Hi all!
Does anybody know of any coworking space in Zadar, Croatia? (Or just some calm place with (free) WiFi to work from?)
Thank you
⭐️ Overall Score | 3.28/5 (Rank #267) |
👍 Quality of life score | Okay |
👶 Family score | Okay |
💵 Cost | 😙 Affordable: $1,880 / mo |
📡 Internet | 🏎 Fast: 20Mbps (avg) |
😝 Fun | Bad |
⛅️ Temperature (now) | 🥶 Too cold: 9°C49°F (feels 9°C48°F) |
💦 Humidity (now) | 😊 Comfy: 52% |
💨 Air quality (now) | 🌱 Great: 34 US AQI |
👌 Safety | Good |
🎓 Education level | High |
💰 Income level | Very Low: $12,159/y |
🙊 English speaking | Okay |
🚶 Walkability | Great |
✌️ Peace (no pol. conflict) | Good |
🚦 Traffic safety | Okay |
🏥 Hospitals | Bad |
😄 Happiness | Okay |
🍸 Nightlife | Bad |
📶 Free WiFi in city | Good |
🖥 Places to work from | Great |
❄️ A/C or heating | Good |
😁 Friendly to foreigners | Good |
🗯 Freedom of speech | Good |
🤚🏿🤚🏻 Racial tolerance | Bad |
👩 Female friendly | Good |
🌈 LGBTQ+ friendly | Bad |
🎅 Startup Score | Okay |
🌍 Region | Europe |
🚩 Country | Croatia |
⏱ Average trip duration | 4 days |
📡 Internet speed (avg) | 20 Mbps |
⛅️ Weather (now) | ☀️ 9°C 49°F + 😊 Comfy (52%) = feels 9°C 48°F |
💨 Air quality (now) | 👍 34 US AQI 🍃 good |
🔌 Power | 230V50Hz |
🚀 Upcoming neighborhood | Zadar |
🚕 Best taxi app (in country) | |
🚑 Travel medical insurance | ![]() |
📱 Best wireless carrier | Vip |
💸 10 HRK in USD | USD 1.57 |
🏧 Suggested ATM take out: | HRK 1,000 = USD 157 |
💸 Tipping | No |
💳 Cashless society | 💳 Yes, cards OK almost everywhere |
💻 Best coworking space | Coin Zadar |
☕️ Best coffee place | Novi Caffe |
🚰 Safe tap water | 👌 Yes, drinkable |
♻️ Return rate | 7% of visitors return |
👨👩👧👦 Population | 72,000 people |
👨👩👧👦 GDP per Capita | $12,159 / year |
🏞 Foreign land ownership allowed | Yes |
⛪️ Religious government | Non-religious |
💻 Online electronics shop | Nabava |
🏠 Apartment listings | Airbnb |
✈️ Best short-haul air carrier | Easy Jet |
✈️ Best int'l air carrier | Croatia Airlines |
🏥 Best hospital | General Hospital Zadar |
💵 Cost of living for nomad | $1,880 / month |
💵 Cost of living for expat | $1,037 / month |
💵 Cost of living for family | $1,431 / month |
💵 Cost of living for local | $409 / month |
🏠 1br studio rent in center | $319 / month |
🏢 Coworking | $360 / month |
🏨 Hotel | $1,328 / month |
🏨 Hotel | $62 / night |
🏠 Airbnb (289 listings) | $2,475 / month |
🏠 Airbnb | $81 / night |
🍛 Dinner | $2 |
🥤 Coca-Cola (0.3L) | $0 |
🍺 Beer (0.5L) | $1 |
☕️ Coffee | $1 |
Hi all!
Does anybody know of any coworking space in Zadar, Croatia? (Or just some calm place with (free) WiFi to work from?)
Thank you
The sapce is open now.
I’m in it right now. Very nice space with great office furniture.
Hello, there is one: http://www.coinzadar.hr
Thank you, Tomislav, but I think it is still not open. About a month ago I got a message from them, that “COIN will be open to public in October. We have some issues with construction works what will prolong the opening.”
Hey Lukas,
if Split is not too far for you, you can try out our Amosfera Coworking space.
Thank you, Tomislav,
but I know the Amosfera (or CEDRA currently) quite well. I was there in July during my stay in Split. And I think that coworking is very pleasant
Oh?! Then we have just missed each other! I was away for 2 weeks. I am glad you liked it!
Well, good luck with your work! Maybe see you again in Amosfera!
Hello, we are US citizens that have been able to stay in Italy past our standard visa stay due to covid. Now we must leave. We want to drive to Croatia as our “out of EU” stay. But I’m now wondering what considerations I need to take care of for my visa. I won’t go through an airport and get my passport stamped. But I assume I need to get my passport stamped as a way to prove I’m out of the EU.
Anyone else travel in and out of Schengen zone via car? Or know what I should do to properly handle the visa situation? I get unclear answers online. Hmm.
Appreciate your help!
I don't have the answer to your question, but have you verified to be sure that as a US citizen you are allowed to enter Croatia? I believe that their border is open for the citizens of a select few countries.
right, I'm working on getting more info on that..if possible. It'll be tricky because I'm not coming from the USA, I've been in Europe for 6 months, but still I have a US passport.
