City guide · Buenos Aires

Where to Stay in Buenos Aires: Best Neighborhoods for Digital Nomads in 2026

5 min readUpdated Jul 8, 2026

Why Buenos Aires Neighborhoods Matter for Remote Workers

Buenos Aires sprawls across dozens of barrios, each with distinct character, connectivity, and cost. For digital nomads working remotely in 2026, choosing the right neighborhood shapes your daily routine (whether you walk to coworking spaces or commute by Subte), your monthly rent (which averages around $750 but swings $300 either direction depending on location), and your after-hours vibe. The city's 85 Mbps average internet speed holds steady across central neighborhoods, so your main tradeoffs come down to walkability, coworking density, safety, and noise levels.

Below are five real neighborhoods remote workers gravitate toward, with honest tradeoffs and practical booking notes for each.

Palermo Soho & Palermo Hollywood: Coworking Capital

Who it fits: Comfort-first nomads who want maximum coworking options, international food, and a social scene.

Palermo Soho (south of Avenida Santa Fe) and Palermo Hollywood (north toward the train tracks) form the beating heart of Buenos Aires' nomad ecosystem. Tree-lined streets, dozens of coworking spaces (including UrbanStation, Sunshine, and La Maquinita), and cafes with reliable WiFi make it easy to hop between workspaces. You'll also find the densest concentration of English-friendly restaurants, craft cocktail bars, and weekend brunches.

Tradeoffs: Rent runs $700 to $900 for a furnished one-bedroom or studio, slightly above the city average. Streets can get loud Thursday through Saturday nights, especially near Plaza Serrano. Tourist foot traffic runs heavy in the warmer months. Safety is generally high, though petty theft (phone snatching) happens in crowded plazas after dark.

Booking tip: Most landlords on [ADDRESS], Airbnb, and Facebook groups expect one month rent plus one month deposit upfront for stays longer than 30 days. Negotiate monthly rates directly after your first short stay to skip the platform fee.

Recoleta: European Elegance and Quiet Productivity

Who it fits: Digital nomads prioritizing quiet, classic architecture, and proximity to parks over nightlife density.

Recoleta offers wide boulevards, Parisian-style apartment buildings, and the famous Recoleta Cemetery. Coworking options are sparser (AreaTres is the standout), but cafes like La Biela have hosted remote workers for decades. The neighborhood skews older and quieter, with less English spoken in shops than Palermo.

Tradeoffs: Rent spans $650 to $850 depending on building age and elevator access. You'll walk farther for groceries and coworking, but the streets feel noticeably safer and cleaner. Nightlife means wine bars and intimate restaurants, not clubs. Budget nomads may find fewer cheap eats compared to Palermo or San Telmo.

Booking tip: Older departamentos lack central heat, a non-issue in summer but worth checking if you're staying through winter (June to August). Ask landlords directly about heating and hot water before signing.

San Telmo: Colonial Charm on a Tighter Budget

Who it fits: Budget-first nomads, history lovers, and creatives drawn to tango culture and cobblestone streets.

San Telmo mixes colonial architecture, Sunday antique markets, and a grittier, more Argentine feel. Coworking spaces are fewer (La Nucleo is a solid option), but rent drops to $500 to $700 for comparable square footage. Cafes double as informal workspaces, though you'll want to confirm table power outlets and WiFi speed before settling in for the day.

Tradeoffs: Some blocks feel sketchy after dark, especially south of Avenida San Juan. Petty crime rates tick higher than Palermo or Recoleta. Subte access is limited (you'll rely on buses or walking). The neighborhood skews louder on weekends due to street performers and market crowds.

Booking tip: Short-term rentals (under 30 days) often come furnished and include utilities, but monthly leases may require you to set up your own internet and electricity accounts. Clarify this upfront.

Belgrano: Family-Friendly and Residential

Who it fits: Families, couples seeking space, or nomads who value quiet over central location.

Belgrano sits northwest of Palermo, offering larger apartments, tree-lined residential blocks, and a distinctly local vibe. Coworking spaces are sparse, so most nomads here work from home or commute to Palermo a few days per week. The Subte D line connects you to downtown in 30 minutes.

Tradeoffs: Rent ranges $600 to $800, competitive for the extra space. You'll find fewer English menus and almost no tourist infrastructure. Walkability to cafes and restaurants drops compared to Palermo. Great if you want immersion and quiet; isolating if you crave spontaneous coworking meetups.

Booking tip: Landlords in residential barrios like Belgrano often prefer six-month or year-long leases. If you're staying two to three months, expect to pay a slight premium or book through a short-term platform.

Villa Crespo: The Budget-Conscious Middle Ground

Who it fits: Nomads who want Palermo's energy at San Telmo's price, with a more local flavor.

Villa Crespo borders Palermo to the west and has quietly grown into a nomad-friendly alternative. Rent runs $550 to $750, coworking spaces like Hubbog have opened in the last two years, and the cafe scene rivals Palermo's density without the tourist markup. You'll still walk 15 minutes to reach Palermo Soho's main drags.

Tradeoffs: Some corners lack trees and charm compared to Palermo proper. Safety is solid but less polished. Fewer English-speaking expats mean you'll practice Spanish daily (a plus or minus depending on your goals).

Booking tip: This neighborhood rewards walking around in person. Many landlords don't advertise online, posting "Se Alquila" (For Rent) signs in windows instead. Arrive with a short-term Airbnb and spend your first week scouting.

Choosing Your Base in Buenos Aires

Your ideal barrio depends on whether you prioritize coworking walkability (Palermo), quiet European aesthetics (Recoleta), budget savings (San Telmo or Villa Crespo), or residential space (Belgrano). Rent, food, coworking, transport, and entertainment together average around $1,500 per month across neighborhoods, with housing the biggest variable. Most nomads cycle through two or three barrios over their first six months, refining preferences as they go.

For a full breakdown of cost-of-living, visa logistics, and coworking space reviews, check the complete Buenos Aires city hub at /cities/buenos-aires.

Want the numbers behind this guide? See real coworking spaces, prices, and wifi speeds in Buenos Aires.

See coworking + costs in Buenos Aires