Best Co-Working Spaces in Tenerife for Remote Workers and Freelancers
Words by
Maria Garcia
Finding the best co-working spaces in Tenerife feels overwhelming at first, because the island keeps expanding its remote work infrastructure faster than most guidebooks can keep up. I have spent the better part of three years working from corners of cafes, proper shared offices, and hybrid spaces across the island, and I still discover new spots every few months. What makes Tenerife particularly compelling for freelancers and digital nomads is not just the weather, which hovers around 22 degrees Celsius for most of the year, but the density of well connected spaces in towns that were never designed to be work hubs. Santa Cruz, Puerto de la Cruz, Adeje, and the southern corridor between Los Cristianos and Las Americas have each developed their own rhythm for remote work.
Shared offices Tenerife: why Santa Cruz sets the standard
Santa Cruz de Tenerife has quietly become the Canary Islands most serious city for structured co-working, mostly because the local government pushed a digital nomad visa awareness campaign that started attracting European freelancers around 2021. Walking through the streets near Calle del Castillo you can feel the shift happening in real time: what was once a purely administrative and shopping district now hums with laptop screens in converted 19th century townhouses.
Coworking Santa Cruz (Calle del Castillo, Santa Cruz de Tenerife)
This sits on the upper floor of a building that used to house a maritime insurance firm in the 1940s, and the owners kept the original wooden beams and tile floors when they converted it. A coworking membership Tenerife visitors most frequently buy at this location starts around 130 euros per month for a hot desk, with dedicated desks pushing closer to 250 euros monthly. The internet runs at about 200 megabits per second download, which I have tested myself on three separate visits with speed test apps. Order a cortado from the small barista counter at the back of the space and you have your entire morning sorted. Show up on a Wednesday or Thursday mid-morning, around ten o'clock, and you will find the community at its most alive: locals and expat freelancers mingling during the informal coffee breaks the staff organizes. The building is directly across from the Palacio Insular, and if you walk five minutes south you hit the open air market at Plaza de la Candelaria, where you can grab tropical fruit for less than two euros a bag. One detail most visiting workers miss is the rooftop terrace that is technically only for members, but the reception staff will let you up if you smile and mention you are considering a membership. The afternoon sun on that roof between three and five in summer is almost too warm for concentrated work, so plan your deep focus sessions for the morning.
Nomad Sanctuary Tenerife (Calle Juan Padrón, Santa Cruz)
A smaller operation tucked behind the main Nomad Sanctuary accommodation block, this space skips the corporate polish in favor of a relaxed, almost living-room atmosphere. Hot desk Tenerife options here are pay-as-you-go, around 14 euros per day, which is useful if you are island hopping between Tenerife and La Gomera on weekends. What strikes me most is the Thursday evening networking events, where local entrepreneurs pitch micro-projects they need freelancers for. I landed a six month translation contract at one of these evenings, so do not dismiss them as casual small talk. The walls are decorated with vintage black and white photographs of Santa Cruz port from the 1920s, a nod to the city's deep Atlantic trading history. Get there by nine in the morning if you want a window seat, because the space only fits around twenty people and it fills fast during European winter months, roughly November through March. A practical note: the single gender-neutral bathroom can create a queue during lunch hours, which is annoying when you are on a deadline.
Hot desk Tenerife options in the north
The north of Tenerife moves slower. The trade winds bring clouds, the banana plantations cling to steep hillsides, and the co-working culture reflects that unhurried pace. Puerto de la Cruz and its surrounding towns have a different energy entirely from the southern tourist strip.
Incubazul (Parque Taoro, Puerto de la Cruz)
Technically an business incubator run by the Cabildo de Tenerife's ITER technology institute, Incubazul doubles as a coworking space that freelancers can access through day passes or flexible monthly arrangements. The building is perched above the Jardin Botanico, and the terrace overlooks banana fields that roll down toward the sea. Day passes run about 18 euros, which includes access to printing, a meeting room for up to one hour, and the outdoor terrace. The internet is fiber optic, around 300 megabits, because the building was designed for tech startups that need heavy data transfer speeds. The best time to work here is between ten in the morning and two in the afternoon, before the building's heating system, such as it is, starts struggling with the coastal damp that settles in by late afternoon. The staff can connect you with local specialists in renewable energy and marine biology startups, a reflection of the Canary Islands' push toward sustainability research. Most tourists walk right past Incubazul on their way to the botanical gardens and never know it exists. On weekends the space closes, so do not count on a Saturday workspace here.