Hey @ld,
My girlfriend has an american passport : I can confirm that you will be able to cross the border in Croatia with an american passport. It's better if you have some proof that you were not in the US recently.
Croatia has a website dedicated for tourism in the current Covid situation. I cannot post link as i am a new member but you should be able to find it easily. You can even email the border police if you have any questions.
Regarding the question of getting your passport stamped : Croatia is NOT in Shengen as you understood. So my understanding is that you will have to cross the border by car and they will stamp it there. Probably worth to send an email to the border police to check that part !
Hello,
We are in Umbria until August 31. We've been here since March, but crisis-level visa extensions are over. After that we have to leave the EU. We would like to stay out of the USA (our home) due to it's covid crisis, at the same time we want to be responsible about travel. Ideally we would not travel at all, rather stay hidden in the countryside of Umbria forever until covid is more under control globally, but here we are!
So we must leave the Schengen zone. We should avoid USA. We should avoid long air travel.
We were thinking Croatia.
Do you recommend a route to Croatia? We are open to long train rides. Ideally not long ferry rides. Is there a ferry route under 4 hours? I read about it...I don't see it. If not, the other option is to make our way north and up over to Croatia via train.
I'd appreciate your thoughts and insights!
Thanks.
Hey!
Umbria is a great green region in Italy and it's sad that you can't stay there longer. I do agree that's best to avoid long air travel or getting back to the US.
I currently remain in Kuala Lumpur and hope to stay here as long as possible – similar to you guys.
While I haven't done the exact route I did make many trips across Europe via buses, trains and cars (carpooling). I'd recommend checking your options via Omio app. They integrate many European transport operators and most likely going by land is quicker/safer/better than going by sea. Please double-check with local officials and regulations.
thanks for the app rec, I'll check it out. After posting this, I realized renting a car might be the best option. More expensive, but also public-free. I've never rented a car in Europe or at all..sounds like a lot of surprise costs, but this might be my best route.
This might be useful: places in Europe but outside Schengen nomadlist.com/non-schengen-places-in-europe
Advice. Thinking of Split Croatia next?
Hi all, need some help with schengen fuzziness… I’m a US citizen.
Does any know if the 90 day rule applies inside of Croatia. I’m seeing that Croatia isn’t part of schengen but adopts the same visa aquis. This isn’t clear to me.
If someone has a definitive answer please let me know as I’m approaching the 90 day rule in my travel plans and I want to hit Croatia and not have it count.
Thanks in advance.
Croatia is a member of the EU, but not part of Schengen. So, both the border people of the country you are leaving and of Croatia might check your passport. If you are leaving a Schengen country after your 90 days are up, you are more likely to be caught by the exit country, who will arrest you for overstaying your visa. (They say it is a felony, but really only a fine. I’m a US citizen, and in my case, the fine was $250 and a lot of paperwork.) Then you are also on Croatia’s radar for the length of stay.
Unless you have an emergency and have to stay, cross the border before 90 days are up. If you have an emergency, go to the embassy before 90 days are up.
Don’t risk overstaying the visa limit, it’s not worth the hassle.
The Croatian terrestrial internet I’ve used has been 5-10Mbps but faster 4G is very cheap (~$10=3gb) and widespread. I guess it’s an example of lower-level physical infrastructure getting leapfrogged by newer technology.
1-2 days in Dubrovnik will be plenty. Istria is really nice; I’d try to make it up there if I were you. Piran ( just across the Slovenian border, so not an option if you’re at 90 days on your schengen clock), Pula, and Rovinj were all lovely and less crowded than Dubrovnik (but still fairly touristy–this is Croatia, after all).
@dvc Slovenia is schengen, though, so if he has to be out of the schengen, he can’t pop up there.
Best internet connection would be T-HT (Croatian Telecom = T-mobile) and VIP.
TELE2 offers cheaper 4G and have cover nation wide since few months back.
Best coverage on Islands is probably T-HT and VIPnet, they have their own infrastructure so their customers have priority. Even 3G is decent, if you don’t have real need for 4G.
no, it doesn’t. croatia wants to join schengen so it’s implementing the same rules but they’re not a member so days there don’t count.
Thank you!
sure thing. have fun. croatia is lovely. just don’t plan to spend too much time in dubrovnik and make sure you explore the neighboring countries (which I personally prefer).
Thanks. Planning around 10 days in Croatia… Dubrovnik and some coastal spots. How’s internet travelling around Croatia. I saw some reports of 5mb or so in Dubrovnik a year ago.
Then we’re off to explore Italy until mid October
2 days is plenty in dubrovnik unless you use it as a base to do day trips to mostar and kotor.
i found the internet fine, but it depends on where you are, what you need, and where you’re staying.
I’d second this. I went to Dubrovnik for three days, mainly because I wanted to do the Game of Thrones tour and found it a bit boring. After you’ve explored the old town and had a bit of a look around, there isn’t a helluva lot to do. You can go to the beaches or take boats around the islands but I’m not a beach person and I imagine if you are, the beaches would be just as nice and far less crowded in other parts of the country.
I’m thinking of spending August-October in Europe; Berlin was a strong contender, but I’m hearing good stuff about Zagreb. Anyone have any experiences (good or bad) to share?
