It is not an accident that the Canary Islands have become one of Europe's most significant digital nomad hubs over the past decade. The combination of factors here is genuinely rare: a GMT timezone that keeps you in sync with both London and most of mainland Europe; year-round temperatures that make working outdoors a year-round reality rather than a summer luxury; fibre internet that matches or exceeds what you'd find in any major European city; and a cost of living that sits meaningfully below Lisbon, Barcelona, or Amsterdam — the cities that nomads used to default to.
We've spent extended periods working remotely across all seven islands — from the rooftop coworking spaces of Las Palmas to a rented house in La Palma where the only sound was the wind through the pine trees and the wifi was 200 Mbps fibre. We know which islands work for different types of nomad, which neighbourhoods have the infrastructure to support a serious working life, and which places look great on Instagram but will frustrate you within a week. This guide contains what we've learned — specific, honest, and updated for 2026.
Why the Canary Islands Work for Remote Workers
The GMT timezone advantage
This is the single most underrated factor in the Canary Islands' appeal for remote workers. At GMT (or GMT+1 in summer), you are perfectly aligned with the UK — morning standups, afternoon syncs, Slack messages — all in normal business hours. You're only one hour behind Central European Time, so even a Berlin or Amsterdam-based team remains entirely workable. Compare this to Bali (UTC+8) or South America, where European timezone alignment requires either working late evenings or being perpetually asynchronous. The Canaries give you perfect European timezone compatibility with a tropical-adjacent climate. No other destination in the world matches this combination.
Tax advantages — the ZEC and IGIC
The Canary Islands have a special economic regime — the Zona Especial Canaria (ZEC) — which gives companies registered here access to a corporate tax rate of just 4% (versus Spain's standard 25%). For freelancers and self-employed nomads, the local tax — IGIC — is 7% on goods and services, versus mainland Spain's 21% IVA. The ZEC and reduced-rate regime have attracted substantial business activity to the islands, particularly Las Palmas. If you're planning a longer stay, getting from the airport to a tax advisor's office on day one is worth considering — the fiscal setup here rewards those who plan it properly.
Infrastructure that actually works
The Canary Islands' fibre rollout has been aggressive and largely successful. The main urban areas — Las Palmas, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Arrecife, Puerto del Rosario — all have 300–600 Mbps symmetrical fibre available from multiple providers. Movistar and Orange are the main national carriers; Macaronesia is the regional provider with particularly strong coverage across the islands. Monthly plans for 300 Mbps typically run €35–50. In shared apartments and coworking spaces, costs are already included.
I've worked from Bali, Lisbon, Medellín, and Tbilisi. Las Palmas is the only place where I've never once thought about leaving because of infrastructure. The internet works everywhere, the timezone is perfect for my Berlin clients, and I can surf before my first call. It's genuinely the best base I've ever had.
Every Island Ranked for Digital Nomads
The seven islands are not interchangeable. Each has a distinct character, infrastructure level, and community size that makes it suitable for a different type of remote worker. Here is our honest ranking based on extended stays across all of them.
Gran Canaria — Las Palmas
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is the undisputed digital nomad capital of the Canary Islands and one of the top five nomad destinations in Europe. The city of 380,000 has all the urban amenities of a proper city — multiple coworking spaces, a dense café culture with universally reliable WiFi, international supermarkets, specialist restaurants, a functioning public transport system — combined with a 3 km urban beach (Las Canteras) that is one of the finest city beaches in the world. The city's Guanarteme and Vegueta neighbourhoods have seen substantial gentrification driven partly by nomad influx, with excellent independent coffee shops and coworking spots every few blocks.
The nomad community in Las Palmas is real and active. Nomad City — an annual gathering that draws thousands — was founded here, and the year-round community of remote workers means social integration happens naturally rather than requiring effort. Facebook groups, local Slack workspaces, and regular meetups all function at a scale not available anywhere else in the islands.
