# Coworking spaces in Chiang Mai: where nomads get work done

> A practical guide to coworking Chiang Mai — the best spaces in Nimman and the old city, day pass and monthly prices, wifi, and the community payoff.

Chiang Mai has been near the top of every digital nomad's shortlist for over a decade, and a big part of why is the work infrastructure. Fast internet, cheap coffee, and a deep bench of **coworking spaces** mean you can land here and be productive by your second morning. The hard part isn't finding somewhere to work — it's choosing.

## Why Chiang Mai is a coworking mecca

The city runs on a virtuous loop: cheap rent and a steady stream of [remote workers](/blog/digital-nomad-chiang-mai) keep new spaces opening, and the competition keeps quality high and prices low. You'll find everything from no-frills desk farms to polished offices with phone booths and barista bars. Just as importantly, the **internet is genuinely good** — fibre is widespread, and most serious spaces run backup connections so a thunderstorm doesn't kill your video call. Pair a space with a [local SIM and a data plan](/blog/sim-card-internet-chiang-mai) and you've got redundancy most home offices would envy.

![Coworking spaces in Chiang Mai: where nomads get work done](/blog/coworking-spaces-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## The main areas

**Nimman** (Nimmanhaemin) is the undisputed hub — a leafy grid of cafés, condos and coworking just west of the old city, where most nomads end up basing themselves. It's walkable, well-caffeinated, and dense with options, which is why so many people who are [settling in](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai) start their search here.

The **old city**, inside the moat, suits anyone who wants temples and street food on their lunch break. And **Santitham**, the scruffier neighbourhood just north of Nimman, is where budget-minded long-stayers cluster — cheaper rooms, local markets, and a few quieter spaces.

## The spaces worth knowing

**Punspace** is the original, open since 2013, with branches at Tha Phae Gate (old city), Wiang Kaew and Nimman. A monthly pass gets you fingerprint-secured **24-hour access** across locations, plus regular community events — day passes run roughly 250–350 THB. **Yellow** sits in the thick of Nimman and is a perennial favourite for its bright, social feel, though it sits at the pricier end. **Hub53**, also on Nimmanhaemin, has the most corporate polish: proper meeting rooms, phone booths, a reception desk, and one of the better-value day passes in town.

For something more design-led, **Alt_Chiang Mai** pitches itself as the premium option — quiet, comfortable, and priced to match at around 4,000 THB a month. **Mana**, **Heartwork** and Santitham's smaller hideaways round out the spectrum if you want calm over buzz. And then there's **CAMP** on the fifth floor of Maya mall: open **24 hours**, free to sit in, with a buy-a-drink wifi model (a 50-baht order gets you online). It's enormous, social, and the default late-night and weekend backup when everywhere else has locked up — just take the side lift when the mall is shut.

As a rule of thumb, expect **day passes around 150–300 THB** and **monthly hot-desk memberships in the 2,000–4,000 THB range**. When you compare, look past the desk: reliable backup wifi, strong air-con, a bookable meeting room, 24-hour entry, decent coffee, and an events calendar are what separate a space you tolerate from one you look forward to. For a sense of how this slots into your overall budget, our [cost of living guide](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai) puts the numbers in context.

## Cafés, and the honest trade-offs

There's a middle ground worth naming. Chiang Mai's [café scene](/blog/coffee-around-nimman) is so strong that plenty of people skip memberships entirely and rotate between [work-friendly cafés](/blog/work-friendly-cafes-chiang-mai), nursing a 60-baht latte instead of paying a day rate. It's cheaper and flexible — but you trade away the reliable wifi, the dedicated chair, the air-con you can't argue with, and crucially the **community**. Coworking's real dividend isn't the desk; it's the people. The lunch invitations, the skill-shares, the "what visa run are you doing?" chats — that's how a lot of nomads end up [making friends](/blog/making-friends-chiang-mai) here, and it's the same warmth we try to build into life at the house. If you're arriving on your own, a coworking space is one of the easiest first footholds — something we go into more in our [honest guide to solo female travel in Chiang Mai](/blog/solo-female-travel-chiang-mai).

Our honest take: if you're here for more than a couple of weeks, buy a monthly pass at one space you like and keep a café or two in rotation for variety. You get the focus and the social safety net without feeling tied to a single room.

Wherever you plug in, you'll quickly notice that working in Chiang Mai rarely feels like work in the grim sense. Close the laptop and a night market, a mountain temple, or a bowl of khao soi is ten minutes away — which is, after all, why you came.
