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How to Find Your Working Base in Playa del Carmen

How to find the right coworking space, cafe, or home setup for remote work in Playa del Carmen. What to test, when to commit, and the approach that works.

4 min read Work Updated Apr 2026

How to find a good coworking space or cafe to work from in Playa del Carmen

Finding your working base in Playa del Carmen is one of the first things to sort if you work remotely. Where you work affects your productivity, your social life, and how quickly the city starts to feel like home. The right setup depends on how you work, what you need for calls, and whether you value community or quiet focus.


Coworking spaces: when to use them

A coworking space makes sense if you take regular video calls, need consistent fast internet, or want the social environment of working around others. The infrastructure is reliable and purpose-built for remote work.

What to look for when finding your working base in Playa del Carmen

  • WiFi speed and stability. 50 Mbps minimum. The best spaces offer 100+. Ask to run a speed test before committing.
  • Phone booths or private rooms. Essential if you have calls. Open floor plans are bad for video meetings.
  • A/C. Non-negotiable from May through October.
  • Location. The closer to your apartment, the more you will actually go. A five-minute walk beats a twenty-minute commute every time.
  • Community. Some spaces host events, have active Slack channels, and attract a regular crowd. Others are quiet and transactional. Both are fine. Know which you want.

Pricing

  • Day pass: 250 to 400 pesos
  • Weekly pass: 800 to 1,500 pesos
  • Monthly hot desk: 2,500 to 4,500 pesos
  • Monthly dedicated desk: 4,000 to 6,000 pesos

Most spaces offer a free trial day. Use it before buying a monthly pass.

Coworking spaces worth trying

Nest Coworking. One of the most established spaces in Playa. Strong WiFi, private meeting rooms, phone booths, and an active community. The crowd is a solid mix of nomads, founders, and remote teams. Central location makes it walkable from most apartments in Centro and Zazil-Ha. Monthly and day pass options available.

Bunker Coworking. A reliable, no-nonsense space with good infrastructure and a quieter atmosphere than Nest. Phone booths for calls, comfortable desks, and consistent internet. Best for people who want to sit down, focus, and leave without the social layer. Solid option if productivity matters more than community.

Terminal Cowork. A newer space that has gained popularity quickly. Modern design, fast internet, and a rooftop area for breaks. The community is growing and the events calendar is active. Monthly rates are competitive with the other options.

Try all three if you can. Each has a different energy. The one that fits your working style will be obvious within a day.


Cafes: when they work better

Cafes work well for focused solo work, writing, design, and tasks that do not require video calls. The atmosphere is more varied than coworking, the cost is lower (just buy drinks), and the change of scenery helps with creative work.

What makes a cafe work-friendly

  • WiFi above 15 Mbps and stable
  • Outlets near seating areas
  • Comfortable seating for two to three hours
  • Relaxed attitude toward laptop workers
  • A/C or good airflow

Not every popular cafe meets these criteria. Test before you settle in for a full morning. Ah Cacao, Ojo de Agua, and several smaller spots in Centro and Zazil-Ha are proven options.


Working from home

If your apartment has reliable internet (30+ Mbps consistently) and a quiet environment, home can be your primary workspace. The risks are isolation and the lack of separation between work and personal space. Most experienced remote workers in Playa use home as their main base and a coworking space or cafe one to two days per week for variety.


The approach that works for finding your working base in Playa del Carmen

Week one

Try one coworking space and two cafes. Test your apartment WiFi thoroughly. Note which environment makes you most productive.

Week two

Commit to a primary workspace and one backup. Set your default schedule: where you go on which days.

Week three onward

Refine. You know your routine now. Upgrade to a monthly coworking pass if you use it enough, or settle into a cafe rotation that works. The goal is to stop thinking about where to work and start just working.

The test that works

If you get through a full workday without thinking about your internet, your seating, or the noise level, you have found the right spot. If any of those things distract you, keep looking.

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