The downside is price. Las Palmas has become expensive relative to its Canarian peers — a decent 1-bed apartment in the Vegueta or Triana neighbourhoods now runs €700–900/month unfurnished, and short-term furnished lets are €900–1,200/month. The city centre is also noisy and dense in a way that doesn't suit everyone. Distance context: Las Palmas airport (LPA) is 20 minutes from the city centre; 4-hour ferry to Tenerife; 50-minute flight to Tenerife North.
🏆 Best overall for nomads who want an established community, reliable infrastructure, and an active social life. First choice for most people arriving in the Canaries for the first time.
Tenerife — Santa Cruz & La Laguna
Tenerife is Spain's most populous island and the one most people picture when they hear "Canary Islands" — but the nomad experience here is defined by Santa Cruz and La Laguna, the northern city duo that most visitors never reach on their way to the southern resort belt. Santa Cruz is a genuine Spanish city with a proper commercial centre, excellent public transit, and a growing coworking scene. La Laguna — a UNESCO World Heritage city with a university of 25,000 students — has the best café culture on the island and an energetic, youthful atmosphere that nomads in their 30s and 40s find refreshing without being overwhelming.
The north of Tenerife is noticeably greener and cloudier than the south — if you're working outdoors on terraces, the southern resorts (Costa Adeje, Los Cristianos) offer more reliable sunshine, but less authentic community and higher prices for lower quality apartments. Nomads based in Santa Cruz who want beach time catch the ferry to La Gomera or drive 45 minutes south. The Teide volcano backdrop gives the island a visual drama that Las Palmas lacks entirely.
Distance context: Santa Cruz to Los Cristianos ferry port 45 min by car; direct flights to mainland Spain every hour. A rental car for the first week helps you establish which part of the island suits you before committing to an apartment.
🥈 Best for nomads who want a genuine Spanish city experience, proximity to nature (Teide is 1 hour from Santa Cruz), and an island with real local culture — not a resort bubble.
Lanzarote — Arrecife & Puerto del Carmen
Lanzarote draws nomads who prioritise lifestyle and landscape over community size. The volcanic scenery — black lava fields, white cubic architecture, the extraordinary palette of Timanfaya — creates a visual environment unlike anywhere else in Europe. Working from a terrace in Arrecife with views of the sea and the volcanic ridge behind is a very specific, very compelling version of the remote work life. Puerto del Carmen, the island's main tourist resort, has decent coworking options and strong English-language community but feels resort-y in a way that some nomads find limiting after a few months.
Arrecife — the modest, unglamorous capital — is our preferred base. It has fibre throughout, a walkable city centre, lower rents than Puerto del Carmen, and a genuine local population that creates an authentic community rather than a temporary one. 1-bed apartments run €600–750/month, making it one of the more affordable bases in the Canaries. The island is compact (50 km long) so a rental car for weekend exploring is easy and cheap. Distance context: Arrecife airport 10 min from city centre; 50-minute flight to Gran Canaria; 25-min ferry from Playa Blanca to Fuerteventura.
🌋 Best for solo nomads or couples who want extraordinary landscape, affordable rents, and a slower pace without sacrificing internet quality. Less suited to people who need a large established community.
Fuerteventura — Corralejo & El Cotillo
Fuerteventura is the island for nomads who surf. That sounds reductive but it's accurate: the north of the island around Corralejo and El Cotillo has a dense population of remote workers whose daily schedule is organised around tide times and wind forecasts. The island's persistent north-easterly trade winds — the same winds that created the extraordinary Corralejo dune system — make Fuerteventura and Lanzarote's northern coast the finest windsurfing and kitesurfing locations in Europe. If these sports are your non-negotiable, there's no better base on the planet.
Corralejo has decent fibre, a handful of coworking options, and an active English-speaking expat and nomad community, but the town has a distinctly holiday-resort feel that some nomads find limiting after the first month. El Cotillo — a smaller fishing village 15 km to the west — is quieter, cheaper, and has a specific group of long-term nomads who prefer its laid-back atmosphere. Internet quality is reliable but the coworking infrastructure is thin; many Fuerteventura nomads work from home or from the better-equipped cafés. Distance context: Corralejo to Puerto del Rosario airport 40 min; 25-min ferry to Lanzarote (Playa Blanca).
