Best Co-Working Spaces in The Hague for Remote Workers and Freelancers

Photo by  Alix Greenman

23 min read · The Hague, Netherlands · co working spaces ·

Best Co-Working Spaces in The Hague for Remote Workers and Freelancers

PJ

Words by

Pieter Jansen

Share

Advertisement

If you are hunting for the best co-working spaces in The Hague, you have landed in the right city. I have spent the better part of a decade working from cafés, libraries, and shared offices across this place, and I can tell you that the scene here is compact enough to know intimately, yet diverse enough to fit almost any working style. From the government-adjacent calm of the Binckhorst area to the gritty creative energy around the Spui, The Hague rewards remote workers who are willing to look beyond the obvious tourist center. This guide is built from my own daily routines, conversations with owners, and the hard-won knowledge of which tables have power outlets and which ones do not.


1. The Hague’s Co-Working Landscape and Why It Works for Remote Workers

The Hague is not Amsterdam, and that is precisely why so many freelancers and remote workers end up here. The city carries the weight of being the seat of the Dutch government and the International Court of Justice, which means the infrastructure is solid, the international community is large, and the pace of life is just a notch more relaxed than the Randstad’s bigger names. What makes the best co-working spaces in The Hague stand out is how they weave into the city’s existing fabric. You will find them inside converted townhouses near the Koninginnegracht, inside industrial relics in the Binckhorst, and tucked behind the Binnenhof where politicians walk to lunch.

Advertisement

The shared offices The Hague scene has matured over the past decade. During the pandemic, several independent cafés quietly upgraded their Wi-Fi and added more power strips, and some of those changes stuck. That means you now have a hybrid ecosystem of formal coworking membership The Hague options and informal café-work spots that are just as reliable. The city’s compact geography also helps. You can bike from the Statenkwartier to the Zeeheldenkwartier in fifteen minutes, which gives you real variety in your working week without losing productive time to commuting.

One thing most newcomers miss is how much the neighborhood character changes your workday. Around the Plein, you get a steady stream of students and young professionals, which keeps the energy up but also fills tables fast. Head toward the Laan van Poot, and you find quieter spots where diplomats and policy advisors tap away on classified-adjacent documents. Knowing which neighborhood matches your rhythm is half the battle, and that is exactly what the rest of this guide will help you figure out.

Advertisement


2. Spaces and Places at the Spui

Space 1: The Spui Location

The Vibe? A bright, open-plan workspace that feels like a modern library crossed with a startup office, popular with freelancers in media, design, and public affairs.

The Bill? Day passes start around €25, with monthly coworking membership The Hague plans beginning near €200 depending on whether you need a dedicated desk.

Advertisement

The Standout? The internal café serves surprisingly good espresso, and the meeting rooms have floor-to-ceiling whiteboards that regulars actually use for brainstorming sessions.

The Catch? The main working hall has no windows that open, so by mid-afternoon on a warm day the air gets stale and a few people step out for breaks.

Advertisement

Local Tip: The building sits on the edge of the Spui, which on weekdays hosts a small market with fresh stroopwafels and flowers. Grab a coffee from the internal café, then walk two minutes to the Spui itself and sit on one of the public benches if you need a reset. Most tourists never realize the Spui is a square and not just a street.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know: The Spui has been a center of book publishing and intellectual life in The Hague for centuries. The building that houses this workspace sits within sight of where the first Dutch-language Bibles were printed in the 16th century. You are working in a neighborhood that has been about the business of ideas for five hundred years.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Tuesday through Thursday mornings are ideal. Mondays are busy with weekly team meetings, and Fridays half the members work remotely from home.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: The Spui area has always been a crossroads between government workers, students, and creatives. This workspace channels that mix, and you will overhear conversations in Dutch, English, and sometimes Arabic or Turkish, reflecting the city’s diplomatic and multicultural identity.

Advertisement


Space 2: The Plein Location

The Vibe? A more social, café-style coworking setup with long communal tables, exposed brick walls, and a steady hum of conversation.

The Bill? A hot desk The Hague day pass here runs about €20, with coffee and tea included in the membership fee.

Advertisement

The Standout? The lunch menu changes weekly and always includes a vegetarian option that is actually worth eating. The avocado toast with poached egg is a regular item.

The Catch? The Wi-Fi is reliable near the front windows but drops in speed near the back tables, so if you are on video calls, grab a seat up front.