La Deliciosa City (Calle Iriarte, Tacoronte)
Not technically a co-working space, but this bakery-cafe in Tacoronte has become an unofficial workstation for freelance writers and designers across the northern wine country. The owner, who trained as a pastry chef in San Sebastian before returning to her family's coffee farm, serves an incredible leche con café that pairs with a house made palm honey tart. Tables near the back wall have power outlets, which is rare enough in rural Tenerife cafes to warrant mentioning. Bring a portable battery pack anyway as backup since I have noticed the outlets occasionally spark. The Wi-Fi password is handwritten on a chalkboard near the counter and changes weekly. Come early, ideally before ten on weekdays, because the day-trippers from Santa Cruz start arriving by eleven, crowding the place and making concentrated work nearly impossible. Tacoronte itself deserves exploration during lunch break: old Canarian balconies with dark wood carvings line streets that have barely changed in a hundred years.
Coworking membership Tenerife seekers head south
The southern coast, from Los Cristianos through Las Americas and down to Adeje, is where the co-working industry in Tenerife has exploded most visibly. Drawn by year-round sunshine and the perception of a relaxed lifestyle, remote workers from Scandinavian and German cities have fueled a boom in dedicated spaces.
Tenerife Coworking (Calle Montalban, Los Cristianos)
This space sits roughly three blocks from the seafront, in a building that used to hold a fish processing cooperative before the local fishing fleet moved operations to a larger port in the early 2000s. The interior has been converted with standing desks, a soundproofed phone booth area, and a modest kitchen where members share responsibility for cleaning. A monthly coworking membership Tenerife regulars choose here costs about 110 euros for hot desk access, or 180 euros for a fixed spot with a locker. The space hosts a weekly "skills exchange" on Tuesday afternoons where someone teaches a short session on anything from Canarian Spanish grammar to After Effects shortcuts. The internet was upgraded recently to fiber, delivering around 250 megabits consistently. The staff include some surprisingly good craft beer choices in the fridge, sourced from local Vallemicro and Pandora microbreweries worth sampling on a Friday afternoon when the week winds down. One drawback: the street parking situation on Calle Montalban is genuinely terrible between noon and four, and when I misplaced my car keys once and had to circle for thirty five minutes I learned to arrive early or walk from the nearby residential streets.
The Working Bay (Avingida de España, Playa de las Americas)
Tucked above a physiotherapy clinic near the Veronicas strip, this space is easy to overlook unless you know to look for the blue door between a souvenir shop and a pizzeria. It has only about twelve desks, which creates a tight community feel. Day rates are 16 euros, with monthly passes at 130 euros including one free hour in the meeting room per day. The decor leans into minimalist Canarian style: white walls, volcanic stone accents, and hanging succulents everywhere. The best thing here is the silence rule enforced between nine and noon, which sounds oppressive but actually gets real work done. I wrote the first draft of a feature article on Canarian volcanic wine geology during one of these morning sessions at this place. The owner grew up in Adeje and will tell you stories about the town's Guanche indigenous history while you wait for your coffee machine order, whether you ask or not. The space closes at six in the evening and there are no evening hours, so plan accordingly.
Community-driven workspaces outside the main tourist axis
Some of the most interesting spaces for remote workers lie outside the obvious corridors, in towns where tourism has not yet fully colonized the local character.
La Tejita Co-Working Collective (Calle del Barranco, El Medano)
El Medano, a windsurfing and kitesurfing town on the southeast coast, has a co-working collective that operates out of a shared house adjacent to the natural sand dune reserve. It is informal: roughly 35 euros per week or 100 per month, paid in cash or transfer directly to whoever is managing the house that month. Satellite internet is provided through a local provider delivering about 80 megabits, which handles video calls adequately but can lag during peak hours around seven in the evening when everyone in the house streams simultaneously. The communal kitchen is stocked with whatever people have brought, and I once had the best chermoula marinated fish of my life prepared by a Moroccan French digital marketer staying at the house for two weeks. Walk five minutes east and you reach La Tejita beach, a long strip of golden sand that still feels relatively wild compared to the southern resort beaches. The town itself was a traditional fishing village until the 1990s and you can still see elderly residents mending nets on the harbor wall each morning.
Baja Center (Avenida de los Pueblos, Adeje)
Part of a municipal business development initiative, Baja Center offers subsidized co-working for registered micro entrepreneurs and freelance professionals. The application process requires proof of autonomous worker Spain status, which means having your alta in the special regime for self employed workers, but the monthly cost is a fraction of private co working memberships, around 40 to 60 euros depending on usage tier. The space is modern, modular, and occasionally feels more like a government office than a creative hub, but the infrastructure is solid: fiber internet, proper ergonomic chairs, booked private meeting rooms, and a quiet policy after hours. It opens at eight in the morning and stays open until eight at night on weekdays, with a skeleton schedule on Saturdays if you register in advance. The surrounding Adeje municipality has invested heavily in eco tourism, which you see reflected in the center's sustainability talks held monthly. Guided walks to the nearby Barranco del Infierno trailhead are organized by local guides associated with the space.