I have a rental on this island of Vis, right in town, walking distance to everything, with internet. It’ll be available the second half of August and all of September. www.vis-croatia.net.
Hi,
I live in Zagreb, coming back home from Thailand on 2. May, because warmer days are coming
Most of the people move to the sea side, mostly between 15. July - 20. August, then the city is usually reserved only for people who are at work, even they tend to run away for the weekends outside of town. And city looks more empty during that time.
During this time there is usually lots of road works, because lots of people are out of town, this is a good time of year to do fixings of the streets.
You will also see a lots of tourists especially Chinese people talking photos of everything including you.
Because there are lots of tourists, more and more each year, there are things to do because our Tourist board is working a lot on promoting Zagreb as a Tourist destination.
You would usually walk around city, visit old part of town, buildings, museums, parks etc.
There are also day tours visiting other tourist attractions outside the city, most popular is Plitvice lakes/waterfalls - must see.
Town Samobor near Zagreb is pretty looking place, good for one day tour.
Most of the nightlife is located in city centre. Tkaličićeva or locals say (Tkalča, eng ~ Tkalcha) is the most popular street full of bars, and around main square, eg: Cvjetni Trg.
Sadly not so many things are open after midnight, and there are not lots of places where you can go after if you would like to party. Busiest hours are 6pm - 10pm.
It’s just because all of the people move to the see side, all the nightlife is moved there so most of the clubs are closed.
Good thing is that you are 2-3 hours away from the sea side with bus/car.
If you traveling, try to avoid Fri - Sat, 3 hours become 6, because on weekends most of tourists are traveling home/coming for vacation.
Not likely you can travel with airplane, you can probably go to Split, Pula, Zadar or Dubrovnik only, not so many plane connections.
Things slowely start to get busy after 20. August, when most of the people are coming back, then the nightlife returns back to Zagreb too.
September is usually good month to visit because temperatures are high, around 25 - 30, depends on the year, and there are things happening, people are hanging outside, on Gornji Grad (uptown) there is street festival each evening with live music called Gričevanje, clubs are open with various things to choose.
Internet is good, you can choose either Vipnet, T-HT (T-com actually) or Tele2.
Bonbon (owner is T-HT)
If you are in Zagreb reception is usually great, and I personally use only 3G, because it’s enough for me. Not sure, but most of them don’t offer 4G for prepaid plans. Maybe there are some tourist promotions which i’m not familiar with, but it changes every year so it’s still early for me to say which one would be ok.
Anyway, best reception where ever you go you should have with Vipnet, T-HT and Bonbon (they use T-HT infrastructure)
For the land line, internet speed is 5Mpbs+, usually everyone has just the lowest speed with flat rate internet, this again depends on where you stay. But the connection is stable.
Coworking spaces:
Cost of living is cheap, just to compare here are some prices:
The city and the centre is actually not that big, you can stay anywhere in around 3-4 stations with Tram, it’s only like up to 15-20 minutes walk anywhere you go.
So it’s not important to stay in the main square circle, just to have a Tram station near, then you will be fine.
After 1pm Tram are driving only every 1 hour and it’s difficult to get anywhere without Taxi.
Just ask for the Taximeter, 10Eur should get you anywhere, and just pay what you see on Taxi-meter no more.
I never had problem because I’m local, but taxi drivers same like everywhere, they want to rip you off.
And always say that you are meeting a friend which is from Zagreb, and you are not first time here, it’s what I do where ever I am.
Hope this helps.
If you would have any questions feel free to ping me.
Cheers
Hey guys and gals! I’m also heading to Croatia (at least going through Zagreb, but not sure where I’ll end up in the country) in September… hope to see some of you there. =)
Fantastic ! A nice small group of people in a gorgeous villa in a Crotian island sounds like a nice plan. I think we should probably start looking end of next week or so.
What is the best way to all get in touch ? I suggest all those interested, send me your email address in a private message and I will create an email message with everybody included.
Kepp me posted all those heading out in mid September.
@allbombs Try contacting the AirBnB hosts and making an offer. I’ve had a few places offer less than asking on the site, especially if you can confirm a month’s stay. And look a little further out as city centre is in high demand.
Arrive in Spilt on Wednesday and trying to find accommodation too.
Looking at Hvar + Vis like many of you, but may setup in Split for a month?
Airbnb is definitely more expensive than I anticipated. Imagine more deals are to be had once I arrive in person and as September approaches?
I’m also open to sharing a house/apartment with the right people. Early 30’s, need to work mon - friday, but up for exploring in the evenings and weekends.
@emondpph - that sounds interesting, although mid-Sept is the beginning of off-season and I think you might do better price-wise…? I am looking anywhere between early or mid-Sept but I won’t know for another few days at least.
Since a lot of nomads are asking about Croatian island wifi and such on different forums, I decided to ask a woman on FaceBook who has been offering to put people in touch with landlords in Split, Brac and Hvar for off-season. Here is what she said:
“Most modern apartments will have wifi, but it depends on the provider. Most islands will have T-com. It depends what speed package they have too. Brac island for example, has good 4G coverage. So you can use mobile wifi router. I have used it successfully to watch Netflix. I worked at a hotel in Hvar Town and internet was awful outside of centre. You need a good gadget though I use TP Link 4G LTE. It amplifies the signal. I use Bon Bon sim card I top up 6 euros and get 5GB data, north of Brac island has a good 4G coverage.”
