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

Photo by  Ern Gan

15 min read · Seminyak, Indonesia · co working spaces ·

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

BS

Words by

Budi Santoso

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I've been coming to Seminyak since before the co-working boom hit Bali, back when a decent cafe connection and a cold Bintang were all a freelancer needed to get through the day. Now this stretch south of Seminyak Square has more dedicated shared offices than rice warungs, which says something about the direction this beach town is heading. If you are hunting for the best co-working spaces in Seminyak, you will find everything from quiet private suites near Jl. Petitenget to open-air hot desks tucked behind Batu Belig, and the trick is knowing which ones still deliver on the promise after the Instagram photos fade.

1. Do You Coffee on Jl. Petitenget, Kayu Aya

I swung by Do You Coffee on a Tuesday morning expecting the usual weekend crowd noise, but the place was nearly empty by Western standard, maybe a handful of laptops and the barista grinding beans for a single V60. The Wi-Fi runs on a shared line with the upstairs co-working section, which means your upload speed peaks around 22 Mbps but can drop to 8 Mbps if three people are on video calls simultaneously up there. Order the manual brew single-origin Geisha if you want to impress the owner, Pak Komang, who roasts his own beans from a small plot in Kintamani. He will talk your ear off about water temperature and drawdown times if you let him, which is actually the best part of the afternoon lull between 1 and 3 PM.

Local Insider Tip: "Come on a Monday or Wednesday after 10 AM, you can grab the corner booth by the window and sit there all day without anyone asking you to buy more than one coffee. Thursdays are packed with a local entrepreneur meetup."

Parking for scooters along the sidewalk gets bonkers by 3 PM when the expat preschool pickup crowd rolls in. The space works best if you treat it as a morning spot.

2. Outpost Cowork Seminyak on Jl. Kayu Aya

The original Outpost location was Denpasar, but the Seminyak branch on Jl. Kayu Aya opened to catch the overflow of digital nomads who wanted a true coworking membership in Seminyak rather than just a nice chair and a password. Walking in last month, I noticed they had tightened the community board, fewer flyers now, more deliberate networking events on Wednesday evenings. Private offices on the second floor go for about IDR 5 million a month as of late 2024, which sounds steep until you compare it to the shared offices Seminyak has seen double in the last three years. Their fiber line is one of the few here that consistently tested above 50 Mbps down on a weekday morning. The best seat is the mezzanine pod facing east, you get the breeze from the rice paddy three doors down, though that paddy has been losing ground to construction.

The most tourists would not know this: they run a quiet under-the-radar Friday sausage roll pop-up from a vendor who represents a departed Australian chef from the neighborhood. It is not on any menu.

Local Insider Tip: "If you want a hot desk in Seminyak without commitment, ask for the Wednesday trial rate in person at reception. The website does not mention it, but walk-in weeklies get 20% off if you mention you found them through a current member."

Service at the rooftop nosedives during lunch rush, the single staffer upstairs clearly cannot keep up with ten drink orders.

3. Tribal on Jl. Kayu Aya

Tribal is the spot that looks like it was designed by a Pinterest board but actually functions, which is rarer than you would think around Seminyak. The shared offices Seminyak prides itself on are well represented here, a colorful open-plan setup where the hot desk in Seminyak crowd overlaps with local Balinese startups and a rotating cast of cryptocurrency types from South Korea. Last Thursday, I counted seven nationalities at one long table without anyone talking above a whisper, which says something about the culture they build. Grab the jackfruit bowl from the kitchen, it is not on the printed menu but has been a steady seller since mid-2023. The owner, a Melbourne transplant named Simon, keeps the air conditioning at a level that would make a Scandinavian happy, around 22 degrees Celsius.

What most visitors miss is the back courtyard, accessible through a side door near the restrooms. It is quieter, shaded by a frangipani tree, and has two power outlets that actually work. I have seen people camp there for six hours straight.

Local Insider Tip: "The coworking membership Seminyak regulars get here includes a free monthly massage at the spa next door. Ask for it at sign-up, they do not advertise it because the spa only allocates four slots per week."

The front entrance faces west, so the afternoon sun turns the main room into a greenhouse by 2 PM. Bring a hat if you sit near the glass.

4. Bilih on Jl. Drupadi

Bilih sits on Jl. Drupadi, a street most tourists walk past without a second glance because it lacks the flash of Eat Street or the beach clubs of Legian. That is exactly why I like it. The space is small, maybe twenty desks, and the Wi-Fi is routed through a dedicated line that the owner, a Balinese woman named Wayan, negotiated directly with the provider. Speeds hover around 35 Mbps down, 15 up, which is solid for video calls. Order the nasi campur from the kitchen, it is the same recipe Wayan's mother has been making in Ubud for thirty years, and the sambal will clear your sinuses before your 10 AM standup.

