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

Photo by  Mackenzie Vance

19 min read · Capri, Italy · co working spaces ·

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

SE

Words by

Sofia Esposito

Share

Working from Paradise: The Best Co-Working Spaces in Capri

I have been freelancing out of Capri for the better part of three years now, and I still wake up some mornings thinking I made the most impractical career decision in history. The island is barely four miles long, the ferry schedule changes with the wind, and half the cafes close for a siesta that lasts longer than some of my client calls. But the creative energy here is impossible to replicate in a windowless office back home, and after months of trial, error, and espresso-fueled panic, I have pieced together a genuine working life on this limestone rock in the Tyrrhenian Sea. Finding the best co-working spaces in Capri is not as straightforward as you might expect. There are no WeWork franchises on Via Camerelle, no dedicated floors of glass-walled meeting rooms. What Capri offers instead is a patchwork of shared offices, cafe corners with reliable Wi-Fi, hotel lobbies that tolerate laptops, and a handful of spots that have quietly adapted to the digital nomad wave. The island is small enough that wherever you set up, you are never more than a ten-minute walk from the sea. What follows is my honest, street-by-street guide to where I and dozens of other remote workers actually get things done here.

La Fontelina: Beach Club Workspace at the Faraglioni

Punta Tragara, Via Tragara 69

Finding a workspace with a postcard view is easy in Capri. Finding one with dependable internet, decent coffee, and actual chairs with backs is another matter entirely. La Fontelina, perched on the rocks at the base of the Faraglioni, has quietly become my default summer office from late May through September. The beach club charges a minimum daily spend, usually around 35 to 45 euros, which includes a sunbed, an umbrella, and access to their Wi-Fi network. You order a spremuta d'arancia at 9 a.m., settle into a lounge chair under the canopy, and open your laptop while the Mediterranean does its work on your stress levels. The internet speed is surprisingly solid once you connect to their premium guest network, ask the waiter for the separate password printed on a card. Download speeds averaged around 35 Mbps when I tested last July, more than enough for video calls if you angle yourself toward their rooftop router. A casual plate of bruschetta or a caprese panino runs 12 to 18 euros. By noon the place fills with day-trippers, so I always show up before 10 a.m. to claim the corner sunbed nearest the staff station, where Wi-Fi reception peaks. What tourists rarely realize is that La Fontelina has direct access to a natural swimming platform carved into the rock, and the staff will lend you goggles without being asked. The connection to Capri's history here runs deep. The Faraglioni have anchored the island's identity since Roman emperors built nearby villas, and eating a plate of linguine alle vongole while staring at those stacks of rock feels like a small act of participation in two thousand years of travelers passing through. Parking or docking a scooter anywhere near Punta Tragua is essentially impossible after mid-morning, so I always take the bus from the Piazzetta.

The honest critique: by 2 p.m. in August the sunbed area is loud enough that I have muted calls and relocated. It is not an all-day deep work environment from June through August, but it is spectacular for morning sessions and admin tasks. I learned this the hard way during a client presentation when a group of German tourists started singing "Happy Birthday" twelve feet from my microphone.

Caffè Michelangelo: The Piazzetta's Working Corner

Piazza Umberto I, Capri Town Center

Every local freelancer in Capri has a complicated relationship with the Piazzetta. It is the island's beating heart, a baroque little square ringed by cafes where a coffee costs 6 euros and the people-watching rivals anything in Rome. Caffè Michelangelo occupies the prime corner, right at the base of the clock tower, and it is the spot I recommend to visiting remote workers who need a quick work session in central Capri. The trick is knowing which tables to pick. The terraced seating outside costs a premium, servers expect you to order something every hour or so, and the Wi-Fi only works reliably on the ground floor. For actual productivity, grab a table inside near the back wall where the router is mounted. Latte and a cornetto will run you around 8 to 10 euros. The shared offices Capri scene has a presence here too: a small bulletin board near the restroom often has handwritten notes from people renting holiday apartments with dedicated desks and looking for roommates willing to split the cost. I found my first long-term writing residency on that board in 2022. Michelangelo's been around since the mid-twentieth century, back when the Piazzetta was transforming from a local market square into the international social hub Somerset Maugham famously loved. Ask the barista, Mario, for the loyalty card after your third visit. It gets you a free espresso every eighth order, and he will remember your name. The best time to work here is between 8 and 11 a.m. before the cruise ship crowds descend. After the Piazzetta gets packed, focusing becomes a battle of wills. Saturday mornings are the sweet spot, the square has energy but not gridlock.

One thing most visitors miss: the Piazzetto was originally called Piazza della Croce and functioned as Capri's vegetable market well into the 1940s. The fruit sellers who used to stand where your Vespa is parked would find the current coffee prices astonishing.

