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

Photo by  Jane Palash

19 min read · Alanya, Turkey · co working spaces ·

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

EK

Words by

Elif Kaya

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Elif Kaya has spent the better part of four years working from coffee shops, libraries, and shared offices scattered across Alanya, and if there is one question she hears more than any other from arriving freelancers and remote workers it is this: where are the best co-working spaces in Alanya, honestly. Not the glossy Instagram cafes with a single power outlet wedged behind a plant, but the actual desks, fast Wi-Fi connections, and honest ergonomic chairs that keep your spine intact through a nine-hour editing session. This guide is the answer she wishes someone had handed her when she first touched down at Gazipasa Airport with a single suitcase, a laptop, and no plan beyond "work by the Mediterranean." Every venue listed below is a place she has personally worked from, some for entire weeks at a stretch, and everything written here reflects what she actually experienced rather than what a website promises.


How Alanya Became a Remote Worker Destination

Alanya spent decades as a package-tourism coastal town, the kind of place German and Scandinavian families returned to every summer like migrating birds. The old town clung to its fortress hill, the harbor filled with wooden gulet boats, and the main drag along Ataturk Caddesi pulsed with cheap beer and louder music than anyone really needed. That version of Alanya still exists, but something shifted around 2019 when Turkish residency rules relaxed and the lira began its long slide. Suddenly, freelancers and digital nomads from across Europe started calculating that a one-bedroom apartment on the Taurus mountain side of town could cost less than a parking space in Lisbon, and the Mediterranean was right there, fifteen minutes downhill on a municipal bus. The infrastructure followed slowly at first, then all at once. Today the shared offices Alanya offers range from converted Ottoman-era stone houses to purpose-built modern floors in new commercial buildings near the city center. What makes the city different from the more obvious remote-worker hubs in Turkey, like Istanbul or Antalya, is its scale. Alanya is small enough that you meet the same faces in co-working spaces within days, which means the community tightens fast and recommendations travel by word of mouth rather than through algorithmic feeds. The town also benefits from a climate that genuinely supports outdoor work for nine months of the year, something that sounds trivial until you have tried to work through an Istanbul February in a poorly heated apartment.

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Alanya Halk Kutuphanesi (Alanya Public Library)

On Inonu Caddesi, just a few hundred meters south of the central bazaar, the Alanya Halk Kutuphanesi occupies a modern municipal building that most tourists walk past without a second glance. Inside, the upper floor has a dedicated quiet study hall with long wooden tables, overhead fluorescent lighting, and a surprising number of wall outlets installed along the baseboards. This is not a co-working space in any formal sense, offers no membership tiers, and does not advertise itself as such, but it has become the de facto free workspace for a rotating cast of freelancers who discovered that the Wi-Fi password is posted behind the front desk and the chairs are more comfortable than half the paid desks in town. The library opens at 8:00 and closes at 22:00 on weekdays, which gives remote workers a full window that most cafes cannot match. On weekday mornings between 9:00 and noon, the study room is quiet enough for phone calls as long as you keep your voice low, and the only real disturbance is the occasional retiree paging through a newspaper at the far end of the hall. The institution connects to Alanya's civic identity in a way that often surprises newcomers, because this is a town where municipal services are genuinely valued and well-maintained, and the library is treated by locals as a point of pride rather than an afterthought. One detail most tourists miss entirely is the small archive room on the ground floor, which holds local Ottoman-era documents and early Republican-era photographs of the city that even many lifelong Alanya residents have never seen. Having this kind of history humming beneath your feet while you answer emails is a peculiar pleasure that no private co-working space can replicate. Arrive before 10:00 on weekdays to claim a table near an outlet, and plan to take your lunch break in the courtyard garden where a boxed orange tree and a single bench sit in full sun.