Also, I looked up T-Mobile’s 4G coverage map and here it is… check out all that great coverage in the sea!
Hi ! I am currently in Split for August. It’s burning hot here, like 40 celsius !
I am also thinking of going a couple of weeks in a Croatian island early september. I was looking at Brac on AirBnb. Maybe there are other/better islands. Really open to any island destination.
I would be interested in joining with one or two persons to rent something bigger and nicer. There are really nice villas with Wi-fi on AirBnb for about 100 - 130 euro per day. So at 3 it could be pretty affordable.
Exemple in Brac:
Korčula (town and island) is pretty chill, and as far as I can remember, has plenty of wifi in cafes, like much of the region. I was there two years ago in August, and it didn’t feel too busy, so I imagine September is pretty good.
Let me know when you’re around as I plan to be on the coast in September too.
Thanks! Vis and Pag are on my list to consider so far too. Where are you planning to go, @hannahvictorius?
Keep in mind that islands usually don’t have a good telecommunication infrastructure and not a very good 4G coverage, so there might be some wifi issues. Also, food and everything else is more expensive on islands. For any specialised shopping (laptop parts, cables etc) you will need to make a trip to the coast.
Vis has always been top of my list, but yet I’ve never made it.
I’ll be basing myself in Split and then day tripping to Brač and Trogir and a weekend in Sarajevo, so it works out better.
I have a feeling Pag may be a bit livelier, but that may not be what you’re after. Vis looks idyllic, but like I said, I haven’t visited yet. One day!
Any reason you’re choosing to base yourself in Split this time rather than returning to Korčula?
A few reasons, but nothing negative towards Korčula.
I want to be in a small city as I’m travelling with my 20 year old brother and like to go and watch the big local football/soccer games. Also, I’ll be travelling up to Sarajevo halfway through my stay and can’t be bothered with the hassle of adding a ferry ride each way.
Also, I’ve never spent more than a day or two in Split, so looking forward to discovering a bit more about the city.
Cool, thanks! I’ll be in touch with you when my plans get better sorted, so hopefully we can meet up!
Looks like an old thread, but wondering if anyone has used an island as their base for an extended period, and how that worked out, in terms of Internet and enough services, cafes, etc? I’m planning to be in Croatia for maybe a month or so in September and have grown weary of bigger cities and crowds lately. Looking for something a little more chill and bohemian would be great, if that exists in Croatia - without being super isolated.
It sounds like Split is perfect for you!
It’s not a big city, and outside of the tourist season it perfect for chilling (and getting creative work done!). Also, you can go to any island for a day or two and get super relaxed! When I go to island I can never get anything done, they are just made for relaxing and enjoying! But Split is the place everybody says is perfect size, big enough to entertain you and small enough not to tire you.
Thank you, @tomislavmamic - and for all your other helpful posts on housing and co-working, much appreciated. I will keep it all in mind.
You can get wifi on Vis at the Admiral hotel’s café on the riva, as well as in the so-called internet café Biliba one street back (just behind the Admiral hotel) as well at at café Bejbi (there’s one near where the ferry lets you off and one in Kut). In Split there’s a place called Backpacker’s Café at the end of the street where all the ships dock and just before you round the bend heading up to the the big open-air market and the palace. They also sell used books and it’s usually a nice, quiet place to work.
I’ve spent 1 month in Zagreb during summer 2012. A lot of local people were saying surprised that we are going to stay in the city for more than 2 days. Everyone suggested to got to the seaside. Seaside IS amazing (Zadar, Kornati, Split, Dubrovnik) - but you know I really like Zagreb a lot. It’s amazing underestimated city. It’s much more comfortable than touristy seaside if you are doing slow travel. There are a lot of things to do in Zagreb, even in summer when some places might be closed.
Loving it so far! If they could just hurry up fixing the internet. The cost of living is cheap, you can walk everywhere and there’s a lot of cool bars, cafés and restaurants to check out.
Hey @juan, I’ll be heading there later this summer, this thread has me excited.
Would you mind sharing some ballpark figures regarding cost of living you’ve experienced so far? Did you end up using airbnb?
We did @theunis, the place we’re in now is really lovely just uphill from Jelacic square, couldn’t ask for a better location. If you stay longer you can negotiate more, but for our 1-month stays we’re paying 750euro and 650 euro, respectively. It’s significantly more than staying long-term, but still relatively cheap IMO.
Here are the two places, and a third that we viewed and would’ve stayed in if the first two hadn’t worked out. All are well-located, have >4mbps and have plenty to do close by:
Current: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/2038366
July-August: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/1398561
Runner-up: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/2618775
Hope that helps, if you’re here before August 15th let us know
T-com owns all the infrastructure, so they’re the safest bet. In my experience 3G/H (SIM) is plenty fast, and you can have 4G if you wish to pay extra. Also, someone should call the provider to fix the current connection, it shouldn’t be that slow.