🏄 Best for surf and wind sports nomads, or anyone for whom daily ocean sports are a higher priority than coworking community. Not ideal for those who want a city lifestyle.
La Palma — Santa Cruz de La Palma
La Palma is the best-kept secret in the Canary Islands for digital nomads with specific requirements: low cost, extraordinary nature, good internet, and complete isolation from the tourist infrastructure that defines the larger islands. A comfortable 1-bed apartment in Santa Cruz de La Palma runs €450–600/month — the cheapest in the archipelago. Fibre is available throughout the town, and the compact colonial capital is walkable, charming, and has a functioning café culture in its historic centre. The Roque de los Muchachos above town gives it the world's finest stargazing, and the Caldera de Taburiente is an extraordinary hiking destination 30 minutes from the capital.
The trade-off is isolation. The nomad community here is small — perhaps 30–50 regulars at any given time — and the social infrastructure is thin. This suits nomads at a stage of life where deep work and solo exploration trump socialising, and genuinely doesn't suit those who need external stimulation and community to stay motivated. A Binter Canarias flight to Gran Canaria takes 30 minutes when you need city energy. Distance context: Santa Cruz de La Palma to airport 20 min; 30-min flight to Tenerife or Gran Canaria; ferry to Tenerife 1.5 hrs.
💎 Hidden gem. Best for experienced nomads who want to focus, spend less, and live somewhere genuinely beautiful and remote. Not a starter island — Las Palmas or Tenerife first, then La Palma.
La Gomera & El Hierro
La Gomera and El Hierro are for nomads who are done with nomad culture. No coworking spaces. No Slack communities. No beach clubs with laptops. What they offer is extraordinary nature — the ancient Garajonay laurel forest on La Gomera, the world-class diving of El Hierro's Mar de Las Calmas — combined with the cheapest rents in the Canaries (€350–500 for a good apartment) and a pace of life that is genuinely restorative.
The internet infrastructure is improving but inconsistent outside the main villages. El Hierro has fibre in La Restinga and Valverde; La Gomera in San Sebastián and the main villages. For nomads who can work on a 50 Mbps ADSL line and don't require video calls more than twice a week, these islands are viable. For anyone who needs 200 Mbps symmetrical or frequent HD video calls, they're not. Think of them as islands for a 2–4 week deep work retreat, not a long-term base.
🌿 Best for sabbatical stays, writing retreats, or experienced nomads who need a reset. Not recommended as a first Canary Islands base.
Real Cost of Living — Island by Island
These are real figures from 2026, compiled from our own spending records and verified against current listings. They assume a solo nomad living comfortably — not luxuriously, not ascetically.
| Monthly expense | Las Palmas (GC) | Tenerife (N) | Lanzarote | Fuerteventura | La Palma |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-bed apartment (furnished) | €900–1,200 | €800–1,100 | €650–850 | €650–900 | €450–650 |
| Coworking membership | €120–200 | €100–180 | €80–150 | €80–130 | €60–100 |
| Groceries (cooking at home) | €200–280 | €200–270 | €190–260 | €190–260 | €160–230 |
| Eating out (lunch daily + dinners) | €250–380 | €230–350 | €200–320 | €200–320 | €170–280 |
| Transport (bus / occasional taxi) | €30–60 | €30–60 | €20–60 | €30–80 | €20–50 |
| Phone / SIM data | €15–25 | €15–25 | €15–25 | €15–25 | €15–25 |
| Entertainment / social | €100–200 | €100–180 | €80–150 | €80–150 | €60–120 |
| Monthly total (comfortable) | €1,615–2,345 | €1,475–2,165 | €1,235–1,815 | €1,245–1,865 | €935–1,455 |
Internet is essentially free: Most furnished apartments in Las Palmas and Tenerife include fibre internet. Coworking day passes typically include excellent WiFi. Budget a separate line item only if you're renting an unfurnished flat and setting up your own contract — expect €35–50/month for 300 Mbps fibre. Using an eSIM as a backup data connection for café hopping or outdoor working adds €10–20/month and eliminates WiFi dependency entirely.
