Coliving in Phuket
Compare coliving spaces in Phuket for digital nomads and remote workers — furnished rooms and studios, coworking, pool and beach life, all bills included.
Compare coliving spaces in Phuket for digital nomads and remote workers — furnished rooms and studios, coworking, pool and beach life, all bills included.
Use the comparison below to weigh Phuket's coliving spaces on price, room type, location and season. The island's purpose-built coliving is led by HOMA, with serviced-apartment properties in Cherngtalay (near Bang Tao and Laguna) and Phuket Town, offering coworking, a gym, a pool and weekly events, complemented by independent condos and long-stay rooms in nomad areas like Rawai and Nai Harn.
| Name | Coliving Type | Coworking | Reviews |
|---|---|---|---|
| HOMA Cherngtalay | Apartments | ✅ | 4.8 (267) |
Phuket is Thailand's biggest island and one of Southeast Asia's most developed nomad bases — beaches, jungle, a buzzing food scene and an international airport with flights across Asia. The high season (November–April) is dry and sunny; the monsoon months are greener, quieter and cheaper. It blends resort comfort with a fast-growing remote-work community, especially around the laid-back south and the upscale north-west.
Coliving here is led by HOMA, a modern, sustainability-focused operator with two Phuket properties — one in Cherngtalay near the Laguna and Bang Tao beach area, and one in cultural Phuket Town — offering serviced apartments with coworking, a gym and a pool. Other popular nomad areas include Rawai and Nai Harn in the quieter south, where many remote workers and surfers base themselves.
It's good value for the comfort. Furnished coliving rooms and studios at HOMA run from around €460 to €1,850 per month (roughly ฿18,000–฿70,000), all-inclusive, with serviced amenities, app-based booking and a busy events calendar. Independent condos and long-stay rooms across the island can be cheaper, especially in low season. Note pricing and availability swing strongly with the seasons.
For remote work the fundamentals are solid: reliable fibre at coliving spaces and many cafés, plus coworking and a real community with weekly events. Downtime is endless — beaches, diving, Muay Thai, island-hopping and nightlife. Thailand's new Destination Thailand Visa (DTV) suits longer nomad stays. The trade-offs are island traffic, tourist crowds in peak season, and the need for a scooter to get around.