So we arrived in Zagreb today and the internet is a lot slower at our apartment than promised (<1mbps), does anyone know what the fastest provider/service is locally?
It’s always entertaining to see how foreigners see your city
Anyway, just wanted to say if anyone is planing to come to Zagreb, you can drop me a question or two and I’ll try to help! I also offer accommodation via airbnb (lollipop apartment), I believe someone here asked…
Internet is ok - most of the times you get 4Mb/s and it’s true, more and more places provide free wi fi.
I’m on Bali currently. Everybody warned me internet is terrible on Bali, but so far it’s not much different than Zagreb (and I’m not in Ubud)… A bit slower for download, but upload is even better than back home
Spent a month in Zagreb and a few weeks in Split.
Pros:
Cons:
I had no preconceptions going into Croatia but it really made me feel at home.
I’ve been there this year and it’s a wonderful city, full of life and good vibe. But I think 2 days are enough for visiting it. It’s not the big. The south of Croatia is amazing, Split, Rijeka and all the south coast… The Lakes are also a must see.
You can find a lot of cafés with wi-fi, it’s everywhere. It’s also cheap to eat and sleep there.
I’m from Portugal, and Croatia and Italy are the bestr european countries I’ve been so far.
Croatia is by far one of the best places I’ve ever spent a summer.
I will say there was much alcohol to be had, and many boat trips around some truly pristine islands. It wasn’t too…educational, but when I went back to do a more historical tour of Croatia it was incredible how much history is there.
YOU MUST check out
I spent a few weeks in Croatia, specifically Dubrovnik, Hvar, Vis, and Split. Other than Vis, internet was pretty easy to find at internet cafes without having to pay too much. Decent for a bit of work and some Skype calls.
Bear in mind that in the offpeak season, there’s less to do and fewer places open on the islands.
Sold! Zagreb is booked for May 15th and I’m currently trying to sort out accommodation through AirBnB, anyone have any recommendations/links to places they’ve stayed at there?
I was born in Croatia – not Zagreb but I lived there for 7 years as well so it’s a bit hard to see things from the outside
Internet is decent, and free Wi-Fi is everywhere (in Zagreb; not so much in smaller cities). You won’t be getting 100mbit connections (they’re available but few people have them), but for Skype video it should be ok.
If you’re coming in August or September, I’d definitely recommend going to the coast. It’s not that far and in summer months it has a lot more to offer than Zagreb, though of course it all depends on what you’re looking for.
In general, I’d say the most interesting things in Croatia are of the nature kind - there are 7 national parks, the coast is beautiful and there are things to see in the mountain parts of the country as well.
I don’t party much so I can’t tell you how it compares there
The country is quite small so regardless of where you spend most of your time, if you’re going to have more than a couple of weeks I think it makes most sense to travel around. It’s quite diverse and an hour long drive can get you to a totally different environment (i.e. from frozen mountain lakes to sunny coast).
I’m curious about the same. My ancestry is there and my girlfriend needs to get out of the Schengen Zone by mid-May (we’re currently in Barcelona), so it’s on my short list. My main concern is internet, as I do a lot of Skype video calls for work.
✅ Affordable to live
✅ Pretty safe
✅ Fast internet
✅ Warm in the spring
✅ Perfect humidity now
✅ Good air quality on average
✅ Spacious and not crowded
✅ Easy to do business
✅ High quality of education
✅ Roads are very safe
✅ Freedom of speech
✅ Democratic
✅ People can speak basic English
✅ Very safe for women
❌ Not much to do
❌ Cold now
❌ Gets cold in the winter
❌ Very difficult to make friends
❌ Hospitals are not that great
❌ Not family friendly
❌ Hostile towards LGBTQ+
❌ Many people smoke tobacco
Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | |
Feels | 457° cold | 5412° cool | 5915° cool | 6317° cool | 6418° cool | 8429° warm | 8429° warm | 8831° hot | 7725° warm | 7021° mild | 6317° cool | 5513° cool |
Real | 489° cold | 5513° cool | 5915° cool | 6317° cool | 6418° cool | 8228° very warm | 8228° very warm | 8429° very warm | 7725° warm | 7021° mild | 6317° cool | 5714° cool |
Humidity | nice 57% | nice 53% | nice 56% | nice 59% | nice 62% | nice 58% | nice 57% | nice 57% | nice 59% | nice 63% | nice 68% | nice 63% |
Rain | dry 38mm | dry 15mm | dry 20mm | dry 45mm | rainy 74mm | dry 9mm | rainy 67mm | dry 21mm | rainy 99mm | dry 31mm | rainy 156mm | rainy 92mm |
Cloud | cloudy 60% | pockets 41% | pockets 40% | cloudy 53% | cloudy 52% | pockets 17% | pockets 14% | pockets 18% | pockets 30% | pockets 40% | cloudy 82% | cloudy 60% |
Air quality | clean 20 US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 34** US AQI | clean 16 US AQI |
Sun | safe 1 UVI | safe 2 UVI | sunscreen 4 UVI | sunscreen 5 UVI | sunscreen 5 UVI | sunburn 8 UVI | sunburn 8 UVI | sunburn 8 UVI | sunscreen 5 UVI | safe 3 UVI | safe 2 UVI | safe 1 UVI |
Nomad List members | 1 people | 0 people | 0 people | 1 people | 2 people | 3 people | 2 people | 3 people | 2 people | 1 people | 1 people | 0 people |
Based on Zadar's cost of living, here's selected remote jobs that would cover your costs:
Split is a very pleasant town. You have Roman ruins, clear Adriatic waters, ferries to Hvar and other islands. Places to stay are affordable, food is medium priced. English is pretty commonly spoken. You can explore the town in about two days, but it seems a very pleasant place to live (I’ve been here 2 weeks & plan to stay for 2 months).