Hera Beach Hotel Co-Working and Café Area

Moving westward along the coastline, the Hera Beach Hotel in the Tosmur district has quietly developed one of the most unusual hybrid work setups in the area. The hotel built a small open-air pavilion right above its private beach section, furnished with wooden tables, overhead fans, and Wi-Fi that extends from the hotel's main router to cover the seating area with a reliable signal. You do not need to be a hotel guest to use this space, though the first time the staff may ask; after a brief conversation they usually point you toward the café counter and let you settle in. The menu is standard hotel fare, grilled dishes and salads during the day, but the Turkish breakfast spread served until 11:30 is extensive enough to serve as a combined morning meal and working lunch. Pull a portion of the menemen and a few slices of beyaz peynir out of the shared trays and you are set until mid-afternoon. Tosmur itself sits along the coastal road between Alanya proper and the newer development districts, and its character is split between the older citrus groves that still line some back streets and the apartment complexes that have risen in their place over the last decade. Working from the Hera's pavilion, you can see both realities simultaneously, the remaining orange trees on one side and the cranes on the other. The area has a personal significance for longtime Alanya residents because it represents the rapid transformation of what was, within living memory, a miles-long stretch of farmland. The mornings here are golden, literally, because the east-facing position catches full sunlight from sunrise until almost noon, so bring sunglasses for your screen. The main drawback is that weekend guests sometimes take over the pavilion with families, and the noise level can spike sharply between 14:00 and 16:00 on Saturdays, which is when she tends to relocate to a backup spot. Still, for a Tuesday or Wednesday morning, there are few better places to open a laptop with salt air hitting your face.

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Mutfak Sanatlari (Culinary Arts Academy) Area Workshops and Shared Tables

In the old-town area just below Alanya Castle, on one of the narrow cobblestoned streets off Muftuler Sokak, the building that houses what was once the Mutfak Sanatlari culinary workshops has evolved over the years into an informal gathering spot for local creatives. The ground-floor reception area and adjacent terrace, which is open to the public during daytime hours, has fast Wi-Fi and a handful of tables where freelancers and local designers sit side by side. This is not a dedicated co-working space by any stretch, but in deep winter, from November through February, when many of the seasonal cafes close or reduce their hours, this spot stays warm, stays open, and stays quiet. Order a strong çay from the small preparation kitchen and settle into one of the cushioned rattan chairs that were originally acquired for cooking-class participants. The building's own history ties into Alanya's slow reinvention from a fishing and agricultural town into one that funds cultural education and trades training, and the faded posters on the interior walls advertise programs going back nearly two decades. The people you encounter here tend to be locals, aging artists, young people studying tourism management, and the occasional expat who wandered in by mistake and stayed for the atmosphere. One unpublicised detail: the terrace gets afternoon breezes that work through the old stone archways in a way that functions as natural air conditioning, and in July and August, when the rest of the Old Town feels like an oven, this shaded perch can be ten degrees cooler. The local tip is to try arriving after 14:00 when the workshop sessions wind down and the space empties out. Parking in the Old Town is an absolute impossibility during any hour that ends in "day," so take the minibus up from the center and walk the last five minutes.


Workinton Alanya, Shared Offices Alanya

The closest thing Alanya has to a conventional, branded co-working operation opened its doors in late 2022 on a floor of a commercial building along Saraçlar Sokak in the city center. Marketed explicitly to freelancers, remote workers, and small business owners, the space offers what the industry calls a "hot desk Alanya" arrangement alongside monthly membership tiers, and the setup includes a dedicated meeting room, a kitchenette with a coffee machine, and fiber-optic internet that consistently tests above 80 megabits per second for downloads. The interior is all clean lines, white walls, and cheap ergonomic chairs that are adequate if not luxurious, the kind of design that signals productivity without trying too hard to impress. A hot desk runs roughly 600 to 800 Turkish lira per day at the time of writing, while a monthly coworking membership Alanya residents or long-term visitors can use comes in around 5,000 to 7,000 lira depending on whether you want a fixed desk, access to the meeting room included, or just the floating hot-desk option. These prices fluctuate with the lira, so confirm directly before committing. The staff speak basic English and better Turkish, and the morning crowd is a mix of Turkish remote workers employed by European companies and a handful of European nomads who chose Alanya specifically because Istanbul's co-working prices tripled in three years. This place matters to Alanya's story because it represents the town's first real concession to the fact that remote work is not a tourist fad here but an economic driver, and the space has hosted at least two small startup launches since opening. Come weekday mornings for the best desk selection, and bring your own preferred coffee mug because the ones provided are small and thin. The reception area gets congested around 10:00 when everyone arrives simultaneously, and the queue for the coffee machine can eat into your first productive hour.

