Best Co-Living Spaces for Digital Nomads in Sousse

Photo by  Amal Bourkhis

16 min read · Sousse, Tunisia · digital nomad coliving ·

Best Co-Living Spaces for Digital Nomads in Sousse

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Fatma Mansouri

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Best Coliving Spaces for Digital Nomads in Sousse

I have spent the better part of three years drifting through Sousse, working from riads, rooftop terraces, and converted medina apartments. The city does not shout about its nomad infrastructure the way Lisbon or Bali do, but the best coliving spaces for digital nomads in Sousse are quietly excellent, often run by Tunisians who understand what remote workers actually need, fast Wi-Fi, a desk that does not wobble, and a kitchen where you can cook harissa at midnight. What follows is a directory built from my own stays, my own frustrations, and my own late-night conversations with the people who run these places.


1. Dar Rihana, Sousse Medina

Location: Rue Taieb Mhiri, inside the medina walls, roughly 200 meters from the Great Mosque.

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Dar Rihana is a restored Ottoman-era townhouse that the owner, Karim, converted into a nomad coliving Sousse experiment in 2021. The ground floor holds a shared workspace with six desks, a printer, and a router that Karim personally upgraded to a fiber line after too many complaints about video calls dropping. Upstairs, four private rooms open onto a central courtyard with a lemon tree that drops fruit directly into the fountain basin. I stayed here for a monthly stay Sousse package in March 2023 and paid 1,800 TND per month, which included utilities, weekly cleaning, and a shared kitchen stocked with olive oil from Karim's cousin's press in Kairouan.

The Vibe? Quiet during the day, social at night when the courtyard fills with the smell of someone's couscous.
The Bill? 1,600 to 2,200 TND per month depending on room size.
The Standout? The rooftop terrace has a direct view of the medina's minarets at sunset, and the Wi-Fi actually holds up there.
The Catch? The medina streets are narrow and confusing at first. Your taxi driver will almost certainly get lost on the first drop-off, so ask Karim to send a pin on Google Maps.

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Local tip: Every Friday morning, the souk directly outside the front door transforms into a livestock market. It is loud, chaotic, and absolutely worth waking up for. You will not find this in any guidebook.

Connection to Sousse: The medina of Sousse is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and Dar Rihana sits within the original 9th-century Aghlabid walls. Staying here means you are sleeping inside the same stone that Ibn Khaldun once walked past.

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2. Le Jardin d'Ali, Boujaafar

Location: Avenue Taieb Mhiri, near the Boujaafar beach promenade, about a 10-minute walk from the medina.

This is less a formal coliving space and more a large apartment that Ali, a retired English teacher, rents out to nomads on a room-by-room basis. There are three bedrooms, one shared living room with a long table that doubles as a workspace, and a small garden where Ali grows mint, tomatoes, and a single stubborn lemon tree. The internet is a 50 Mbps Orange fiber connection that Ali monitors obsessively. I worked from here for six weeks in late 2022 and never once had a Zoom call freeze, which is more than I can say for half the cafes in town.

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The Vibe? Feels like staying with a generous uncle who keeps offering you tea and asking about your deadlines.
The Bill? 1,200 to 1,500 TND per month per room, utilities included.
The Standout? Ali's wife cooks a communal dinner every Sunday, and her ojja is the best I have had outside of Tunis.
The Catch? The shared bathroom is one for three rooms, and morning queues form fast if you are not an early riser.

Local tip: The Boujaafar beach promenade is where Sousse locals actually go to walk in the evening, not tourists. Join the 7 p.m. promenade walk and you will hear five languages spoken within ten minutes.

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Connection to Sousse: The Boujaafar area is the city's social spine. The beach here has been the gathering place for Sousse families since the French colonial period, and the promenade's Art Deco railings date to the 1930s.


3. Riad Zine, Sousse Ville

Location: Rue Abou Nawas, in the Ville neighborhood, between the train station and the old port.