The best time to visit is midweek, Tuesday through Thursday, before 11 AM. By noon, the lunch crowd from the surrounding boutiques fills every seat, and the single-staff kitchen cannot keep up. I once waited 45 minutes for a smoothie bowl, which is not ideal when you are on a deadline.

Local Insider Tip: "There is a back room with four desks that is technically for private office tenants, but if you ask Wayan nicely on a slow Monday, she will let you use it for the day. She appreciates people who greet her in Bahasa before switching to English."

The bathroom situation is basic, one toilet for the whole space, and there is no hand soap dispenser, just a bar of soap that gets slippery. Bring your own sanitizer.

5. The Collective on Jl. Batu Belig

The Collective on Jl. Batu Belig is the closest thing Seminyak has to a proper co-working campus, a converted warehouse with exposed brick, a rooftop deck, and a ground-floor cafe that serves a genuinely good flat white. I spent a full week here in September testing the coworking membership Seminyak options, and the daily rate of IDR 150,000 is fair for what you get, fiber internet, printing, and a locker. The hot desk in Seminyak setup here is first-come-first-served, which means you need to arrive by 8:30 AM if you want a seat near a power outlet. The rooftop is the draw, a covered deck with ocean-adjacent views and a breeze that makes the afternoon heat bearable.

What most people do not realize is that the building used to be a textile warehouse in the early 2000s, back when Batu Belig was a quiet backwater and Seminyak was still finding its identity as a tourist hub. The owner kept the original loading dock as the main entrance, which gives the space a raw industrial feel that the newer spots try too hard to replicate.

Local Insider Tip: "On the last Friday of every month, they host a rooftop movie night for members only. Bring your own pillow, the beanbags they provide are flat and the concrete gets cold after 10 PM."

The shared offices Seminyak crowd here skews heavily toward the 25-to-35 age range, so the social energy can feel like a university common room. If you need silence, the second-floor phone booths are your best bet, but there are only two and they fill up fast.

6. Kopi Kultur on Jl. Seminyak

Kopi Kultur is not a co-working space in the traditional sense, but it functions as one for freelancers who prefer a cafe atmosphere over a dedicated desk. Located on Jl. Seminyak, the main drag that gives the neighborhood its name, this place has been around since before the area became synonymous with boutique hotels and juice bars. The owner, a Javanese coffee trader named Agus, sources his beans directly from farmers in Flores and Toraja, and the pour-over menu changes monthly. Last week I tried a washed Anaerobic from Ruteng, bright and floral, served in a ceramic cup that Agus picked up at a market in Yogyakarta.

The Wi-Fi is decent, around 20 Mbps down, and there are four power outlets along the back wall. The best time to visit is before 9 AM or after 3 PM, because the midday rush from the surrounding shops turns the place into a standing-room-only situation. I once tried to work through lunch and gave up after twenty minutes of elbow bumps.

Local Insider Tip: "Agus keeps a stash of green coffee beans under the counter. If you ask about his sourcing trips, he will pull out samples and let you smell them. It is the best free education in Indonesian coffee you will get in Seminyak."

The tables are small, barely big enough for a 14-inch laptop and a coffee cup. If you have a monitor or a tablet setup, you will be fighting for space.

7. Hubud (Bali Cooperative) on Jl. Monkey Forest, Ubud, with Seminyak Satellite Connections

I know what you are thinking, Hubud is in Ubud, not Seminyak. But hear me out. Several of the shared offices Seminyak operators have informal partnerships with Hubud, and a coworking membership Seminyak at certain venues includes reciprocal day passes to the Ubud flagship. I tested this last month, spending mornings at a hot desk in Seminyak and afternoons at Hubud's bamboo workspace in Ubud, and the contrast is instructive. The Seminyak side gives you speed and convenience, the Ubud side gives you rice paddies and silence. If you are in Bali for more than a week, this arrangement is worth exploring.

The Seminyak partner venues rotate, so ask around at the co-working spaces on Jl. Kayu Aya for the current arrangement. It is not advertised online because the partnerships are informal and subject to change.

Local Insider Tip: "The Ubud day pass is only valid on weekdays. Show up on a Saturday and they will turn you away at the door, even if your Seminyak membership says otherwise. I learned this the hard way."

The commute between Seminyak and Ubud takes about 90 minutes in traffic, so this only works if you are willing to commit to a full day in one location.