Capri Incrociatori: Nautica Meets Nomad Life

Marina Grande, Via Roma 69

Marina Grande feels like a different island from the Capri that postcards sell. It is working-class, fishy, loud, and honest, a fishing port where the ferries dock and the smell of sea bass grilling over coals hangs in the air by late afternoon. Capri Incrociatori, the sailing club tucked along the seawall, has become one of my favorite spots for a change of scenery when the Piazzetta crowds drive me crazy. The club's waterfront terrace is free to access, and the staff do not mind laptop users as long as you order food. Their linguine ai ricci di mare, sea urchin pasta, is the best dish within a five-minute walk of anything in Capri, full stop, and it costs around 22 euros. The Wi-Fi comes from the adjacent hotel and reaches the terrace adequately, though I have had to ask for the password twice because the network name changes seasonally. Expect around 20 to 25 Mbps, enough for Slack and email, borderline for uploading large files. The terrace faces west, so afternoon sun is brutal from June through August. Work here in the morning or late afternoon, and bring a hat. The history of Marina Grande reaches back to Roman and even pre-Roman times. The port was a strategic anchorage for centuries, and the brightly colored fishermen's houses that cap the hillside were built on ancient ruins. You are working where Tiberius's sailors once tied up their boats, which gives a certain weight to answering emails about quarterly revenue projections. Scooters are easy to park along Via Roma, but the fifteen-minute walk up the steps to Capri town from the marina will test your calves.

The honest drawback: the Incrociatori terrace closes unpredictably during special regatta weeks in the summer, and they do not always update their hours online in time. I showed up twice last August only to find a locked gate. Check their Facebook page the morning before you plan to head down, or better yet, call the day before.

Hotel Capri: Quiet Lobby Work for the Discreet Professional

Via Camerelle 45, Capri Town

Via Camerelle is Capri's fashion corridor, a pedestrian lane stitching handbags worth more than my first car outside boutiques. Hotel Capri sits toward the quieter end of this stretch, and its lobby is one of the most civilised places I have found for a focused work session. This is not a formal coworking space, and you will not find a hot desk Capri placard anywhere near it. But the lobby is open to the public, the armchairs are deep and upholstered, and the concierge nods at regulars who settle in with laptops. Order a Negroni sbagliato, around 14 euros, and a plate of pistachio biscotti, and nobody in that marble-floored room will question your presence. The Wi-Fi is hotel-grade, pulling down around 50 Mbps on my last check. In winter, or what passes for winter in Capri, roughly November through March, the hotel practically empties and I have had the lobby almost to myself on weekday mornings. The flow of tourists on Via Camerelle peaked in the 1960s when the Via Veneto crowd migrated here each summer. Before that, the street was called Via della Fienile, Hay Street, because locals dried hay where Gucci now stands. Hotel Capri opened its doors in the 1950s and has hosted writers, spies, and at least one Sicilian prince who allegedly used the roof terrace to survey his enemies. Neither spies nor princes seem to need Wi-Fi anymore, but the infrastructure holds up. My insider tip: the small terrace behind the lobby, past the potted lemon trees, has two tables that almost nobody uses. If you need privacy for a Zoom call, that is your spot. Ask the concierge if the terrace is free before you head out there, and tip well.

One caveat: the hotel's indoor temperature runs cool in spring and fall if you are accustomed to Mediterranean warmth. Bring a light sweater even when it feels like T-shirt weather outside.

Parco Augusto: The Garden Office Above Marina Piccola

Via Parco Augusto, near Marina Piccola

Hot desk Capri options on the island's southern slope are scarce, so when I need to escape the noise of the port and the Piazzetta simultaneously, I head to Parco Augusto. This public garden, built on the ruins of a Roman villa with a short walk from the Phoenician Steps, is terraced into the hillside above Marina Piccola. There are stone benches with bay views, enough shade from the umbrella pines to keep a laptop screen readable, and a municipal Wi-Fi signal that reaches most, but not all, of the upper terraces. I would not rely on it for time-sensitive uploads, but for drafting, light research, and offline work refreshed with occasional signal checks, it serves. A granita from the small kiosk near the entrance costs 3 to 4 euros, and a fresh-squeezed lemonade runs about the same. Bring your own water and a wide-brimmed hat. There is no table surface to speak of, your laptop sits on your thighs or on the bench beside you, and the stone slabs are unforgiving after forty-five minutes. The park is free to enter and almost empty from November through April. Even in summer, early mornings before 9 a.m. and late afternoons after 5 p.m. feel nearly private. The Phoenician Steps, Scala Fenicia, that lead down from Capri town to Marina Piccola were carved by Greek colonists in the eighth century BC. Working a stone's throw from two thousand seven hundred years of engineering history changes the character of your to-do list, somehow. From the upper terrace you can see Capri's Champagne of the Sea, the waters around the island are so clear that fishing boats seem to float on air. That alone clears creative blocks faster than any productivity app.

