Vilnius is one of Europe's best-kept secrets for digital nomads. The Lithuanian capital sits inside the Schengen zone with 90-day visa-free access for most non-EU nationalities, and Lithuania consistently ranks among the top 5 in the EU for broadband speed. Monthly costs hover around €1,200–1,500 in
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Coliving in Vilnius, Lithuania for Digital Nomads

Vilnius is one of Europe's best-kept secrets for digital nomads. The Lithuanian capital sits inside the Schengen zone with 90-day visa-free access for most non-EU nationalities, and Lithuania consistently ranks among the top 5 in the EU for broadband speed. Monthly costs hover around €1,200–1,500 including rent, which makes it affordable for a European capital. The Old Town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, so your WFH backdrop involves cobblestone streets and baroque church towers rather than a beige WeWork wall. Summers are warm and social. Winters are properly cold and productive. The food scene punches well above its weight for a city of under 600,000 people, and there's a small but tight nomad community that you'll find yourself in after exactly one visit to the right café. Vilnius doesn't get the hype of Lisbon or Tbilisi. The people who discover it tend to come back.



Best Neighborhoods for Remote Workers

Senamiestis (Old Town) is the obvious choice and, honestly, the right one. UNESCO heritage, cafés on every corner, and a walkable medieval grid that makes getting lunch feel like a small adventure. Rents are higher here than the rest of the city but still cheaper than equivalent neighborhoods in Lisbon or Warsaw. Great for people who want to feel the city around them while they work.

Užupis is a self-declared independent "republic" — their constitution includes the right to be happy and the right to be unique. Artists, indie coffee shops, and a slightly offbeat crowd make it ideal if you're doing creative work and want your surroundings to match. It's quiet but ten minutes from Old Town.

Naujamiestis (New Town) is where the city's expat and startup scene has gravitated. More practical, less touristy, better apartment-to-price ratio. You'll find modern cafés, coworking spaces, and a younger local crowd here. If you're staying more than a month, this is probably where you end up.

Žvėrynas is a leafy residential neighbourhood across the river — calm, green, and popular with families and longer-term locals. Not much going on, but excellent internet, quiet mornings, and a 20-minute walk to the Old Town when you need it.


Coworking Spaces in Vilnius, Lithuania

Rockit is the OG of Vilnius coworking. Tech-focused community, solid hardware, and a reputation for actually knowing who works there. Good for anyone who wants more than a desk — events, meetups, startup energy. Located in New Town.

Spaces Vilnius is the premium option: think WeWork-style design, private offices, meeting rooms, and a reception that makes you feel like you're in a real company. Good for client calls or when you need the professional backdrop.

Regus Vilnius is the reliable default if you just need a desk without commitment. Multiple locations, decent coffee, no frills. Not exciting but consistent.


What to Eat in Vilnius, Lithuania

This is important. Lithuania does not get enough credit for its food and that needs to stop immediately.

Cepelinai are the national dish and for good reason. Giant potato dumplings shaped like zeppelins, stuffed with ground pork, and drowning in sour cream and crispy bacon. They are heavy in the best possible way. Eat one at noon and your afternoon productivity will suffer but you will be happy.

Šaltibarščiai is cold beet soup — shocking pink, served with a boiled potato and a hardboiled egg, absolutely bewildering to look at, delicious to eat. It's a summer dish and a genuine Vilnius experience. Order it with a straight face like you've had it a hundred times.

Šakotis is the tree cake — a spit-roasted layered cake that looks like a spiky pine tree and tastes like a buttery dream. You'll see it in every bakery window. Buy a piece. Then another.

Kibinai are technically a Karaite pastry from nearby Trakai, but everyone in Vilnius eats them. Crescent-shaped, filled with lamb or pork, baked golden. Best eaten standing up at the Trakai market after walking the castle. Day-trip mandatory.

The rye bread here is also genuinely among the best in Europe. Dense, slightly sour, excellent toasted with butter. Don't skip it because it sounds boring.

For the full market experience, head to Halės turgus — the main food market just outside the Old Town. Local cheese, cured meats, pickled everything, and the kind of Lithuanian grandmothers who will pack your bag better than you asked. Go on a Saturday morning with no agenda.

The restaurant scene has quietly levelled up over the last decade. Vilnius now has more Michelin-recommended spots per capita than most cities its size. Džiaugsmas, Sweet Root, and Amandus are names worth knowing for a proper dinner.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Vilnius good for digital nomads?

Yes, especially if you're coming from Western Europe. Fast internet, good infrastructure, affordable food and rent, Schengen zone access, and enough of a nomad community to not feel alone, without the overcrowded-Lisbon problem. Underrated and worth it.

How fast is the internet in Vilnius?

Lithuania has some of the fastest fixed broadband and mobile internet in the EU. Most apartments and coworking spaces run 100–300 Mbps without breaking a sweat. You will not have upload problems here.

Is Vilnius safe?

Safe. Low crime, walkable at night, minimal scam culture. The main thing to watch for in Old Town is pickpockets during summer festivals — which is true of every tourist area in Europe. Otherwise, relax.

What's the best time of year to visit Vilnius?

May through September. Summers are warm (20–28°C), long evenings, outdoor terraces everywhere. Winters are cold and grey — workable if you like that kind of focus, brutal if you don't.

Can I get by in Vilnius without speaking Lithuanian?

Yes. English is widely spoken, especially among younger people and anyone in the hospitality or tech sector. You'll occasionally hit an older local who doesn't have much English, but Google Translate handles it fine. Lithuanian is a fascinating language to have on in the background though — it's one of the oldest living Indo-European languages. Little trivia for your next coworking icebreaker.


Related Destinations

Looking for more under-the-radar European cities with great internet and affordable rent?

  • Tallinn, Estonia
  • Riga, Latvia
  • Warsaw, Poland
  • Budapest, Hungary
  • Tbilisi, Georgia
  • Published On
    May 11, 2026
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