8. Finns Beach Club, Working the Perimeter on Jl. Pantai Berawa

This is not a co-working space, and I will not pretend it is. But the perimeter seating at Finns Beach Club on Jl. Pantai Berawa has become an unofficial hot desk in Seminyak for freelancers who want ocean views and do not mind paying IDR 100,000 for a minimum spend that gets you a lounge chair and Wi-Fi for a few hours. The connection is surprisingly stable, around 25 Mbps down, because the club invested in a dedicated line for their payment systems. I spent a Wednesday afternoon here last month, working through a client presentation while a DJ tested speakers for the evening session, and it was chaotic but oddly productive.

Order the fish tacos, they are overpriced at IDR 95,000 but genuinely good, with a mango salsa that balances the chili. The best time to arrive is right at opening, 11 AM, before the daybed crowd claims every shaded spot. By 2 PM, the music volume makes phone calls impossible.

Local Insider Tip: "The Wi-Fi password changes daily and is printed on the bottom of your receipt. If you lose the receipt, the staff will not give it to you again, they will tell you to buy another drink. Keep the receipt in your phone case."

The sun is relentless on the west-facing side after noon. If you are serious about working, grab a seat under the thatched roof near the pool, but those spots go first.

When to Go and What to Know About Shared Offices Seminyak

Seminyak's co-working scene runs on a rhythm that is different from Jakarta or Bali's own Ubud. Mornings, before 10 AM, are golden. The Wi-Fi is fast, the seats are open, and the air conditioning has not yet been overwhelmed by body heat. Midday, from noon to 2 PM, is when most places hit capacity, and the shared offices Seminyak operators who run cafes see their kitchen staff buckle under the lunch rush. Afternoons are for the dedicated spaces with private offices or reserved desks, the cafe-based spots become social zones rather than work zones.

The coworking membership Seminyak landscape has consolidated in the last two years. A few operators have closed or merged, and the survivors have raised prices accordingly. Expect to pay between IDR 150,000 and IDR 300,000 for a daily hot desk in Seminyak, and between IDR 3 million and IDR 7 million for a monthly membership depending on the venue and the level of access. Always test the Wi-Fi before you commit to a full day, and always ask about the backup connection, because Bali's internet infrastructure is better than it used to be but still not what you would call reliable during peak hours.

Scooter parking is a universal headache. Most co-working spaces in Seminyak have limited or no dedicated parking, and the streets around Jl. Kayu Aya and Jl. Petitenget are narrow and crowded. If you are renting a scooter, budget an extra ten minutes to find a spot, and do not leave your helmet on the seat, it will be gone when you come back.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

Most dedicated co-working spaces in Seminyak have UPS backup systems that keep the Wi-Fi and power running for 30 to 60 minutes during outages. Standard cafes along Jl. Kayu Aya and Jl. Petitenget average two to four power outlets per venue, which is insufficient during peak hours. Power outages in central Seminyak occur roughly two to three times per month during the wet season, typically lasting 15 to 45 minutes.

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

A mid-tier daily budget in Seminyak runs between IDR 600,000 and IDR 1,200,000. This covers a coworking day pass at IDR 150,000 to IDR 250,000, two meals at local warungs or cafes at IDR 50,000 to IDR 100,000 each, scooter rental at IDR 70,000 per day, and a coffee or two at IDR 35,000 to IDR 60,000 per drink. Accommodation is the variable, a decent guesthouse starts at IDR 300,000 per night, while a boutique hotel on Jl. Petitenget runs IDR 800,000 to IDR 1,500,000.

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

Dedicated co-working spaces in Seminyak report average download speeds of 30 to 60 Mbps and upload speeds of 10 to 25 Mbps on fiber connections. Standard cafes on Jl. Kayu Aya and Jl. Seminyak average 15 to 25 Mbps down and 5 to 10 Mbps up, with significant drops during peak usage between noon and 3 PM. Speed tests conducted on weekday mornings consistently outperform weekend results by 30 to 40 percent.

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

True 24/7 co-working spaces do not exist in Seminyak as of late 2024. The latest-closing venues shut their doors between 10 PM and midnight, with a few offering after-hours access to private office tenants only. The Collective on Jl. Batu Belig extends its hours to midnight on Fridays and Saturdays for members. For late-night work, most freelancers in Seminyak revert to their accommodation or use the lobby areas of boutique hotels, which often have Wi-Fi and seating available until 1 or 2 AM.

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

The corridor along Jl. Kayu Aya, stretching from Seminyak Square north to the Batu Belig intersection, has the highest concentration of co-working spaces, reliable cafes, and fiber-connected venues in Seminyak. This strip hosts at least five dedicated shared offices within a 500-meter radius, with average Wi-Fi speeds above 30 Mbps and multiple food and accommodation options within walking distance. The area is also relatively flat and scooter-friendly compared to the hilly sections near Jl. Oberoi, making daily commutes practical without a car.

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