Mexico sits in Central America & Caribbean and offers a remote-work proposition that balances cost, infrastructure, and lifestyle in a way unique to its part of the world. The figures below are aggregated from the 23 Nomad Desk city guides covering destinations across the country — they reflect a single remote worker's realistic monthly budget for a private apartment in a central, walkable neighborhood, plus food, transport, coworking, and basic discretionary spending.
What it costs to live here
The country average across our city guides comes in at $1,639 per month, but the spread is wide. The cheapest base on our list is San Cristobal de las Casas at roughly $1,300 monthly, while higher-cost or capital-city options can run two or three times that. Use this as a sanity check, not a guarantee — your actual burn rate depends heavily on neighborhood choice, lease length, and how much of your food spending happens at home versus restaurants.
Cheapest cities in Mexico
San Cristobal de las Casas
$1,300/month · 55 Mbps
Budget pickPuebla
$1,300/month · 80 Mbps
Budget pickGuanajuato
$1,300/month · 80 Mbps
Budget pickMorelia
$1,300/month · 80 Mbps
Internet and connectivity
Average internet speed across our covered cities in Mexico is around 77 Mbps on typical residential and coworking lines. That is comfortably above the threshold for stable video calls and most remote-work loads. Verify the actual line speed at your specific address before signing a longer lease — newer buildings and central districts usually have fiber, while older infrastructure lags.
Fastest internet cities in Mexico
Mexico City (Roma)
90 Mbps · $2,100/month
Fast fiberMexico City (Condesa)
90 Mbps · $2,300/month
Fast fiberOaxaca
90 Mbps · $1,500/month
Fast fiberGuadalajara
90 Mbps · $1,500/month
Visa and stay length
Mexico operates a dedicated nomad-friendly route: Temporary Resident Visa. Headline terms: 1 year initial, renewable up to 4 years, with an income requirement of ~$2,700/month income or ~$43,000 in savings. Not branded as a nomad visa but functionally one of the best long-term nomad routes in the Americas. Read the full breakdown on our Mexico nomad visa page, then verify current terms on the official immigration site before applying.
Where to base — neighborhoods and city choice
For a first stay in Mexico, prioritise the country's most established remote-work hubs — these are the cities where the rental market, cafe scene, and coworking infrastructure have all matured to the point that you can land on a Tuesday and have a working routine by Friday. The list below is ranked by overall nomad score, but the right pick usually comes down to your visa, your timezone, and the specific neighborhoods you actually want to spend three months in.
All Mexico cities on Nomad Desk
Mexico City (Roma)
Mexico City (Condesa)
Oaxaca
Guadalajara
Merida
Playa del Carmen
San Miguel de Allende
Monterrey
Sayulita
Tulum
Puerto Vallarta
Queretaro
La Paz (BCS)
Puerto Escondido
San Cristobal de las Casas
Puebla
Cancun
Guanajuato
Mazatlan
Morelia
Cuernavaca
Bacalar
Holbox
Practical tips for working from Mexico
The general framework that works well across the country: scout a city for two weeks before committing to a longer lease, lean on monthly rental sites and local Facebook groups for housing rather than short-term-rental platforms, and use a coworking day pass at two or three spaces before settling on a monthly membership. Your first week will involve more logistics than work; budget for that and the rest of the stay falls into place.
For payment infrastructure, a multi-currency account like Wise handles local rent transfers and salary receipts cleanly across most of Mexico. For health and travel coverage, the standard nomad-stack option is SafetyWing — long-stay friendly and accepted by most visa programs that require proof of insurance.