen closes at 10pm, so if you want the burger, order before 9."

The noise level climbs sharply after 6pm, so if you need to focus, treat this as a morning and early afternoon spot. Six Dogs embodies the Athenian philosophy that work and play are not opposites, they are neighbors who share a courtyard.

6. The Hub at Athens International Airport Business Center

This one might sound unusual, but hear me out. The Athens International Airport business center, located in the main terminal before security, has become a genuine workspace for digital nomads who are in transit or who live in the eastern suburbs of Athens. I used it during a week when my apartment renovation went sideways and I needed a reliable place with guaranteed Wi Fi and air conditioning. Day access runs about 20 euros, and the space includes desks, printing, and a small refreshment area. It is not the most inspiring environment, the decor is aggressively corporate, but the internet is fiber optic fast and the chairs are ergonomic. The best time to visit is mid morning on weekdays, between 10am and noon, when the business traveler rush has thinned out. What most people do not know is that the airport area, particularly the Spata and Koropi neighborhoods, has developed a small but growing cluster of shared offices Athens style spaces catering to logistics and e commerce professionals who work near the cargo terminals.

Local Insider Tip: "If you are working from the airport area for more than a day, take the suburban rail to Koropi station and check out the small coworking space above the bakery on the main square. It is cheaper, quieter, and the bakery below has the best tyropita in the Attica region."

The obvious drawback is that you are working in an airport terminal, so the announcements and foot traffic can be distracting. Bring noise canceling headphones. This spot reflects Athens' role as a gateway between Europe and the Middle East, a city where transit and permanence blur together.

7. Ono Co Working on Emmanouil Benaki Street in Pagrati

Pagrati is one of Athens' most underrated neighborhoods for remote workers, and Ono Co Working is the reason I started spending time there. I discovered it through a friend who works in UX design, and it quickly became my preferred spot for deep work sessions. The hot desk Athens pricing here is around 140 euros per month, and the space is spread across two floors of a renovated apartment building. The ground floor has the communal area with a small kitchen where members leave snacks and fruit for each other, a gesture that tells you everything about the community vibe. Upstairs is the quiet zone, and the rule is strictly enforced, no calls, no music, no loud typing. I ordered a Greek coffee from the machine on the ground floor and worked through an entire project draft in one sitting. The best time to visit is early morning, between 8 and 10am, when the space is nearly empty and you can claim the best desk by the window. What most tourists do not know is that Pagrati was once the neighborhood where Athens' working class lived, and the building that houses Ono was originally a family home from the 1950s, complete with the original tile floors that the owners preserved during renovation.

Local Insider Tip: "Join their Slack channel even if you only buy a day pass. The members post about apartment rentals, freelance gigs, and local events that you will not find anywhere else. It is the most useful expat resource in Athens that nobody outside Pagrati knows about."

The kitchen area can get crowded around lunch, and the single bathroom on the ground floor is a bottleneck when the space is full. Plan accordingly. Ono represents the new Pagrati, a neighborhood that is gentrifying but still retains its neighborhood soul, and the coworking space is a microcosm of that balance.

8. Regus Marousi on Kifisias Avenue

I will be honest, Regus is not the most exciting entry on this list, but it serves a specific purpose that the more atmospheric spaces cannot. I used their Marousi location on Kifisias Avenue for a month when I needed a professional meeting room to pitch a client, and the experience was exactly what I needed. The coworking membership Athens options at Regus Marousi start at around 180 euros per month for a hot desk, and meeting rooms can be booked by the hour for about 25 euros. The space is in a modern office building with all the corporate amenities you would expect, reception service, mail handling, printing, and a fully stocked kitchen. The best time to visit is during standard business hours, 9am to 5pm, when the reception staff is available and the meeting rooms are most likely to be open. What most people do not realize is that the Marousi corridor along Kifisias Avenue has become Athens' unofficial business district, and the concentration of shared offices Athens style spaces here means you can network across multiple companies just by walking between buildings.