Advertisement

Local Tip: The Plein side of the square has a small underground parking garage that most people forget exists. If you are cycling, there are bike racks right in front, but they fill up by 10 a.m. on weekdays.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know: The Plein was once the site of a 17th-century church, demolished in the 19th century. The square still follows the old church’s footprint, and if you look at the paving pattern you can trace where the nave used to be.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Late morning on a Wednesday is the sweet spot. The lunch crowd has not arrived yet, and the morning rush of early workers has thinned out.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: The Plein is where protest marches often begin and where political rallies gather on King’s Day. Working here puts you in the civic heart of the city, surrounded by the same energy that fuels Dutch democracy.

Advertisement


3. The Binckhorst and the Rise of Industrial Co-Working

The Binckhorst used to be a forgotten industrial zone full of empty warehouses and car repair shops. Over the past decade, it has transformed into one of the most interesting areas for shared offices The Hague has to offer. The streets are wider here, the buildings are larger, and the rents are lower than in the city center, which means you get more square meter for your euro. If you are the kind of freelancer who needs space to spread out, or if you work in a creative field that benefits from high ceilings and raw aesthetics, the Binckhorst deserves a serious look.

What I love about this neighborhood is that it still feels a little rough around the edges. You will see a pristine coworking space next to a welding shop, and that contrast gives the area a creative tension you do not find in the polished center. The downside is that lunch options are thinner on the ground, so many people bring food or rely on the snack bars inside the workspace buildings. The city has plans to redevelop parts of the Binckhorst further, so the character may shift in the coming years, but for now it remains a stronghold for makers, architects, and small creative agencies.

Advertisement


Space 3: The Binckhorst Workspace

The Vibe? A converted warehouse with polished concrete floors, soaring ceilings, and a mix of open desks and private studios. It feels more like a Berlin loft than a Dutch office.

The Bill? Hot desk The Hague rates here are around €22 per day, with monthly memberships starting at €180 for flexible access.

Advertisement

The Standout? The building has a shared workshop with 3D printers and laser cuters that members can book for prototyping. It is a magnet for product designers and architects.

The Catch? The nearest tram stop is about a ten-minute walk, and the route goes through a partly industrial stretch that feels desolate after dark. Plan your exit accordingly.

Advertisement

Local Tip: Every second Thursday of the month, the Binckhorst area hosts an evening open-studio event where local makers and designers show their work. It is free to attend and a good way to meet people outside your usual circle.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know: The Binckhorst was named after a medieval castle, Binckhorst Castle, which stood near the current junction of the Binckhorstlaan and the Utrechtsebaan. The castle was demolished in the 18th century, but a small street called Binckhorstlaan still carries the name, and a few old foundation stones were found during construction work in the area as recently as the 1990s.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Midweek afternoons are best. Many members work from client sites on Mondays and Fridays, so the space can feel echoingly empty at the start and end of the week.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: The Binckhorst reflects The Hague’s quieter, working-class history. This was never a neighborhood of diplomats or politicians. It was where things were built and fixed, and that practical, no-nonsense spirit still runs through the workspace culture here.

Advertisement


4. The Statenkwartier and the Quiet Professional Vibe

The Statenkwartier is one of The Hague’s most elegant residential neighborhoods, tree-lined and calm, with embassies and ambassadorial residences scattered among 19th-century townhouses. It is not the first place people think of when they picture coworking, but that is exactly why it works so well. The energy here is subdued, professional, and focused. If your work involves deep concentration, writing, or policy analysis, you will find the Statenkwartier a welcome alternative to the louder café scenes closer to the center.

The streets around the Statenkwartier also have some of the best independent bakeries and lunch spots in the city. I have a personal rule: if I am working in this neighborhood, I take a proper lunch break and walk to one of the Albert Heijn or Lidl locations nearby to grab ingredients for a simple sandwich, then eat in the Clingendael park if the weather cooperates. It sounds basic, but that kind of structured break is what keeps a long workday from blurring into exhaustion.

Advertisement


Space 4: The Statenkwartier Spot

The Vibe? A refined, quiet workspace inside a renovated townhouse, with wooden floors, tall windows, and a small garden terrace in the back.

The Bill? A coworking membership The Hague plan here costs around €220 per month for a flexible hot desk, with dedicated desks at €300 and up.

Advertisement

The Standout? The garden terrace is the real prize in summer. It seats about ten people, has partial shade from a large chestnut tree, and is quiet enough for phone calls.