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Rhapsody Bar and Lounge, Aspendos Boulevard

Further along the coastal road toward the airport, on Aspendos Bulvari in the Mahmutlar district, Rhapsody operates as a bar and lounge that during the day functions better than it probably should as a work environment. The large ground-floor interior has long tables, a surprisingly reliable 5-gigahertz Wi-Fi network, and a kitchen that serves a competent version of a Turkish-style avocado toast alongside the usual range of sandwiches and fresh juices. In the off-season, from October through April, the daytime crowd is thin enough that you can claim a corner table near the window and work for several hours with minimal interruption. The drink menu in the afternoon leans heavily toward fresh-squeezed juices and a solid cappuccino, and the staff do not hover or pressure you to order more, which is a problem at several other cafes along this stretch. Mahmutlar itself is Alanya's expansion zone, a district that doubled in population in less than a decade and where the tension between rapid construction and genuine community-building is visible on every block. The neighborhood's main boulevard is lined with supermarkets, pharmacies, phone repair shops, and the occasional bakery that still bakes pide from scratch, and it has a walkable, lived-in feeling that the resort-heavy west side of town sometimes lacks. The local tip here is to head to the back section of the lounge, past the main bar, where a smaller room with a few tables gets almost no foot traffic during daytime hours. This back room also has the building's only air-conditioning unit that works consistently in summer, so in July it becomes a sought-after refuge. The drawback is that after 18:00 on Fridays and Saturdays the music volume increases substantially, transforming the space from workable to unusable.


Dine Fine Restaurant and Lounge, Near Cleopatra Beach

On the narrow street that descends from Ataturk Caddesi toward Cleopatra Beach, Dine Fine occupies a two-story stone building with a rooftop terrace that wraps around three sides and offers a view of the sea so close you can hear waves breaking against the breakwater. During the off-season and during weekday mornings, the rooftop is nearly empty of dining guests, and the staff are comfortable with freelancers spreading out with laptops and ordering tea by the pot rather than a full meal. The food menu is slightly elevated from standard tourist fare, the grilled sea bream is fresh and well-seasoned, and the mixed hot meze plate works as both a meal and a long lunch that justifies staying through the afternoon. Order the hummus and the fried eggplant and ask for both to be brought together with lavaş bread. The Wi-Fi signal is strongest on the rooftop's west side, and the download speeds measured there consistently hit 40 to 50 megabits, which is adequate for video calls if you keep your camera off during peak lunch hours. The building sits within the historical commercial spine of Alanya, a lane that has hosted traders and fishermen since before the Seljuk era, and standing on the rooftop you can see the Red Tower (Kizil Kule) immediately to your north, that iconic octagonal structure from 1226 that has become the symbol of the city itself. The area's connection to Alanya's maritime and defensive history is hard to miss when your desk faces that direction. The best times to work here are weekdays between 9:00 and 14:00, before the lunch crowd arrives. The staircase to the rooftop is steep and narrow, carrying a laptop bag up three flights of stone steps is not comfortable and is the kind of detail no online listing will mention. Despite this, the view more than compensates, and on a clear day you can see across to the mountain villages inland.

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Kırmızı Cafe Tırpani, Incekum

Out past the main built-up area, on the road toward the Incekum nature park and the village of Tırpani, Kırmızı Cafe sits at the edge of a citrus grove with a terrace that overlooks the plain stretching toward the Taurus Mountains. This is the kind of spot that does not appear on any Turkish co-working directory but has hosted writers, photographers, and at least one documentary filmmaker during its off-season quiet periods. The Wi-Fi is decent, roughly 20 to 30 megabits download on most days, and the owner installed a small solar panel array on the roof that keeps the refrigerator and router running even during the power outages that occasionally hit this rural stretch. The menu is simple, menemen, tost, fresh orange juice squeezed on request, and the owner's wife occasionally prepares a home-style güveç stew in the afternoon if she has been cooking anyway. Tırpani village itself has a long history of citrus cultivation, and the groves surrounding the cafe were planted by families who have worked this land for three or four generations, though the pace of land sales to developers has accelerated sharply in the past five years. Sitting at one of the outdoor tables, you watch this tension play out in real time, tractors passing on dirt roads while new apartment foundations take shape on the hillside beyond. The local tip: the cafe is about a 25-minute ride from central Alanya on a dolmuş (shared minibus) that departs from the main terminal near the bazaar, and the last vehicle back to town usually leaves Tırpani by around 19:30, so plan your return accordingly. The terrace seating gets direct sun from mid-morning onward and in summer there is minimal shade, so this spot really works best from November through April. Even during cooler months, bring a hat. If you need to make an important video call, let the owner know in advance and he will move you near the router inside, where the signal is strongest and the dog of the house is least likely to bark.