Day-to-day spending examples (Las Palmas)
A typical Las Palmas working day might look like: flat white at Dogma Coffee (€2.50), lunch at a menu del día restaurant near Parque Santa Catalina (€10–12 for three courses with wine), afternoon beer at a terrace bar (€2.80), supermarket Mercadona shop for dinner ingredients (€8). Total daily food and drink spend: around €25–30 — which is considerably less than Madrid, Barcelona, or Lisbon for equivalent quality.
Best Coworking Spaces Across the Islands
Coworking infrastructure is concentrated heavily in Gran Canaria and Tenerife. The other islands have emerging options but nothing approaching the density of Las Palmas.
Coworking Las Canteras
- 200 Mbps symmetric fibre, never drops
- 100m from the Las Canteras beach
- Day pass ~€15, monthly ~€150
- Active community events and meetups
- 24/7 access on monthly plans
Impact Hub Las Palmas
- Startup-focused community; great for networking
- Private offices and hot desks available
- Regular workshops and speaker events
- Monthly from €180; day passes €18
- Located in Guanarteme, walkable neighbourhood
Worklan Santa Cruz
- Modern space, excellent natural light
- 300 Mbps fibre; Zoom booths available
- Monthly passes from €130
- Walking distance to city centre restaurants
- Growing nomad community hosting regular events
CoWork La Laguna
- Set in a renovated colonial building
- UNESCO World Heritage street location
- Strong university / creative community
- Cheapest major cowork on Tenerife: from €90/month
- Best café culture immediately outside
Nomad Hub Arrecife
- Small but reliable; strong fibre
- Community of 20–40 regulars at any time
- Monthly from €100; day pass €12
- Close to Arrecife Marina
- Best option on the island by some margin
Corralejo Cowork
- Surf-oriented community; relaxed atmosphere
- 100 Mbps; reliable for video calls
- Day pass €10; monthly €90
- Evening social events and surf meetups
- 5 min walk to beach; closes 19:00
Café culture as backup coworking: Las Palmas has an exceptional café-working culture — Dogma, Ofelia, Tagoror, and dozens of others maintain consistent WiFi, accept prolonged laptop sessions, and serve outstanding coffee. A €2.50 flat white buys you 3 hours of working time at a great desk by the window. This culture is the real reason Las Palmas tops nomad rankings — the whole city is essentially a distributed coworking space.
Overrated, Perfect & Underrated Spots
After years of watching nomads arrive with expectations and discover the reality, here are our honest assessments of specific locations across the islands.
Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife
Charming town but internet is inconsistent, coworking is sparse, and the expat community skews older. Looks great on Instagram; frustrates after a month of work.
Vegueta / Triana, Las Palmas
The old city neighbourhoods of Las Palmas. Walkable, beautiful, genuine local life, excellent café concentration, and 10 minutes from Las Canteras beach. The sweet spot.
Santa Cruz de La Palma
Cheapest rents in the archipelago, fibre internet, extraordinary hiking and stargazing on the doorstep. Almost entirely undiscovered by the nomad community. Not for beginners.
Costa Adeje / Playa de las Américas
Tenerife's southern resort strip. Great weather, expensive apartments, poor local culture. The nomads who move here invariably relocate to the north within 3 months.
La Laguna, Tenerife
UNESCO city, university energy, best café scene on the island, affordable rents, and 15 minutes from Santa Cruz when you need city amenities. Genuinely outstanding.
Arrecife, Lanzarote
The unglamorous capital that most tourists skip entirely. Cheap, authentic, good fibre, and 10 minutes from some of the island's best beaches. Far better than the resort towns.
Las Canteras beachfront, Las Palmas
The street directly on the beach is noisy, overpriced, and feels like a resort strip. Move 2 blocks inland for the same fibre, a fraction of the noise, and 30% lower rent.
El Cotillo, Fuerteventura
Small fishing village with an active surf community, cheap apartments, reliable home internet, and the most beautiful sunsets in the Canaries. For lifestyle-first nomads only.
Guanarteme, Las Palmas
The neighbourhood immediately north of Las Canteras. All the beach proximity, lower rents than the seafront, better restaurants, and the most active nomad community in the city.