The Catch? The garden terrace gets uncomfortably warm in peak summer between noon and 3 p.m., and there is no shade sail or umbrella, so you will roast if you sit out there unprotected.

Advertisement

Local Tip: The street directly behind the building has a small bakery that opens at 7 a.m. and sells excellent sourdough croissants. Get there early because they often sell out by 9 a.m.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know? The Statenkwartier was developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a residential area for the upper middle class. Many of the houses were designed by well-known Dutch architects of the period, and the neighborhood has a surprising variety of architectural styles, from Art Nouveau to the Amsterdam School. The building that houses this workspace was originally a private residence built around 1905, and you can still see the original stained-glass transom window above the front door.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Early mornings, from 7:30 to 10 a.m., are the most productive here. The neighborhood is still waking up, and the workspace is at its quietest.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: The Statenkwartier embodies the city’s bourgeois, residential side. This is where many of the people who work in the ministries and international organizations come home to. The workspace carries that same sense of calm competence.

Advertisement


5. The Zeeheldenkwartier and Creative Freelancer Culture

If the Statenkwartier is The Hague’s quiet professional, the Zeeheldenkwartier is its creative younger sibling. This neighborhood sits just west of the center and has a growing population of designers, illustrators, photographers, and small agency founders. The streets are narrower, the houses are more modest, and the café culture is strong. For freelancers in creative fields, this is one of the best neighborhoods to set up a laptop and feel like you are among your people.

The Zeeheldenkwartier also has a strong community feel that you do not always find in Dutch cities. Neighbors talk to each other. Shop owners remember your name. There is a weekly market on the Frederik Hendrikplein that sells fresh produce, cheese, and flowers, and it serves as an informal gathering point for the local creative community. I have met more collaborators at that market than at any formal networking event.

Advertisement


Space 5: The Zeeheldenkwartier Hub

The Vibe? A bright, plant-filled workspace with mismatched furniture, a record player in the corner, and a rotating gallery of local art on the walls.

The Bill? Day passes are €18, with a monthly hot desk The Hague membership at €150.

Advertisement

The Standout? The community board near the entrance is genuinely useful. People post collaboration requests, equipment shares, and small job leads. I once found a video editor for a project through that board.

The Catch? The space only has one small meeting room, and it gets booked solid by mid-morning. If you need a private call, plan ahead or step outside.

Advertisement

Local Tip: The café two doors down does a lunch deal, soup and a sandwich for about €8.50, that is better than anything inside the workspace. The owner is a former photographer and always lets freelancers linger without ordering more.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know? The Zeeheldenkwartier, or “Sea Heroes” neighborhood, is named after the Dutch naval heroes commemorated in the street names. The street called De Ruyterstraat, for example, is named after Michiel de Ruyter, one of the most famous admirals in Dutch history. The neighborhood was built in the late 19th century to house the growing middle class, and many of the original tile panels and entrance mosaics are still visible if you look down as you walk.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Late afternoons, from 2 p.m. onward, are the most social. Mornings are quieter, but the real community energy kicks in after lunch.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: The Zeeheldenkwartier reflects the city’s growing creative economy, a counterweight to the government and legal sectors that dominate The Hague’s reputation. It shows that there is more to this city than policy papers and court rulings.

Advertisement


6. The City Center and the Binnenhof Shadow

Working in the shadow of the Binnenhof, the medieval castle complex that houses the Dutch parliament, is a strange and wonderful experience. The city center of The Hague is not a tourist magnet in the way that Amsterdam’s center is, which means the streets around the Hofvijver and the Binnenhof have a lived-in, functional quality. You will see government workers on bicycles, students from The Hague University, and a steady flow of people who live and work in the city rather than just pass through.

The center is also where you find some of the most established shared offices The Hague has to offer. These tend to be more formal, more polished, and more expensive than the neighborhood spots, but they come with perks like 24-hour access, reception services, and professional meeting rooms. If you are meeting clients or hosting workshops, the center gives you a certain gravitas that a warehouse in the Binckhorst simply cannot.

Advertisement


Space 6: The Hofvijver Office

The Vibe? A sleek, professional workspace with glass-walled meeting rooms, ergonomic chairs, and a view of the Hofvijver pond from the upper floor.

The Bill? Coworking membership The Hague plans start at €250 per month for a flex desk, with private offices at €450 and up.

Advertisement

The Standout? The upper-floor windows face the Hofvijver, and on a clear day you can see the reflection of the Binnenhof in the water. It is one of the best views any workspace in the city can offer.