The honest truth about this spot: there are zero power outlets. Bring a fully charged laptop and a portable battery pack. I learned this mid-pitch to an editor, staring at a 3 percent battery warning while the Tyrrhenian Horizon mocked my poor planning.

Il Gelato ai Capresi: Marina Piccola's Open-Air Desk

Marina Piccola, Lungomare G. Ungaretti

The tiny gelateria at Marina Piccola does not advertise itself as a workspace, and I would be doing it a disservice to call it a proper co-working spot. But this is one of my secret spots for a single focused hour of work with gelato, and it deserves inclusion because of how it reflects the improvisational spirit that defines working on the island. A handful of outdoor tables face the water, the free municipal Wi-Fi signal is usable here, and the pistachio and almond granitas are extraordinary. I have spent many a late morning here editing articles, writing pitches, and mapping out content plans while stone's throw from families swimming off the rocks under ten euros, drink included, and the sea breeze keeps everything pleasant until about 1 p.m. The gelateria's owner, a woman I have known for three years who once worked as a secretary in Florence and moved to Capri for the light, will occasionally bring you a ceramic cup of water without being asked. Make sure to check Marina Piccola's tiny beach scene, the ancient Roman port of Palazzo a Mare is just around the headland, and Augustus himself used this harbor before Tiberius moved the imperial residence to the other side of the island.

My best tip for making this work: sit at the table closest to the gelateria's door, not the ones right at the railing. The door-side table gets better Wi-Fi, less wind, and the owner is more likely to chat with you about her favorite flavors. She steered me toward the caprese cake gelato, a flavor I never would have ordered on my own, and it became a regular order.

What every tourist skips: from Marina Piccola you can walk along the coast to the Faraglioni in about 25 minutes on a paved path. Doing this walk before sitting down to work adds perspective, and I try to do it at least once a week.

Giardini di Augustus: The Roof Garden with a Router

Via Matteotti, between Capri Town and the gardens

The Giardini di Augustus, Augustus Gardens, are a terraced botanical park overlooking Marina Grande, with panoramic views that make the Piazzetta look like a postcard for beginners. What most visitors do not realize is that the small terrace cafe adjacent to the gardens has become a quiet work zone for a handful of Capri-based freelancers who figured out that the cafe's Wi-Fi extends to the lower garden benches. The terrace itself has four or five tables, shaded by a wooden pergola, and serves panini, fresh juice, and espresso at prices only slightly inflated above mainland standards, around 5 for an espresso, 7 to 10 for a panino. The speed tests I have run here hover around 15 to 20 Mbps, workable but not bragworthy. What makes this spot valuable is the setting. The gardens were laid out in the early twentieth century by German industrialist Friedrich Alfred Krupp, who donated them to the island. They are layered with Mediterranean plants, succulents, lavender, and views that shift color every hour as the sun changes angle. I came here in May to write a feature about Capri's literary history and knocked out the first draft in ninety minutes, something that had eluded me for three days in my rented apartment. The gardens open at 9 a.m., and I recommend arriving just as the gate unlocks and claiming the bench nearest the cafe's router. By noon the tour groups arrive, and the ambient noise makes concentration tricky.

The tradeoff: seating is stone benches only. No cushions, no back support, and no power outlets anywhere in the garden. Limit yourself to ninety-minute sessions and treat it as a creative reset rather than a full office day.

Recognizing the Coworking Reality on a Small Island

Capri's coworking membership scene does not mirror that of a city the size of Paris or Berlin. You will not find month-long passes with twenty-four-hour keycard access buzzing on every corner. What exists instead is a deeply informal ecosystem, freelancers sharing tips in group chats, remote workers renting apartments together and converting dining tables into shared offices Capri style, and a handful of cafe owners who have learned that a foreigner with a laptop is a reliable source of steady income from October through May. If you are coming to Capri for a short stay, a week or two, your best bet is a combination of the Piazzetta cafes for mornings, the beach clubs for creative brainstorming, and your rental apartment for deep focus work. Most short-term rentals on the island now advertise Wi-Fi as a standard amenity, and the speeds in recent builds have improved significantly. Expect 20 to 50 Mbps in most apartments at the island's center, less in the far-flung garden villas of Anacapri. The coworking membership concept has gained some traction in Anacapri, the quieter town at the island's western end, where a few apartment complexes market themselves specifically to long-stay digital nomads between November and April. These arrangements are more Airbnb-plus than formal co-working, private desks in shared villas with communal kitchens, but they serve the same purpose. Rates for a winter rental with a dedicated workspace run from roughly 1,200 to 2,000 euros per month, which is steep by southern Italian standards but reasonable compared to the summer rates that drive 400-euro-per-night hotel bills.