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Pricey📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 11° 52° 11° 52°AQI 15🚕4h$3,156 / mo22Mbps×Spent summer 2020 on Hvar which turned into best summer ever in spite of the pandemic. The most friendly people, great food, beautiful beaches and for a few weeks.. fun nightclubs. All without the normal crush of tourists that would otherwise clog the place up. Made some lifelong friends on this trip and cannot wait to get myself back to Hvar in 2021. And other than the time difference (stayed on NYC time), I had no issues working remotely from the island whatsoever. For the most part, I t
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun bad👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 11° 52° 11° 51°AQI 2✈️13min$1,882 / mo20Mbps×Didn't plan to come to Zagreb, and so had no expectations. Turned out to be a lovely, liveable city, so much so that I extended my stay by several weeks! Contrary to some of the comments from a year ago, it is now very vegan friendly, cards are universally accepted, steady WiFi si abundant, and many other people are working from coffee shops. The city is very walkable, and more affordable than Split or Dubrovnik.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 45°AQI 85😷✈️16min$1,864 / mo25Mbps×Ljubljana (and Slovenia in general) is an AMAZING place. I cannot recommend it enough. All I ask is - please don't write public blogs and make vlogs about it. It is still sort of undiscovered except among Europeans and mostly Italians. Let's try and keep it that way as long as possible.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 44°AQI 84😷✈️18min$2,155 / mo50Mbps×An unexpectedly amazing town with many places to see and go. One of those towns that has gives quaint attachment feeling. And of course, very cheap!
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun bad👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 10° 50° 10° 51°AQI 114😷✈️18min$1,351 / mo12Mbps×A really amazing city, I wouldn't agree that it's small, there's much more to it than just the historical core, 20th century architecture is like 4/5 of the city and there are many vibrant neighbourhoods, restaurants and places where the normie locals hang out.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun bad👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 44°AQI 113😷✈️20min$1,239 / mo13Mbps×1. Dubrovnik is in Republic of Croatia and Croatia is among FIRST SIX COUNTRIES IN THE WORLD that legally regulated 12 month visas for Digital nomads. 2. When this Town (under name of Ragusa) was independent state it was The first country in the world that officially recognize independency of the USA. Historic heritage of this town is enormous so there is plenty amazing things to see and learn. 3. During last year Dubrovnik was almost COVID-19 FREE ZONE with extra small numbers of infections and
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 12° 54° 12° 53°AQI 69✈️23min$2,376 / mo20Mbps×Split is a very pleasant town. You have Roman ruins, clear Adriatic waters, ferries to Hvar and other islands. Places to stay are affordable, food is medium priced. English is pretty commonly spoken. You can explore the town in about two days, but it seems a very pleasant place to live (I’ve been here 2 weeks & plan to stay for 2 months).
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Pricey📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 11° 52° 11° 52°AQI 15🚕4h$3,156 / mo22Mbps×Didn't plan to come to Zagreb, and so had no expectations. Turned out to be a lovely, liveable city, so much so that I extended my stay by several weeks! Contrary to some of the comments from a year ago, it is now very vegan friendly, cards are universally accepted, steady WiFi si abundant, and many other people are working from coffee shops. The city is very walkable, and more affordable than Split or Dubrovnik.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 45°AQI 85😷✈️16min$1,864 / mo25Mbps×Spent summer 2020 on Hvar which turned into best summer ever in spite of the pandemic. The most friendly people, great food, beautiful beaches and for a few weeks.. fun nightclubs. All without the normal crush of tourists that would otherwise clog the place up. Made some lifelong friends on this trip and cannot wait to get myself back to Hvar in 2021. And other than the time difference (stayed on NYC time), I had no issues working remotely from the island whatsoever. For the most part, I t
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun bad👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 11° 52° 11° 51°AQI 2✈️13min$1,882 / mo20Mbps×I live here in Dublin and I disagree you should stay in Ballymun or Finglas. These places are dangerous. Very. Mobile operator Three is terrible. Vodafone tends to be a bit more expensive but to support your work it is the only one I recommend. Dublin and the whole of Ireland is charming and fun. It is not cheap. You will not regret coming over.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Pricey📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety goodTap to open☀️ Feels 8° 46° 9° 48°AQI 35✈️2h$3,884 / mo57Mbps×Ljubljana (and Slovenia in general) is an AMAZING place. I cannot recommend it enough. All I ask is - please don't write public blogs and make vlogs about it. It is still sort of undiscovered except among Europeans and mostly Italians. Let's try and keep it that way as long as possible.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 44°AQI 84😷✈️18min$2,155 / mo50Mbps×1. Dubrovnik is in Republic of Croatia and Croatia is among FIRST SIX COUNTRIES IN THE WORLD that legally regulated 12 month visas for Digital nomads. 2. When this Town (under name of Ragusa) was independent state it was The first country in the world that officially recognize independency of the USA. Historic heritage of this town is enormous so there is plenty amazing things to see and learn. 3. During last year Dubrovnik was almost COVID-19 FREE ZONE with extra small numbers of infections and