Year-Round Weather for Remote Workers
One of the most commonly asked questions from prospective Canary Islands nomads is whether the weather is actually good year-round or just in summer. The answer, for most of the islands, is genuinely year-round.
| Month | Las Palmas | Tenerife (N) | Lanzarote | Fuerteventura | Outdoor work? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 19°C | 18°C | 19°C | 18°C | ✅ T-shirt possible |
| February | 19°C | 18°C | 20°C | 19°C | ✅ Pleasant |
| March | 21°C | 20°C | 21°C | 20°C | ✅ Excellent |
| April | 22°C | 21°C | 23°C | 22°C | ✅ Ideal |
| May | 23°C | 22°C | 25°C | 24°C | ✅ Ideal |
| June | 25°C | 24°C | 27°C | 26°C | ✅ Ideal (some wind) |
| July | 26°C | 26°C | 29°C | 28°C | ⚡ Hot midday |
| August | 27°C | 27°C | 30°C | 29°C | ⚡ Morning/evening best |
| September | 27°C | 26°C | 28°C | 28°C | ✅ Excellent |
| October | 25°C | 24°C | 26°C | 26°C | ✅ Ideal |
| November | 23°C | 21°C | 23°C | 23°C | ✅ Pleasant |
| December | 21°C | 19°C | 21°C | 20°C | ✅ Fine in afternoon sun |
The practical implication: you can work outdoors on a terrace or at a café table every month of the year in the Canary Islands. Even in January — the coldest month — afternoon temperatures in Las Palmas reach 19–20°C in the sun, which is more than sufficient for comfortable outdoor working with a light jacket. Contrast this with Lisbon (8–10°C in January) or Barcelona (10–12°C) — the supposedly "warm" European nomad hubs that require a coat and a heated interior from November to March. The Canaries' winters are genuinely their competitive advantage.
I used to do the classic nomad circuit — Lisbon in spring, somewhere Baltic in summer, then panic about winter. Now I've been in Las Palmas for eighteen months. I've worked from a café terrace every single week. I'd completely forgotten what a grey November felt like until my mum sent me photos from Sheffield.
Visas & Legal Requirements
The legal situation for digital nomads in the Canary Islands is straightforward for EU citizens and manageable (with planning) for everyone else.
Visa Options at a Glance
🇪🇺 EU / EEA Citizens
- No visa required — live and work indefinitely
- Register on the Padrón (local census) for stays over 3 months
- Access to Spanish NIE (tax ID) straightforwardly
- Full access to Spanish public health system (EHIC until replaced)
- No income requirements
🌍 Non-EU Citizens
- 90-day visa-free (Schengen) for most nationalities
- Spain Digital Nomad Visa: 12 months, renewable to 5 years
- DNV requirement: proof of remote income €2,334+/month
- DNV tax rate: 24% on first €600k (Beckham Law option)
- Process via Spanish consulate in home country; allow 2–3 months
Tax residency matters more than visa status. If you spend more than 183 days in Spain in any calendar year, you become a Spanish tax resident regardless of your visa status. This changes your tax obligations significantly. This guide is not tax advice — consult a Spanish gestor (tax advisor) as early as possible in your stay. The Beckham Law (Ley Beckham) allows qualifying non-EU nomads to pay a flat 24% tax rate on Spain-sourced income for 6 years, which can be highly advantageous. A good gestor in Las Palmas or Santa Cruz de Tenerife costs €80–150 for initial consultations and is well worth the investment.
Getting There & Staying Connected
Flights from Europe
The Canary Islands are exceptionally well-connected from across Europe, with direct budget flights to Gran Canaria (LPA), Tenerife South (TFS), Tenerife North (TFN), Lanzarote (ACE), and Fuerteventura (FUE) from dozens of UK and European cities. Searching flexible dates on multi-route tools typically identifies the cheapest combination of home city + island — Tuesday and Wednesday departures are regularly 20–35% cheaper than weekend flights. For nomads committing to 3+ months, the cost of occasional home visits is a real budget consideration; the Canaries' excellent flight connectivity makes this relatively painless.