When to Go and What to Show Up With Capri

If you are planning a working trip to Capri, timing changes everything. Summer, June through August, is when the island is most beautiful and least functional for productivity. The ferries from Naples and Sorrento are packed, the Piazzetta turns into a human traffic jam by 11 a.m., and beach clubs charge premium prices for sunbeds. Autumn, especially October and early November, is my favorite season. The sea is still warm enough for swimming, the light turns golden in the late afternoon, the prices drop noticeably, and you can walk into almost any cafe without fighting for a table. Winter is quiet. Very quiet. Some hotels and restaurants close entirely from December through February, island life slows to a crawl, and the wind off the water cuts through every jacket you own. But the freelancers who stay through winter develop a rapport with locals that summer visitors never achieve. Spring, March through May, is the best compromise. Everything is open, the gardens are at their peak, and the tourist tide has not yet crested. Bring a portable battery pack, a universal power adapter, and at least one backup plan for every work session. Capri respects spontaneity more than schedules. Cafe Wi-Fi goes down, ferries get cancelled due to weather, and the best spots vanish behind groups of cruise ship passengers. Have a secondary location ready, keep your heaviest files backed up offline, and always have gelato nearby. That combination will carry you further on this island than any productivity app ever could.

One more thing: if you are taking calls from the beach or the Piazzetta, invest in a good directional microphone. The ambient noise level in central Capri hits 70 to 80 decibels on a busy afternoon, and your clients in London deserve to hear your voice over the accordion player outside the piazza.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

Central Capri's cafe and hotel Wi-Fi typically ranges from 15 to 50 Mbps for downloads, depending on the venue's infrastructure and time of day. Upload speeds vary more widely, from 5 to 20 Mbps, with hotel-based lobbies and newer establishments generally performing at the higher end. Municipal free Wi-Fi zones in public gardens and around the Piazzetta often deliver 10 to 15 Mbps down but can be unreliable during peak tourist hours. Uploading large video files or running bandwidth-intensive video calls without testing the connection first is a common mistake visitors make.

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

A mid-tier daily budget for Capri typically runs 150 to 250 euros per person. This includes 40 to 60 euros for a casual lunch, 3 to 7 euros per coffee across multiple stops, 15 to 25 euros for snacks or gelato, and 10 to 15 euros for local transportation with the funicular or bus. Accommodation dominates the budget, with basic but clean double rooms in a small pensione averaging 80 to 140 euros per night in shoulder season and 150 to 300 in summer. Dining at a sit-down trattoria for dinner typically costs 25 to 45 euros per person for a full meal with wine.

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

Capri town center, the area around the Piazzetta and along Via Camerelle, offers the highest concentration of cafes with working-grade Wi-Fi and the shortest walking distances between backup options. Anacapri, the town at the island's western end, has fewer cafes but lower tourist density, quieter streets, and a growing number of winter-rental apartments marketed to long-stay remote workers. For a one to two week visit, staying near Capri town center gives the most flexibility. For stays longer than a month, especially during winter, Anacapri provides better value and fewer distractions.

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

It is moderately difficult. Most Capri cafes have at most two to four power outlets, and these tend to be near the bar counter or in the back corner of the indoor seating area. Establishments with outdoor terraces rarely have any accessible outdoor outlets. Hotels and the island's library inCapri have better socket availability but enforce norms around purchasing. Carrying a fully charged portable power bank, 10,000 mAh or higher, is the standard practice among regular remote workers on the island.

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

No. Capri does not have any dedicated twenty-four-hour co-working spaces. Some hotel lobbies remain accessible to the public until 10 or 11 p.m., and a handful of Piazzetta cafes serve drinks until around midnight in summer, but none are designed for late-night laptop work. The island's small size and residential character mean that noise and activity taper off significantly after 10 p.m. Remote workers who need late hours typically work from their rental apartments, which is one reason why securing a rental with a dedicated desk and strong Wi-Fi is the most practical long-term strategy on Capri.

Share this guide

Enjoyed this guide? Support the work

Filed under: best co-working spaces in Capri

More from this city

More from Capri

Best Vegetarian and Vegan Places in Capri Worth Visiting

Up next

Best Vegetarian and Vegan Places in Capri Worth Visiting

arrow_forward