Local Insider Tip: "If you only need a meeting room and not a full membership, book through the Regus app the night before. The walk in rate is about 40 percent higher, and the app sometimes shows last minute discounts for rooms that would otherwise sit empty."

The space feels sterile compared to the independent coworking spots in central Athens, and the location requires a car or a bus ride since the nearest metro stop is a 15 minute walk. But for client facing professionalism, it delivers. Regus Marousi reflects the corporate Athens that exists alongside the creative one, the Athens of multinationals and consulting firms that most tourists never see.

When to Go and What to Know

Athens is a year round coworking destination, but the experience shifts dramatically with the seasons. From October through April, the weather is mild and the coworking spaces are at their busiest, especially January through March when digital nomads from Northern Europe arrive to escape the dark winters. Summer, June through August, is when many Athenians leave for the islands, and some smaller coworking spaces reduce their hours or close entirely. If you are planning a working visit, aim for late September through November or March through May for the best balance of good weather, open spaces, and active community life.

Most coworking spaces in Athens accept walk in day passes, but booking online at least a day in advance is wise during peak months. Payment is usually via card, though some smaller spots still prefer cash. The average cost for a hot desk Athens membership ranges from 120 to 180 euros per month, which is significantly cheaper than Berlin, Amsterdam, or Lisbon. Bring your own adapter if you are visiting from outside Greece, as the outlets use the standard European two pin plug.

Public transportation connects most of these neighborhoods efficiently. The metro runs from about 5:30am to midnight on weekdays, and the bus network fills in the gaps. I recommend getting an ATH.ENA card, which costs about 1.20 euros and can be loaded with a monthly unlimited pass for around 30 euros. Taxis are affordable by European standards, and the Beat app, Greece's version of Uber, works well for getting around after the metro closes.

One thing that surprised me when I first started working from Athens is how social the coworking culture is. Unlike some Northern European cities where people keep to themselves, Athenians in shared offices tend to invite newcomers to lunch, to after work drinks, to weekend excursions. Say yes to these invitations. They are how you build a real life in this city, not just a remote work setup.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

Koukaki and Exarchia are the two most reliable neighborhoods, with Koukaki offering the best balance of cafes, coworking spaces, and proximity to the city center. Exarchia has a more alternative vibe and slightly lower rents, but fewer formal coworking facilities. Pagrati has emerged as a strong third option in the past two years, with several new spaces opening along Emmanouil Benaki and Arachovis streets.

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

Most dedicated coworking spaces provide multiple sockets per desk and have backup generators or UPS systems for power outages. Independent cafes are less reliable, roughly half have accessible outlets, and power cuts, while rare, do occur during summer heat storms. Carrying a portable power bank is a practical habit in Athens.

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

Dedicated coworking spaces in central Athens typically offer fiber connections with download speeds between 50 and 100 Mbps and upload speeds between 20 and 50 Mbps. Cafe Wi Fi varies widely, from 10 to 30 Mbps download, and is often unreliable during peak hours. The national average fixed broadband speed in Greece is around 40 Mbps as of recent measurements.

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

True 24/7 coworking spaces are rare in Athens. Most close by 9 or 10pm, with a few staying open until midnight on weekdays. Regus locations offer extended access for dedicated desk and private office members, sometimes 24 hours by arrangement. For late night work, cafes like Six Dogs and some Syntagma area spots stay open past midnight but are not designed for focused work.

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

A mid-tier daily budget in Athens runs approximately 70 to 100 euros, broken down as follows: accommodation 35 to 50 euros for a decent Airbnb or budget hotel, food 15 to 25 euros for two meals and coffee, coworking day pass 12 to 20 euros, and transportation 5 to 10 euros including metro and occasional taxis. This excludes flights and entertainment. Athens remains one of the more affordable capitals in Western Europe, though prices have risen noticeably since 2022.

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