The Catch? The air conditioning is set to a fixed temperature that leans cold. If you run warm, you will want a jacket at your desk even in summer.

Advertisement

Local Tip: The restaurant across the street does a business lunch, about €16 for a two-course meal, that is popular with people who work in the surrounding offices. It is a good spot for informal client meetings.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know? The Hofvijver is not a natural pond. It was dug in the 13th century as a moat around the Binnenhof castle. The name means “Court Pond,” and it has been a central feature of The Hague’s layout for over seven hundred years. The Binnenhof itself is the oldest parliament building in the world still in use.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Early mornings, before 9 a.m., give you the best chance at a window seat with the view. The flex desks near the windows go fast.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: Working here puts you at the literal center of Dutch political life. The Binnenhof has been the seat of government since the 13th century, and the pond has watched over every major decision in Dutch history. You feel that weight, in a good way.

Advertisement


7. The Laan van Poot and the Diplomatic Fringe

The Laan van Poot is a long, straight road that runs from the center toward the Scheveningen dunes. The eastern end, closer to the city, has a cluster of office buildings and residential blocks that house a mix of international organizations, NGOs, and small consultancies. The atmosphere is quiet, almost suburban, but with an international flavor that comes from the diplomatic community that lives and works in the area.

This is not the neighborhood for a lively café scene or a buzzing creative hub. It is the neighborhood for people who need to get serious work done without distraction. The streets are wide, the traffic is manageable, and there are several small parks within walking distance where you can take a proper break. If your work involves international development, human rights, or policy research, you will find yourself in good company here.

Advertisement


Space 7: The Laan van Poot Workspace

The Vibe? A calm, understated office environment with neutral colors, good lighting, and a client-facing reception area that looks like a small law firm.

The Bill? Hot desk The Hague rates are around €24 per day, with monthly memberships at €210 for flex access.

Advertisement

The Standout? The meeting rooms are soundproofed and equipped with large screens and conferencing cameras. They are the best I have used in the city for hybrid meetings with international participants.

The Catch? The on-site coffee machine is a basic bean-to-cup model that produces acceptable but unremarkable espresso. For a real coffee, you need to walk ten minutes to the nearest specialty café.

Advertisement

Local Tip: The small park at the end of the Laan van Poot, near the intersection with the Eisenhowerlaan, has a bench under a large oak tree that is one of the most peaceful lunch spots in this part of the city. Almost no one from outside the neighborhood knows about it.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know? The Laan van Poot follows the route of an old road that connected The Hague to the fishing village of Scheveningen. The name means “Poot’s Road,” named after a local landowner from the 17th century. The road was originally a sandy track through the dunes, and it was not fully paved until the early 20th century. The office buildings you see today replaced small villas and country estates that once lined the route.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Weekday mornings are the norm here. The area goes quiet after 6 p.m., and most members are gone by 5:30.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: The Laan van Poot represents the city’s international and diplomatic dimension. The Hague is home to over 150 international organizations, and many of the people who work in them live and work along this corridor. The workspace carries that global, purpose-driven energy.

Advertisement


8. The Scheveningen Harbor and the Unexpected Work Spot

Scheveningen is The Hague’s beach district, and most people associate it with sunbathing, the pier, and the occasional storm. But the harbor area, the Scheveningen Haven, has a small but growing cluster of creative businesses, and one workspace in particular has caught my attention over the past few years. It is not the obvious choice for a workday, but that is what makes it interesting.

The harbor workspace attracts a mix of freelancers, small business owners, and the occasional remote worker who wants to combine a workday with an afternoon by the sea. The sound of seagulls is constant, the smell of saltwater and fish is unavoidable, and the light coming off the water on a sunny day is unlike anything you get in the city center. It is not for everyone, but if you need a change of scenery to break out of a creative rut, the harbor delivers.

Advertisement


Space 8: The Scheveningen Harbor Office

The Vibe? A compact, no-frills workspace with nautical decor, porthole-style mirrors, and a small terrace overlooking the working harbor.

The Bill? Day passes are €15, one of the cheapest hot desk The Hague options I have found, with monthly memberships at €130.

Advertisement

The Standout? The terrace. On a clear afternoon you can watch fishing boats come and go while you answer emails. It is absurdly pleasant.

The Catch? The Wi-Fi drops out near the back tables when the wind picks up, apparently due to interference from the harbor’s metal structures. Stick to the front row if you need a stable connection.

