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Remote Work in Rome: A Guide to the Best Workspaces

Where to work remotely in Rome β€” the best neighborhoods, cafes with WiFi, coworking spaces, and practical tips for staying productive in the Eternal City.

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Remotica

Workspace Experts

Working remotely in Rome sounds romantic until you're hunting for a power outlet in a 300-year-old cafe. The good news: Rome has more laptop-friendly spots than you'd expect. You just need to know where to look.

Why Rome Works (and Where It Doesn't)

Rome's WiFi situation has improved dramatically. Many central cafes now offer 15-30 Mbps β€” typically enough for video calls and cloud work. The catch: historic buildings mean thick walls and spotty coverage in back rooms. Sit near the front and you'll be fine.

Public transport is less reliable than Milan or Turin. The metro has only 3 lines, and buses are unpredictable. Pick a neighborhood and stay there for the day.

Best Neighborhoods

Trastevere

Charming, walkable, full of life. The cobblestone streets have dozens of bars with outdoor tables and decent WiFi. It gets touristy after lunch, so mornings are your productivity window. Budget 3-5 euro per coffee.

Pigneto

Rome's creative district. Independent cafes, craft beer spots that double as workspaces, and a younger crowd that doesn't bat an eye at laptops. Lower prices than the center (2-3 euro per coffee), better WiFi.

San Lorenzo

The university area near La Sapienza. Cheap, vibrant, full of students working on laptops. Bars here are used to people staying for hours. Some of the best value in the city.

Monti

Between the Colosseum and Termini. Small, boutique-style cafes with character. Good for a morning of focused work, but tables are small and fill up fast. Book ahead on Remotica if you want a guaranteed spot.

Testaccio

Former industrial district, now foodie paradise. Fewer tourists, more locals. Several cafes have invested in fast WiFi and coworking-friendly layouts. A hidden gem for remote workers.

EUR

Modern Rome. If you need corporate-style reliability β€” fast WiFi, big desks, quiet β€” this is where to go. It's also where Impact Hub Roma is located (day pass from 20 euro).

The Cost of Working From a Cafe

Espresso in Rome is still sacred: 1-1.50 euro at the bar, 2-3 euro seated. The price gap between standing and sitting is real β€” always sit down if you're working.

For a full day, expect 10-15 euro between coffee, water, and a light lunch. If you want a verified workspace with guaranteed WiFi and a reserved desk, Remotica offers bookings from 4 euro/hour across the city.

Roman Cafe Etiquette

This matters more in Rome than anywhere else in Italy:

  • Don't camp without ordering β€” Italians notice. Order every hour.
  • Lunch rush is 12:30-14:00 β€” close your laptop or leave. Many places need the table for food service.
  • Tip is optional β€” but rounding up is appreciated if you've been there all morning.
  • Ask about WiFi before sitting β€” not every cafe advertises it. A quick "Avete il WiFi?" saves time.

Practical Tips

  • Work mornings, explore afternoons β€” Rome is too beautiful to spend 8 hours in a bar.
  • Avoid areas near major monuments β€” tourist-trap pricing, poor WiFi, zero outlet access.
  • Carry a portable charger β€” historic buildings and power outlets don't mix well.
  • Check live occupancy on Remotica β€” especially in popular areas like Trastevere and Monti.
  • Buy a monthly metro pass β€” 35 euro, unlimited rides on metro + bus. Worth it.

Looking for your next workspace in Rome? Search on Remotica β€” verified WiFi, live occupancy, book in seconds.

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