Best Coworking Spaces in Alicante for Remote Workers (2026)
Where to actually get work done in Alicante and along the Costa Blanca, from the city centre to the coastal towns.
If you have just moved to Alicante to work remotely, your apartment wifi and the corner café will only get you so far. At some point you want a proper desk, a quiet room for video calls, and a few faces you recognise. The good news is that the coworking scene here is better than people expect for a city this size, and it stretches well beyond the centre into the coastal towns. Here are the spaces we think are actually worth your money, grouped by where they are so you can pick by neighbourhood.
In the city centre
If you want to walk to work and keep client meetings easy, stay central. These three are all within a short walk of Avenida Maisonnave and the main shopping streets.
WAO Coworking is the one we send most newcomers to first. It sits on the first floor of a building right on Avenida Maisonnave, so you are in the middle of everything. It is bright and modern, the wifi holds up for calls, and the thing people keep mentioning is the community. Folks here actually talk to each other and grab coffee together, which matters a lot when you are new in town. A 5-star rating from 60-odd reviewers is hard to argue with.
V11 Coworking on Calle Santiago is the opposite energy, and that is the point. This one is about private offices and virtual office services rather than a big open room. If you do focused work and find open-plan spaces distracting, this is your spot. It is a few steps from the main shopping streets and transport, so meetings are still easy.
terretUp on Calle Italia lands somewhere in between. It is modern but relaxed, with good natural light and proper meeting rooms, and it pulls in a friendly mix of freelancers and small teams. With well over 100 reviews it is one of the more established options near the centre.
In the old town
Prefer narrow streets, café terraces, and a bit more character? The casco antiguo has two spaces with real personality.
ULab sits on Plaça de San Cristóbal in the heart of the old town and has the deepest track record of any space on this list, with more than 300 reviews. It leans into community, with regular events and workshops, so it is a good pick if you want to actually meet people rather than just rent a chair.
El Taller de la Flor on Carrer Jerusalem is the small, characterful option. It is a restored space with exposed brick and a creative feel, and it stays intimate rather than corporate. If you like working somewhere that has a soul to it, start here.
By the marina
Sky Coworking runs along the Rambla de Méndez Núñez, near the marina, and the selling point is in the name: you get a view while you work. Reviews are more mixed than the centre spots, so go take a look in person before committing to a longer desk, but the location is genuinely hard to beat if you want the sea nearby.
Regus in the Business World Alicante building is the corporate, no-surprises choice. Hot desks, private offices, meeting rooms, drop-in flexibility. It is not the place for community vibes, but if you are a business traveller or you just want a reliable professional setup with no long commitment, it does exactly that.
Beyond the city
Plenty of remote workers on the Costa Blanca are not actually in Alicante city. If you are based up or down the coast, these are worth the short trip.
Sun and Co in Xàbia (Jávea) is the best-known name on this list internationally, and for good reason. It is a coliving and coworking space rolled into one, with fast wifi, a sunny terrace, and a genuinely international crowd of nomads from across Europe. If you want the full live-and-work-with-other-nomads experience, this is the one.
Hubitat Mutxamel is about 20 minutes from the city centre and feels more like working from a friend's nice house than an office. Reliable internet, comfortable seating, and a real local community of entrepreneurs. A good shout if you live north of the city and want to skip the commute.
Genion Lab is further inland in Petrer, with a perfect 5-star reputation among the local crowd. It mixes focus and creative energy, and the internet is solid. If you have settled in the interior rather than on the coast, it is your best base.
How to pick
Most of these offer day passes, so do not overthink it. Try two or three before you commit to a monthly desk. Go central (WAO or terretUp) if you want convenience and easy meetings, old town (ULab or El Taller de la Flor) if you want character and community, and Sun and Co if you want the full nomad-coliving life. Then settle in.
You can see all of these side by side, with photos, ratings, and contact details, on our coworking directory. And if you are still sorting out the paperwork side of remote life here, read our Spain digital nomad visa guide next.