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 12° 54° 12° 53°AQI 69✈️23min$2,376 / mo20Mbps×Grew up here in the 80s/90s, moved back in 2015 after 10 years in LA and 10 years abroad. I don't get why it's so highly rated. It's a far cry from the free-living, cheap to live, music-infused past. The old music venues are being torn down to build condos. Tech bros moving en masse has caused housing demand to spike, and with it, property values, rent, and cost of living, and no scale with increases in pay. All the musicians and artists are leaving, and everyone here is young, white, and has
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Pricey📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun great👮 Safety very badTap to open☀️ Feels 19° 66° 18° 65°AQI 27✈️12h$3,439 / mo74Mbps×Vienna is nice if you're a tourist and want to see beautiful old architecture. And I guess it's nice if you want to live here for a long time, since it's quite safe and clean. But it's borderline impossible to live and work here short-term as a nomad. There's no good cafes to work from, the coworkings here are of extremely mediocre to bad quality here. Except for greaaaat Asian food, other food is difficult to get, there's either affordable takeaway fast food or expensive in-door fancy dining re
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🙂 Okay📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 45°AQI 65✈️37min$2,904 / mo38Mbps×Zurich is a nice city, not very big but charming, especially the old town where you can find bars and restaurants. Good party culture, a lot of different clubs. A lot if different things to do and other cities like the capital (Bern) are within a 1 hour train ride.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😳 Way too expensive📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun good👮 Safety mediocreTap to open🌥 Feels 10° 50° 10° 50°AQI 21✈️51min$5,331 / mo32Mbps×I visited Prague on more than one occasion and tried something new each time. I really wanted to enjoy it, but unfortunately it turned out to be one of my least favourite cities. Perhaps it was just me, but there was an overwhelming sense of distrust and dislike towards foreigners, you have to try pretty hard to blend in if you want to experience the life of a local & avoid the tourism. I met some wonderful people and and there’s some cool communities to be part of, but another extended stay
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun great👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 6° 43° 6° 44°AQI 55✈️53min$2,113 / mo36Mbps×I lived in Brno for 6 months working as an expat. I am from US and have lived in NJ and NYC and been to almost every major city in the US. Compared to US Cities, this place just works, it's very easy to live here and the public transportation is wonderful. It was also extremely cheap compared to any US city and I could afford to eat out every meal and go to the fancier restaurants on my US salary. The beauty of the buildings in the center and quick access to nature was my favorite part as well a
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 6° 43° 6° 43°AQI 89😷✈️46min$1,831 / mo24Mbps×Split is a very pleasant town. You have Roman ruins, clear Adriatic waters, ferries to Hvar and other islands. Places to stay are affordable, food is medium priced. English is pretty commonly spoken. You can explore the town in about two days, but it seems a very pleasant place to live (I’ve been here 2 weeks & plan to stay for 2 months).
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Pricey📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 11° 52° 11° 52°AQI 15🚕4h$3,156 / mo🌇 Also went here42 people×Didn't plan to come to Zagreb, and so had no expectations. Turned out to be a lovely, liveable city, so much so that I extended my stay by several weeks! Contrary to some of the comments from a year ago, it is now very vegan friendly, cards are universally accepted, steady WiFi si abundant, and many other people are working from coffee shops. The city is very walkable, and more affordable than Split or Dubrovnik.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 45°AQI 85😷✈️16min$1,864 / mo🌇 Also went here37 people×Vienna is nice if you're a tourist and want to see beautiful old architecture. And I guess it's nice if you want to live here for a long time, since it's quite safe and clean. But it's borderline impossible to live and work here short-term as a nomad. There's no good cafes to work from, the coworkings here are of extremely mediocre to bad quality here. Except for greaaaat Asian food, other food is difficult to get, there's either affordable takeaway fast food or expensive in-door fancy dining re
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🙂 Okay📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 7° 45°AQI 65✈️37min$2,904 / mo🌇 Also went here28 people×I stayed here for a month in July last year. There's lots of cool aspects to the city but I hated it when I was there. The city has a problem with British stag parties, so if you look like you're a British male and speak English expect to be treated with disdain (it's fair enough) The Hungarians can just generally be unfriendly, especially bartenders. It's a weird experience waiting to be served while 3 people ignore you. Or buying the same drink and getting charged whatever they want (700-1500
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun good👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 7° 45° 8° 46°AQI 73✈️38min$1,475 / mo🌇 Also went here34 people×I visited Prague on more than one occasion and tried something new each time. I really wanted to enjoy it, but unfortunately it turned out to be one of my least favourite cities. Perhaps it was just me, but there was an overwhelming sense of distrust and dislike towards foreigners, you have to try pretty hard to blend in if you want to experience the life of a local & avoid the tourism. I met some wonderful people and and there’s some cool communities to be part of, but another extended stay
