
Discover 81 nomad-tested spots with fast Wi-Fi and accessible outlets in Barcelona.
CRAI Biblioteca de Fons Antic Universitat de Barcelona UB

Biblioteca Josep Laporte
Ilustre Colegio de la Abogacía de Barcelona - ICAB
Depósito de las Aguas
Biblioteca Ignasi Iglésias - Can Fabra
Biblioteca Barceloneta - La Fraternitat
CRAI UPF Biblioteca de la Ciudadela
CRAI Biblioteca de Filosofía, Geografía e Historia Universidad de Barcelona
Biblioteca Francesca Bonnemaison
Biblioteca Sant Antoni - Joan Oliver
Barcelona remains Spain's most internationally networked city for remote work, with a dense concentration of coworking spaces, coliving options, startup events, and digital nomad meetups. Key neighborhoods for working nomads include Poblenou — Barcelona's repurposed industrial district and 22@ innovation zone — which hosts dozens of tech firms and coworking hubs within walking distance of the beach. Gràcia offers a more bohemian alternative with independent cafés and plazas, while L'Eixample and El Born provide central options with excellent metro access. Notable coworking spaces include MOB (Makers of Barcelona), betaHaus Barcelona in Gràcia with six floors and multiple terraces, and Aticco Workspaces with a rooftop pool. Day passes typically run €19–€30, and monthly hot-desk memberships cost €150–€350 depending on the space.
Fiber-optic internet is ubiquitous throughout the city, and speeds of 300+ Mbps are standard in coworking spaces. Cost of living is the highest of any Spanish city on this list: a one-bedroom apartment in central Barcelona (Eixample, Gràcia, Born) typically runs €1,100–€1,800/month, with more affordable options in Poblenou or Sant Martí from around €900. Nomads on Spain's Digital Nomad Visa will find Barcelona's international infrastructure — multiple consulates, English-speaking accountants, immigration lawyers — makes the application process straightforward. Barcelona also has direct routes to virtually every major European city via El Prat airport, plus AVE rail to Madrid (2.5 hours) and the French border.
The downside of Barcelona is well-documented: short-term rental restrictions have tightened significantly since 2023, making furnished apartment hunting competitive, and tourist-heavy areas like Barceloneta or the Gothic Quarter are not conducive to focused work. Serious nomads gravitate toward Poblenou or Gràcia for a better quality-of-life-to-cost ratio. Despite its cost, Barcelona's combination of professional network density, language diversity, and Mediterranean lifestyle keeps it at the top of most European nomad rankings.