Inter-island connectivity
Moving between islands is easy and cheap. Binter Canarias and CanaryFly operate short flights (25–50 minutes, typically €40–80 return if booked in advance) between all islands. Fred Olsen and Naviera Armas run fast ferries between the western islands. Most nomads on an extended Canary Islands stay do 2–3 island hops over a season — exploring the archipelago while maintaining a primary base.
A rental car for your first two weeks on any island is strongly recommended — it lets you evaluate different neighbourhoods, beaches, and coworking locations before committing to a long-term apartment. After the first month, most nomads in Las Palmas and Santa Cruz manage entirely on foot and public buses.
SIM cards and mobile data
For short-term arrivals or those waiting for a Spanish SIM, an eSIM with Spanish data coverage activates instantly and provides reliable 4G/5G backup when café WiFi is unreliable. For longer stays, Movistar's monthly SIM plans (€15–20 for unlimited data) are the most reliable single-operator solution. Orange and Vodafone are reasonable alternatives. The Canaries are covered by Spanish national networks — 5G is available in urban areas of all main islands.
Multi-country eSIM for island hoppers: If you're combining the Canaries with Portugal, Germany, or another European country on the same trip, a multi-country eSIM covering 150+ destinations avoids the SIM-swapping headache. One app, one account, seamless across borders — particularly useful if your Canaries stay involves a visit home mid-trip.
What Other Nomads Say
The thing nobody tells you about Las Palmas is that you stop missing Europe within about three weeks. The food is good, the people are warm, the internet is fast, and your afternoon run is on the beach. Then your colleagues in Berlin start complaining about the rain and you realise you've accidentally solved the problem you didn't know you had.
I came to Lanzarote for a month and stayed eight. Arrecife is not glamorous but it's cheap, the internet works, and I'm surrounded by a landscape that makes my screenshots look like science fiction. I get more deep work done here than anywhere I've ever been. The silence helps.
✦ Our Final Nomad Verdict
Essential Tools for Your Canary Islands Move
Flights to the Canary Islands
Kiwi.com · Multi-route Search
Search flexible-date fares across all five Canary Islands airports simultaneously. The nomad approach: fly into Gran Canaria (LPA) to establish your base, then use the cheap inter-island network to explore. Tue/Wed departures are typically 25–35% cheaper than weekend flights.
Search Flights ✈Car Rental for First 2 Weeks
GetRentaCar · Rental Search
Essential for evaluating neighbourhoods before committing to an apartment. A 2-week rental lets you compare north vs south, coast vs city, coworking proximity — all the factors that determine whether your Canaries base actually works for your schedule. Return the car once you know where you're staying.
Compare Rentals 🚗Airport Transfers
GetTransfer · Private Transfers
Arrive at your new base without the taxi-meter anxiety. Pre-book a fixed-price private transfer directly from the airport to your accommodation — particularly useful when you're landing with a full nomad kit (laptop bag, dive gear, however many suitcases you've convinced yourself you need).
Book Transfer 🚐Spanish eSIM — Instant Data
Saily · Mobile Data
Activate before your flight lands — seriously. Having 4G/5G data the moment you exit arrivals transforms the first 48 hours: SIM-free navigation, WhatsApp to your new landlord, checking coworking space addresses. No waiting for a Spanish SIM in a queue. Essential for the first month while you sort a long-term plan.
Get eSIM 📱Global eSIM for Island Hoppers
Yesim · International Data
If your Canaries stay is part of a broader nomad circuit — combining with Portugal, UK, Germany, or beyond — Yesim's 150+ country eSIM eliminates SIM management entirely. One app, continuous data wherever you are. Used by serious long-haul nomads who've stopped thinking about connectivity.
Get Connected 🌐Explore Beyond Your Desk
WeGoTrip · Audio Guides
Weekend exploration without planning overhead — downloadable audio guides to Teide, Garajonay, Timanfaya, and the natural highlights of every island. Work hard Monday–Thursday; let a good guide take over on the weekend. The Canaries' natural wonders are the reward for your working week.
Explore Islands 🗺️