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Riad Zine is a three-story riad that was partially converted into a remote work accommodation Sousse option by a French-Tunisian couple, Nadia and Sami, who split their time between Sousse and Lyon. The second floor has a dedicated co-working corner with ergonomic chairs they imported from IKEA in Tunis. The top floor is a shared kitchen and terrace. I booked a monthly stay Sousse here in January 2024 and paid 2,000 TND, which was on the higher end but justified by the workspace quality and the fact that Nadia speaks fluent French, Arabic, and English, making local logistics effortless.

The Vibe? Professional but warm. Think of it as a small office that happens to have a rooftop.
The Bill? 1,800 to 2,400 TND per month.
The Standout? The ergonomic chairs. I know that sounds minor, but after months of working from plastic cafe seats, my back nearly wept with gratitude.
The Catch? The street below gets noisy during afternoon prayer calls from the nearby mosque, which is beautiful but can interrupt a focused work session if your window is open.

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Local tip: The port area two blocks east has a fish market that opens at 5 a.m. Buy sardines for 3 TND a kilo and cook them yourself in the shared kitchen. Nadia will show you her grilled sardine recipe if you ask nicely.

Connection to Sousse: The Ville neighborhood was the European quarter during the colonial era, and the architecture here, arched windows, wrought-iron balconies, pastel facades, reflects that layered history. Riad Zine itself was built in the 1920s as a merchant's home.

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4. Casa Nour, Hammam Sousse

Location: Rue de la Plage, Hammam Sousse, about 15 kilometers north of central Sousse.

Hammam Sousse is technically its own town, but the bus connection to Sousse is frequent and cheap, 1.2 TND, and Casa Nour is worth the short commute. Nour, the owner, runs a beachfront house with four private rooms, a shared workspace in the front salon, and direct access to a quiet stretch of sand. The Wi-Fi is a 30 Mbps connection that works fine for email and documents but struggles with large file uploads. I stayed here for a month in the summer of 2023 and paid 1,400 TND, which included a twice-weekly cleaning service and use of Nour's bicycle.

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The Vibe? Slow, coastal, almost sleepy. This is where you come when you need to finish a project without distractions.
The Bill? 1,200 to 1,600 TND per month.
The Standout? Falling asleep to the sound of waves. The beach directly outside is nearly empty on weekday mornings.
The Catch? The 30 Mbps internet is adequate but not impressive. If your work involves heavy cloud-based tools, test it before committing to a full month.

Local tip: Hammam Sousse has a Thursday souk that is far less touristy than Sousse's medina market. Buy dates, spices, and handwoven baskets at a fraction of the medina prices.

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Connection to Sousse: Hammam Sousse has historically been the quieter, more residential sibling of Sousse. Its beach culture predates the tourism boom of the 1970s, and Casa Nour sits in a neighborhood that still feels like a working fishing community.


5. Appartement El Kantaoui, Port El Kantaoui

Location: Marina Bay area, Port El Kantaoui, approximately 10 kilometers north of Sousse center.

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Port El Kantaoui is the resort zone, and I will be honest, it is not where most nomads think to look for a nomad coliving Sousse setup. But Appartement El Kantaoui, a ground-floor unit in a low-rise complex near the marina, is run by a Tunisian-German digital nomad named Youssef who has been living in the area since 2019. The apartment has two bedrooms, a living room workspace, and a small pool shared with the complex. The internet is a 100 Mbps fiber line, the fastest I have personally tested in the greater Sousse area. I stayed here for a monthly stay Sousse in October 2023 and paid 2,500 TND, which is premium but includes pool access and Youssef's curated list of the best local restaurants.

The Vibe? Resort-adjacent but not resort-priced. You get the infrastructure of a tourist zone without the tourist crowds.
The Bill? 2,200 to 2,800 TND per month.
The Standout? The 100 Mbps fiber. I uploaded a 2 GB video file in under four minutes. I nearly cried.
The Catch? Port El Kantaoui is designed for package tourists, so the immediate surroundings feel artificial. You will need a scooter or taxi to reach authentic local life.