El Portezuelo Surf & Work Space (Calle San Felipe, El Portezuelo, Santa Cruz outskirts)
This tiny spot near a stretch of black volcanic surf beach north of Santa Cruz appeals to the overlap between surf culture and freelancing. For about 22 euros a day you get a desk, Wi-Fi (around 70 megabits), surfboard storage, and a communal terrace where people eat after morning sessions. The owner, a Tenerife born surfer who spent a decade doing IT consulting in Berlin, built the place specifically because he was tired of co working spaces that had no connection to outdoor life. The bar serves kombucha on tap and fresh-squeezed juice blends from local tropical fruits. Lunch is often a communal affair: the owner buys fish from the nearby Puerto de Santa Cruz market on Tuesdays and Fridays and cooks on a basic outdoor grill. Be aware that the atmosphere gets rowdy on weekend afternoons when visiting surfers crowd the terrace, making it a poor environment for focused work on Saturdays and Sundays. Come during the week for the productive calm.
When to go and what to know about working from Tenerife
Tenerife's co working scene operates on a distinctly European time schedule. Most spaces open between eight and nine in the morning and close by six or seven at night, with a few exceptions. Sunday is effectively dead for co working, with only rare exceptions, so plan your week accordingly. The winter months from November through February are peak season for Northern European digital nomads, which means spaces fill up and prices for short term access can rise by fifteen percent compared to summer. Summer is quieter in co working terms, which sounds counterintuitive, but many nomads leave for mainland Europe and those who remain often work from cafes or beaches.
The internet infrastructure in Tenerife has improved dramatically since 2020, with fiber coverage now standard in Santa Cruz, Puerto de la Cruz, and the southern tourist corridor. Rural areas and smaller towns still rely on ADSL or satellite, with speeds that can drop to fifteen or twenty megabits during storms. The Canary Islands sit four hours ahead of US Eastern Time, which works well for freelancers serving North American clients if you start your day early. Most co working spaces accept card payments, though the collectives and DIY spots like La Tejita may prefer cash or bank transfer.
A genuinely useful insider detail: Spain's 21 percent IVA tax applies to co working memberships, and if you are a freelancer registered as autónomo in Spain, you can potentially deduct these costs from your quarterly tax return. Ask the space for a proper invoice, or factura, because not all of them issue one automatically. Also, Tenerife does not observe daylight saving time differently from mainland Spain: it shifts forward and backward on the same schedule, so do not confuse it with the UK or Portugal during spring and autumn clock changes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Tenerife central cafes and workspaces?
Fiber connected co working spaces and upgraded cafes in Santa Cruz, Puerto de la Cruz, and the southern tourist corridor typically deliver between 150 and 300 megabits download with upload speeds of 20 to 50 megabits. Satellite dependent venues in rural towns like El Medano or mountain villages range from 20 to 80 megabits download and can drop significantly during bad weather. Public Wi-Fi offered at hotel lobbies and tourist cafes averages around 10 to 30 megabits and should not be relied on for video calls.
What is the most reliable neighborhood in Tenerife for digital nomads and remote workers?
Santa Cruz de Tenerife is the most reliable neighborhood due to its density of co working spaces, consistent fiber coverage across the urban core, availability of registered long term rental housing, and proximity to government offices for administrative tasks like registering as autónomo or obtaining a NIE tax identification number. The northern old towns of Puerto de la Cruz and La Orotava offer alternatives with slightly higher cost of living but stronger local community infrastructure for freelancers who prefer a slower pace.
How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Tenerife?
Santander Bank-funded city center initiatives in Santa Cruz have equipped several commercial streets with upgraded electrical infrastructure, so dedicated workspace cafes along Calle del Castillo and the Plaza Weyler area typically include multiple outlets per table. Outside those zones, socket availability is inconsistent, especially in older Canarian buildings in the north and in the southern resort strip, where cafe design prioritizes touristic aesthetics over worker convenience. Portable battery packs and multi port adapters are strongly recommended for anyone planning to work from non dedicated spaces.
Is Tenerife expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.
Mid tier daily costs in Tenerife run roughly 70 to 90 euros per person, covering a modest apartment rental averaged to about 45 euros daily (based on monthly rentals of 1,000 to 1,300), supermarket self catering meals at 10 to 15 euros per day, one dinner out at 15 to 20 euros, and local transportation including occasional bus rides at five to eight euros. Co working day passes add 14 to 20 euros. This excludes flights. The southern tourist strip is slightly more expensive for dining, while the north offers lower grocery prices and cheaper long term rentals in residential neighborhoods.
Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Tenerife?
Dedicated 24 hour co working spaces are extremely rare. Baja Center in Adeje offers extended weekday hours until 20:00. The Working Bay closes at 18:00. One or two collectives in Santa Cruz, particularly pop up spaces associated with accommodation providers, provide key card access for registered members during off hours, but these are exceptions rather than the norm. Freelancers requiring frequent late night access for work across time zones should budget for a private rental with good fiber rather than depending on co working infrastructure after 21:00.
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