Keyif Café, Near Alanya Marina

At the waterfront near the yacht marina on Alanya's south side, Keyif Café occupies a glass-walled space that catches light from three directions and offers a view of the harbor where gulets and small fishing boats bob alongside the occasional visiting sailboat. The café has operated in various forms for over a decade, predating the current co-working trend by a wide margin, and its longevity alone makes it worth mentioning in a town where many businesses fold within a season or two. The interior tables along the window wall have power outlets, the Wi-Fi is provided by the marina's commercial connection and is more stable than most café networks in the area, and the espresso machine produces a decent double shot that goes for around 75 lira. A full breakfast plate with eggs, cheeses, olives, honey, and bread runs approximately 250 to 300 lira, which is fair for the location. The marina area carries the DNA of old Alanya in its DNA, because this waterfront was the heart of the town's economy for centuries before tourism arrived. The fleet of gulets you see lined up along the quay still depports on day-trips to nearby caves and beaches, and the fish market adjacent to the harbor operates every morning at dawn. Working here, you are layering a contemporary digital routine over centuries of maritime livelihood, and the juxtaposition never quite gets old. Arrive before 9:30 on weekdays to get a window seat, because the yacht-owning crowd and the retired expats who make a ritual of their morning coffee both tend to claim the best spots by 10:00. One downside: the restroom situation is limited to a single small unit, and lines form during the brief rush between 11:00 and 11:30 when the breakfast crowd peaks.

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When to Go and What to Know

Alanya's co-working calendar follows the same rhythm as its tourism calendar, and understanding that overlap will save you significant frustration. From mid-June through August, every public and semi-public space in central Alanya fills up with seasonal visitors, and daytime noise levels in cafes and shared areas spike accordingly. The sweet spot for serious remote work runs from late October through mid-May, when temperatures are manageable, crowds thin out, and the town reclaims its local character. During Ramadan, however, many cafés and shared spaces either close early or reduce their service hours, so check schedules during that period. The Turkish lira continues to fluctuate significantly, which means prices quoted in this guide may shift by the time you read it, and paying for coworking memberships Alanya venues offer is almost always cheaper in lira cash than by credit card, where a markup sometimes applies. Internet outages are rare in the city center but do occur in outlying neighborhoods, especially Tırpani and the rural stretches toward Gündogmus, so if your work depends on a constant connection, carry a mobile hotspot with a local SIM as backup. Turkcell and Vodafone both offer prepaid data packages, a 10-gigabyte package costs approximately 200 to 250 lira and can be purchased at any phone shop with a passport. Finally, the social fabric of Alanya's co-working scene is tighter than you might expect in a town of this size, introduce yourself to the person at the next desk, learn their name, accept the inevitable offer of çay, and you will find that the professional network you build here pays dividends for months.


Frequently Asked Questions

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

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In central Alanya, roughly half of the cafés and restaurants along Ataturk Caddesi and the marina district have charging sockets at or near tables, though availability thins out sharply in older buildings in the castle district. Power outages occur a few times per month in some outer neighborhoods, and venues on Saraçlar Sokak and the center are UPS-equipped; rural areas like Tırpani have less consistent backup. Carry a portable power bank rated above 10,000 mAh for any work session outside the city core.

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

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A mid-tier daily budget in Alanya runs approximately 2,500 to 3,500 Turkish lira (roughly 75 to 110 US dollars at recent exchange rates), covering a one-bedroom apartment rental averaged monthly to a daily rate of about 700 to 1,000 lira, meals from local cafés at 300 to 600 lira per day, a daily hot desk at 600 to 800 lira, local transport by dolmus at 30 to 50 lira per ride, and a coffee and miscellaneous expenses budget of roughly 200 to 300 lira. Peak summer months push accommodation costs up by 20 to 40 percent.

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

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Alanya does not have any dedicated 24-hour co-working facilities at present. The Alanya Public Library stays open until 22:00 on weekdays, and a handful of cafés along Ataturk Caddesi and near the marina operate until midnight, but neither category provides the power-backup or dedicated desk infrastructure that late-night workers need. For after-midnight sessions, working from your accommodation with a mobile hotspot remains the most practical solution.

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

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The Saraçlar Sokak and Inonu Caddesi corridor in central Alanya is the most reliable because of its concentration of shared offices Alanya clients can access, stable fiber-optic internet infrastructure, proximity to the public library, and walkable access to groceries, pharmacies, and transport. The area around the marina ranks second for reliability, and Tosmur offers a quieter alternative but with fewer backup options if an internet connection drops.

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

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In the central co-working spaces along Saraçlar Sokak, download speeds range from 60 to 100 megabits per second and upload speeds from 15 to 30 megabits on fiber connections. Standard cafés along Ataturk Caddesi and the marina area average 25 to 50 megabits down and 5 to 15 megabits up on shared Wi-Fi. Rural venues in areas like Tırpani typically deliver 15 to 30 megabits down, with uploads often below 10 megabits, and are less consistent during evening hours when household usage in the surrounding area peaks.

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