One of the world’s original remote-work hubs - the best coworking spaces and laptop-friendly cafes in Nimman, the Old City and Santitham, with typical day and monthly rates, internet and power, 24/7 options and which neighbourhood to base yourself in.
Chiang Mai helped invent the modern digital-nomad lifestyle, and remote work is woven into the city. The Nimmanhaemin (Nimman) district beside the university is the epicentre - dozens of laptop-friendly cafes, several dedicated coworking spaces and coliving hubs, fast fibre and a large, social international community. Whether you want a quiet dedicated desk, a 24-hour space or just a good cafe with strong wifi, here is how remote work fits together in Chiang Mai, grouped into dedicated spaces, cafes, and the practical details.
One of Chiang Mai's original and best-known coworking brands, with a quiet, productivity-focused Nimman location and a second site near Tha Phae Gate in the Old City. Fast fibre, meeting rooms, hot desks and a long-running international member community make it a default first stop for newly arrived nomads.
A large, modern Nimman space popular for its 24-hour member access, dedicated desks, phone booths, event programming and on-site cafe. Good for founders and remote employees who want reliable infrastructure, a social scene and the option to work late.
A calm, design-forward coworking space in the Nimman area favoured by creatives and writers for its greenery, natural light and quieter atmosphere. Hot desks, private offices and meeting rooms with a more boutique feel than the bigger hubs.
A community-oriented space that pairs coworking with coliving and regular social and skills events, drawing a tight-knit nomad crowd. A strong pick for solo remote workers who want a ready-made network as much as a desk.
A purpose-built coliving and coworking property aimed at remote professionals, bundling accommodation, work space, fast internet and community into one membership. Popular with people who want to land, plug in and meet others quickly.
Chiang Mai has several coworking-plus-coliving hubs in and around Nimman that combine private rooms, shared work areas and community events on flexible weekly or monthly terms - a convenient all-in-one base for a multi-month stay while you settle on an area.
A huge, 24-hour laptop-friendly cafe on an upper floor of the Maya shopping centre at the top of Nimman - free to use with a modest food or drink purchase (a top-up card system applies overnight). An institution of the Chiang Mai nomad scene and ideal for flexible, no-commitment work.
Nimmanhaemin is wall-to-wall with speciality-coffee shops that welcome laptops, many with strong wifi, plugs and air-conditioning. Cafe-hopping is a genuine remote-work strategy here; just be mindful of peak hours and buy as you go to keep your table.
Beyond Nimman, the Old City and neighbouring Santitham have a growing set of relaxed, affordable cafes that suit quieter, lower-cost working days closer to budget accommodation - handy if you are based on that side of the moat.
Coworking day passes commonly run from roughly THB 150-250, with monthly hot-desk memberships around THB 2,500-4,000 and dedicated desks higher. Cafes are effectively pay-as-you-go through what you order. Confirm current rates directly, as pricing and membership tiers change.
Chiang Mai has fast, cheap fibre, and coworking spaces typically advertise strong, stable connections with backup and plenty of outlets. For mobile work, local SIM and pocket-wifi data is inexpensive - useful for cafe days and travel around the north.
Nimman is the undisputed nomad core - the highest density of coworking, cafes and community sits here. The Old City suits walkable, culture-led living, while Santitham offers the best central value. See the Chiang Mai area guides to match a base to your budget and routine.
Many remote workers now use the Destination Thailand Visa (DTV), designed for digital nomads and long-stay visitors, to base in Chiang Mai for extended periods. Check current eligibility and conditions before committing to a multi-month stay.
It depends on your style. Punspace is the classic, productivity-focused choice with Nimman and Old City sites; Yellow Coworking suits people who want 24/7 access and a social scene; Heartwork is quieter and design-led; and Mana, Alt_ChiangMai and similar hubs combine coworking with coliving and community for solo nomads.
Day passes typically run around THB 150-250, with monthly hot-desk memberships roughly THB 2,500-4,000 and dedicated desks more. Laptop-friendly cafes like CAMP are effectively free with a purchase. Always confirm current pricing directly, as rates change.
Nimman (Nimmanhaemin) is the heart of the scene, with the highest concentration of coworking spaces, speciality cafes and community. CAMP at Maya is a famous 24-hour cafe option, and many nomads mix dedicated coworking with cafe-hopping across Nimman, the Old City and Santitham.
Yes. Chiang Mai has fast, inexpensive fibre, and coworking spaces advertise strong, stable connections with ample power outlets. Cheap mobile data makes cafe and travel days easy too, which is part of why the city is one of the world's original remote-work hubs.
In-depth Chiang Mai coworking guide · Nimman area guide · Getting around Chiang Mai · Chiang Mai city hub · Visas & the DTV
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Hero photo by MART PRODUCTION on Pexels. General information only; coworking venues, hours, prices and membership terms change - confirm current details directly with each space.