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Local tip: The marina's backstreets, away from the main tourist drag, have small Tunisian-run restaurants where a full meal costs 15 to 20 TND. Ask Youssef for his map; he has hand-drawn one.

Connection to Sousse: Port El Kantaoui was built in the late 1970s as a purpose-built tourist marina, and its white-and-blue architecture is a deliberate echo of traditional Tunisian design, even if the execution feels more theme-park than authentic.

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6. Dar Sousse Hostel & Workspace, Sousse Medina

Location: Rue Sidi Ali Karray, deep in the medina, near the Ribat of Sousse.

This is the most budget-friendly option on this list. Dar Sousse Hostel & Workspace is a converted funduq, a traditional caravanserai, that now operates as a hybrid hostel and co-working space. The dorm beds go for 35 TND per night, and private rooms start at 800 TND per month. The workspace is a ground-floor room with long communal tables, power outlets at every seat, and a 40 Mbps Wi-Fi connection. I spent two weeks here in February 2024 and found the workspace functional, if not luxurious. The owner, Mehdi, organizes a weekly "nomad dinner" on Wednesday evenings where everyone cooks together in the courtyard kitchen.

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The Vibe? Backpacker energy with a work-friendly twist. Expect to meet people from six countries before breakfast.
The Bill? 800 to 1,200 TND per month for a private room; 35 TND per night for a dorm bed.
The Standout? The Wednesday nomad dinner. It is the single best way to build a network in Sousse quickly.
The Catch? The dorm rooms are basic, thin walls, and the medina noise carries. Bring earplugs if you are a light sleeper.

Local tip: The Ribat of Sousse, a 9th-century fortress-monastery, is a three-minute walk away. Go at sunrise when it is empty and the light through the arches is extraordinary.

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Connection to Sousse: The Ribat is one of the oldest Islamic monuments in North Africa, and the funduq that now houses Dar Sousse Hostel served as a merchant's lodging for centuries. You are quite literally sleeping in a building that predates the city's modern identity.


7. Studio Les Oliviers, Kalaa Kebira Road

Location: Route de Kalaa Kebira, on the southern outskirts of Sousse, about 8 kilometers from the medina.

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This is the outlier on the list, a standalone studio apartment in a residential area that has no formal coliving structure but functions as one because the building's owner, a woman named Amel, rents exclusively to remote workers. There are four studios in the building, each with a kitchenette, a desk, and a private bathroom. The shared space is a rooftop terrace with a view of the surrounding olive groves, which is where the building's name comes from. The internet is a 60 Mbps connection that Amel upgraded specifically after her first nomad tenant complained. I rented here for a monthly stay Sousse in April 2023 and paid 1,300 TND, the cheapest private workspace I have found in the area.

The Vibe? Isolated, peaceful, almost rural. You will need to take a taxi or louage to reach the city center.
The Bill? 1,100 to 1,500 TND per month.
The Standout? The olive grove view from the rooftop. In spring, the air smells like wild thyme.
The Catch? Transportation. There is no reliable public transit on this road, and louages run infrequently after 6 p.m. Plan your grocery runs accordingly.

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Local tip: The Kalaa Kebira road passes through Tunisia's olive oil heartland. In November and December, you can buy freshly pressed oil directly from farms along the route for 18 to 22 TND per liter.

Connection to Sousse: The olive economy has defined this region for over two thousand years. The groves visible from the rooftop are part of the same agricultural landscape that fed Roman Carthage.

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8. CoWork Sousse, Sousse Corniche

Location: Boulevard de la Corniche, facing the Mediterranean, in the modern commercial district.

CoWork Sousse is the closest thing the city has to a formal co-working space, and it opened in 2022 in a renovated office building on the corniche. It operates on a membership model: 50 TND per day, 400 TND per week, or 1,200 TND per month. The space has hot desks, two private phone booths, a meeting room, a small kitchen, and a 200 Mbps fiber connection that is, without exaggeration, the most reliable internet I have used in Tunisia. I have been a member on and off since it opened and have never experienced an outage during business hours. The manager, a young Tunisian woman named Ines, runs the space with military efficiency, coffee is always fresh, the printer never jams, and the air conditioning actually works in August.