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun great👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 6° 43° 6° 44°AQI 55✈️53min$2,113 / mo🌇 Also went here38 people×Berlin is overall a great city to be. Food is cheap and everywhere, easy to go out and have fun/meet for business. Rent has crept up but still far better value than where I came from. Internet: 36 EUR/month get me 450/40 mbps (cable -> DOCSIS 3.0) Public transport is 2.70 EUR/ticket. No woman I know has said they felt unsafe. Some really odd, xenophobic sounding comments on here. Biggest downsides IMO: service quality at restaurants - not that people are rude, but they don't seem to particular
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Pricey📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun great👮 Safety mediocreTap to open🌤 Feels 2° 36° 4° 40°AQI 70✈️1h$3,001 / mo🌇 Also went here36 people×During winter is quite safe plus much cheaper. Some nightclubs are free and yet there is still a lot of people. Great por lgbtq+ community.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🙂 Okay📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun great👮 Safety mediocreTap to open🌥 Feels 15° 59° 15° 58°AQI 59✈️1h$2,927 / mo🌇 Also went here35 people×Super fun and beautiful city. I find Parisians are actually very patient and warm if you at least attempt to speak French; in my experience, most people who complain that they're rude are the ones making zero effort to speak the language. Expensive though and not very easy to meet other nomads.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Too expensive📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun good👮 Safety mediocreTap to open☀️ Feels 8° 46° 9° 48°AQI 73✈️1h$4,015 / mo🌇 Also went here38 people×I lived in Amsterdam for three years in three different apartments in the center. The place is very noisy and during the lockdown it became painfully obvious that the dutch in general don't really care about whether they bother their neighbors or not. After reading expat Facebook groups, it seems I'm not alone with this opinion. The city is gorgeous, but to be frank, I'm not eager to live there again.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Too expensive📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun good👮 Safety mediocreTap to open🌥 Feels 6° 43° 6° 42°AQI 84😷✈️2h$4,507 / mo🌇 Also went here31 people×London is a SO beautiful city. The historical center is cute, but also majestic and luxurious. You feel the culture at every step. British people are really kind and welcoming! Plus, more than just one, you can enjoy TWO skylines 😍 so many skyscrapers, nothing beats its collection in Europe.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 🧐 Too expensive📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun great👮 Safety mediocreTap to open🌥 Feels 7° 45° 7° 44°AQI 50✈️2h$4,243 / mo🌇 Also went here39 people×Lisbon and portugal reality its not a fairytale locals tell to expats and tourist only good things all good and nice but the reality is hiding like many portuguese try to do about expats and tourists, unfurnoly many locals dont want progress and evolution they always want be the same year by year
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun great👮 Safety goodTap to open☀️ Feels 16° 61° 16° 61°AQI 36✈️3h$2,117 / mo🌇 Also went here29 people×Chiang Mai used to be N.1 for the digital nomad life. It is still great and you can find really cheap apartments (300-400$) and restaurants (2-3$ for a main). Wouldn't recommend staying there during the burning season. The best area is Nimman, but it's also the most expensive. You can stay in the old city that's very nice but that gets noisy during the weekend for the night markets. Last but not least, very safe city. All in all would go back in a heartbeat.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun good👮 Safety goodTap to open☀️ Feels 31° 88° 33° 91°🥵AQI 182😷✈️11h$1,094 / mo🌇 Also went here32 people×Don't believe the prices on here for an apartment. 686 usd/month refers to an apartment in a high class condo, right in the city centre and seconds away from the BTS(train station). Just remember this, people working at supermarkets make 2 usd/per hour. If you want to live like a local, then you can save a lot of money. If you don't mind a 5-10 minute walk from the BTS, then you can easily get a one bedroom apartment for 300 USD per month, in a high class condo, plus with free golf cart ser
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun good👮 Safety goodTap to open🌤 Feels 45° 113° 34° 92°🥵AQI 61✈️11h$1,463 / mo🌇 Also went here38 people×Usually goes dead after one month. Polluted streets and antisocial locals. It’s okay for a few weeks, but the fun diminishes quickly and boredom sets in. You are left with high rent and no fun after about a month.
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😝 Cheap📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun good👮 Safety mediocreTap to open🌥 Feels 41° 106° 33° 92°🥵AQI 69✈️12h$957 / mo🌇 Also went here29 people×First time I was in KL was in 2015 as a backpacking student. I stayed for 2 weeks at an airbnb in Bangsar South and I loved it. Met up with Uni friends, made new friends and I really like the relaxed atmosphere, despite being in a huge city. Fast forward, 3 years later, I went by myself to KL for a 3 days stay on a visa run from Chiang Mai. I stayed in a hotel near Bukit Bintang. I actually really didn't like it - I think because I was by myself, in a fairly wild part of the city and got so us
⭐️ Overall Score 💵 Cost 😙 Affordable📡 Internet 🏎 Fast😀 Fun mediocre👮 Safety mediocreTap to open🌧 Feels 32° 90° 27° 81°🥵AQI 70✈️13h$1,303 / mo🌇 Also went here29 people×
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