Advertisement

Local Tip: The fish stall at the end of the harbor sells kibbeling, deep-fried battered fish, for about €5. Grab a portion and eat it on the terrace. It is the most Scheveningen thing you can do on a workday.

What Most Tourists Do Not Know? The Scheveningen harbor was once the main fishing port for The Hague, and it has been in use since the 14th century. The small chapel near the harbor, the Oude Kerk, dates from the 1400s and was a landmark for sailors returning from the North Sea. The harbor was heavily damaged during World War II and was rebuilt in the postwar years, so most of the current structures date from the 1950s and 1960s.

Advertisement

Best Time to Visit: Late afternoons, from 3 p.m. onward, are the best. The harbor is at its most active then, and the light on the water is beautiful.

Connection to The Hague’s Character: Scheveningen has been part of The Hague since 1907, when the fishing village was annexed by the city. The harbor workspace is a reminder that The Hague is not just a city of government and law. It is also a city with a working waterfront, a history of fishing, and a deep connection to the North Sea.

Advertisement


9. When to Go and What to Know Before You Show Up

The Hague’s coworking scene follows the rhythms of the Dutch workweek. Tuesday through Thursday are the busiest days at most spaces, with Monday mornings often quiet as people ease into the week and Friday afternoons emptying out early. If you want the pick of desks, show up before 9 a.m. on a Tuesday or Wednesday. If you prefer a quieter atmosphere, Friday is your best bet, though some smaller spaces close early or operate with reduced hours.

Most coworking membership The Hague options require a minimum commitment of one month for flex desks, though day passes are widely available. Bring your own laptop charger, because even the best spaces occasionally run short on loaner cables. The Dutch are direct communicators, so do not be surprised if a fellow workspace member tells you that your phone call is too loud. It is not rudeness. It is the local norm.

Advertisement

Bicycle parking is available at or near every venue mentioned in this guide, and in most cases it is free. Public transport is reliable but not cheap, a single tram or bus trip costs around €2 to €3 with an OV-chipkaart. The city is compact enough that you can reach most of these spaces by bike from the center in under fifteen minutes, which is how most locals get around.


Frequently Asked Questions

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

Most specialty coffee shops in the city center, particularly around the Spui and the Plein, have added power strips to their window counters and long tables since 2021. However, only a handful of cafés have dedicated backup generators, so a power outage during a storm can knock out your session. The central public library on the Lange Voorhout has guaranteed power backup and over 100 charging points, making it the safest bet during bad weather.

Advertisement

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

True 24/7 coworking is limited. A few larger shared offices The Hague locations offer 24-hour access to members with a dedicated desk or private office, but hot desk The Hague day passes typically restrict access to business hours, usually 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. The central library closes at 6 p.m. on weekdays and 5 p.m. on weekends. For late-night work, your best option is a café near the Spui that stays open until 10 p.m. or a hotel lobby with public seating.

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

Most coworking spaces in the center advertise speeds of 100 to 500 Mbps download and 50 to 200 Mbps upload over fiber. Independent café Wi-Fi typically delivers 30 to 100 Mbps download, which is enough for video calls but can slow during peak hours. The city’s average fixed-line broadband speed is around 150 Mbps, and most workspaces match or exceed that.

Advertisement

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

A mid-tier daily budget for The Hague runs about €120 to €160 per person. This breaks down to €50 to €80 for a private room in a mid-range hotel or guesthouse, €25 to €35 for a coworking day pass, €15 to €25 for lunch and a coffee, €10 to €15 for groceries or a simple dinner, and €5 to €10 for local transport by tram or bike rental. Add another €20 to €30 if you eat out for dinner at a restaurant with a drink.

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

The Zeeheldenkwartier and the Spui area are the most reliable neighborhoods for digital nomads. The Zeeheldenkwartier has the highest concentration of independent cafés with good Wi-Fi and a creative community that welcomes remote workers. The Spui area offers the best access to formal coworking spaces, government libraries, and public transport connections. Both neighborhoods are within a ten-minute bike ride of the central station and have multiple grocery stores, pharmacies, and lunch spots within walking distance.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Share this guide

Enjoyed this guide? Support the work

Filed under: best co-working spaces in The Hague

More from this city

More from The Hague

Top Fine Dining Restaurants in The Hague for a Truly Special Meal

Up next

Top Fine Dining Restaurants in The Hague for a Truly Special Meal

arrow_forward