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The Vibe? Professional, clean, no-nonsense. This is where you go when you have a deadline and cannot afford distractions.
The Bill? 1,200 TND per month for unlimited access; 50 TND for a day pass.
The Standout? The 200 Mbps fiber and the phone booths. I have taken client calls in those booths without a single echo or dropout.
The Catch? It closes at 8 p.m. and is closed on weekends. If you are a night owl or need Saturday access, this will not work for you.

Local tip: The corniche directly outside has a row of small juice stands that open at 6 a.m. The fresh pomegranate juice from the third stand from the left is 4 TND and will change your morning routine.

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Connection to Sousse: The corniche is Sousse's modern face, a wide seaside boulevard built during the post-independence expansion of the 1960s and 1970s. CoWork Sousse represents the city's tentative but genuine push toward a knowledge economy.


When to Go / What to Know

Sousse is livable year-round, but the best months for a nomad coliving Sousse experience are March through May and September through November. Summer, June through August, brings temperatures above 35 degrees Celsius and a flood of European tourists that drives up short-term rental prices and makes the medina nearly impassable on weekends. Winter is mild but some of the smaller, owner-run spaces reduce their hours or close entirely in January and February.

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The Tunisian dinar is the currency, and as of my last visit, 1 euro bought roughly 3.4 TND. Most coliving spaces accept cash in dinars, and a few accept bank transfers. Very few accept credit cards directly, so carry cash or use a local ATM.

Louages, the shared white minibuses, are the cheapest way to move between Sousse and surrounding towns like Hammam Sousse and Port El Kantaoui. They depart when full, not on a schedule, and cost between 1 and 3 TND for short routes.

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Wi-Fi quality varies dramatically. Always ask for a speed test screenshot before committing to a monthly stay Sousse package. The spaces listed above have all been personally tested, but connections can degrade during peak evening hours when the neighborhood is streaming.


Frequently Asked Questions

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

A mid-tier digital nomad in Sousse can expect to spend 80 to 120 TND per day, which covers a coliving private room at 1,200 to 1,800 TND per month, two meals out at 10 to 20 TND each, local transport at 5 to 10 TND, and a coffee or two at 3 to 5 TND each. A weekly grocery run for self-catering costs roughly 40 to 60 TND. This puts a full month of comfortable nomad living at approximately 2,400 to 3,600 TND, or around 700 to 1,050 euros.

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

Most modern cafes along the corniche and in the Ville neighborhood have charging sockets at roughly half their tables. Power outages in central Sousse are infrequent, occurring perhaps two to three times per month and lasting 15 to 45 minutes. The medina cafes are less reliable, with older wiring and fewer sockets. Co-working spaces and the coliving venues listed above all have backup routers or UPS units for their internet equipment.

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

The Ville neighborhood, between the train station and the port, offers the best combination of fiber internet availability, affordable housing, and proximity to both the medina and the corniche. The Boujaafar area along the beach promenade is a close second, with slightly higher rents but better quality of life. The medina itself is atmospheric but has inconsistent infrastructure and narrow streets that complicate deliveries and taxi access.

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

Central Sousse cafes typically deliver 15 to 40 Mbps download speeds on their guest Wi-Fi, with upload speeds between 5 and 15 Mbps. Dedicated co-working spaces and the better coliving venues offer 50 to 200 Mbps download and 20 to 100 Mbps upload on fiber connections. Speeds drop by 20 to 40 percent during peak evening hours, between 7 and 10 p.m., when residential usage spikes.

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

No. Sousse does not currently have any 24/7 co-working spaces. CoWork Sousse on the corniche closes at 8 p.m. and is closed on weekends. The coliving spaces listed above, particularly Dar Rihana, Riad Zine, and Appartement El Kantaoui, allow round-the-clock access to their shared workspaces since residents come and go freely. For late-night work, your best bet is a private room in one of these coliving setups or a cafe on the corniche that stays open until midnight, though none are dedicated workspaces.

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