City-by-City Monthly Budgets: What Remote Workers Actually Spend
These numbers reflect a comfortable but not extravagant lifestyle: a private one-bedroom apartment, eating out a few times a week, a coworking space or home office setup, and normal social activities. All figures in EUR.
Lisbon, Portugal
- Rent (1-bed, central): EUR 1,000-1,400
- Coworking: EUR 150-250
- Groceries: EUR 250-350
- Eating out (8-10 meals): EUR 150-200
- Transport: EUR 40-60 (metro pass)
- Health insurance: EUR 100-200 (private expat)
- SIM/internet: EUR 20-30
- Misc (coffee shops, entertainment): EUR 150-200
- Total: EUR 1,860-2,690
Lisbon has gentrified significantly. It's no longer the bargain it was in 2020. Rent is the big variable -- neighborhoods like Graça or Almada across the river are notably cheaper than Chiado or Príncipe Real.
Valencia, Spain
- Rent (1-bed, central): EUR 800-1,100
- Coworking: EUR 120-200
- Groceries: EUR 200-300
- Eating out: EUR 120-180
- Transport: EUR 35-50
- Health insurance: EUR 80-150
- SIM/internet: EUR 15-25
- Misc: EUR 120-180
- Total: EUR 1,490-2,185
Valencia offers arguably the best value in Western Europe for remote workers. Excellent infrastructure, good weather, manageable cost of living, and a growing tech community.
Medellin, Colombia
- Rent (1-bed, Laureles/Poblado): EUR 500-900
- Coworking: EUR 60-120
- Groceries: EUR 150-250
- Eating out: EUR 80-150
- Transport: EUR 30-50
- Health insurance: EUR 80-150
- SIM/internet: EUR 10-20
- Misc: EUR 100-150
- Total: EUR 1,010-1,790
Medellin's costs have risen with its popularity among digital nomads, especially in El Poblado. Laureles and Envigado offer better value and a more authentic experience.
Bangkok, Thailand
- Rent (1-bed, central): EUR 400-800
- Coworking: EUR 80-150
- Groceries: EUR 150-250
- Eating out: EUR 100-200
- Transport: EUR 40-80 (BTS + occasional taxi)
- Health insurance: EUR 80-150
- SIM/internet: EUR 10-15
- Misc: EUR 100-200
- Total: EUR 960-1,845
Bangkok's value depends heavily on lifestyle choices. Street food keeps costs incredibly low. Western-style restaurants and bars push costs toward European levels quickly.
Tbilisi, Georgia
- Rent (1-bed, central): EUR 350-600
- Coworking: EUR 60-100
- Groceries: EUR 120-200
- Eating out: EUR 60-120
- Transport: EUR 15-30
- Health insurance: EUR 80-150
- SIM/internet: EUR 5-10
- Misc: EUR 80-120
- Total: EUR 770-1,330
Tbilisi remains one of the most affordable bases for remote workers with excellent internet infrastructure, a one-year visa-free stay for most nationalities, and a surprisingly vibrant tech scene.
Hidden Costs Nobody Warns You About
The city budgets above cover the obvious expenses. Here's what they don't include -- and what often tips the financial math.
Health insurance: If you're leaving an employer that provided health coverage, you're now paying for it yourself. A proper international health insurance policy (SafetyWing, Cigna Global, or Allianz Care) runs EUR 80-250/month depending on your age and coverage level. Travel insurance from your credit card is not a substitute -- it covers emergencies, not routine care. This is a fixed cost that follows you everywhere. Budget it as a line item, not an afterthought.
Flights home: You'll go home at least 1-3 times per year -- family events, administrative requirements, renewals. These flights are real costs. Budget EUR 500-1,500 per trip depending on distance. If you're based in Medellin and your family is in Germany, that's EUR 3,000-4,500 per year in flights alone.
Visa and residency fees: Digital nomad visas aren't free. Spain's is around EUR 80 for the application plus legal fees of EUR 500-2,000 if you use an immigration lawyer (recommended). Portugal's D8 visa has similar costs. These are one-time or annual expenses, but they add up -- especially if you're moving between visa regimes.
Exchange rate losses: If you earn in one currency and spend in another, you're exposed to exchange rate fluctuations. EUR/COP (Colombian peso) can swing 10-15% in a year. Even with Wise's good rates, you'll lose 0.5-1% on every conversion. Over a year of spending EUR 1,500/month in a foreign currency, that's EUR 90-180 in exchange losses. Not catastrophic, but not zero.
The "nomad tax" on housing: Short-term and medium-term rentals cost more per month than long-term local leases. A local Colombian renter might pay COP 1.5M/month (EUR 350) for an apartment that costs EUR 700 on Airbnb. You're paying a premium for flexibility and furnished spaces. This premium narrows the longer you stay.
Productivity costs during transitions: Every time you move cities, you lose 3-7 days of peak productivity to travel, settling in, and logistics. If you move every month, that's 36-84 days per year of reduced output. For a consultant billing EUR 800/day, even a conservative estimate of 2 lost billable days per move equals EUR 19,200/year in opportunity cost. This is the strongest financial argument for staying in places longer.
The Comparison: Staying Put vs. Moving Abroad
Let's do the honest math. Take a senior tech professional earning EUR 6,000/month net (after tax) and compare three scenarios for a year.
Scenario A: Stay in Munich
- Rent: EUR 1,400/month
- All other living expenses: EUR 1,800/month
- Health insurance: covered by employer
- Total annual cost: EUR 38,400
- Annual savings: EUR 33,600
Scenario B: Live in Valencia full-time (freelance)
- Living costs: EUR 1,800/month (middle estimate from above)
- Health insurance: EUR 150/month
- Flights home: EUR 400/year (short-haul)
- Visa/legal: EUR 1,000/year (amortized)
- Total annual cost: EUR 24,800
- Annual savings: EUR 47,200
Scenario C: Move every 2-3 months across multiple cities
- Living costs: EUR 1,800/month (average across cities)
- Health insurance: EUR 180/month (international policy)
- Flights between cities: EUR 3,000/year
- Flights home: EUR 2,000/year
- Visa fees: EUR 500/year
- Lost productivity: EUR 4,800/year (6 moves x EUR 800)
- Total annual cost: EUR 34,060
- Annual savings: EUR 37,940
The surprise: the nomad who moves frequently doesn't save dramatically more than staying in Munich. The person who picks one affordable city and stays there saves the most. The financial case for location independence is strongest when you minimize moves and maximize the cost differential between your earning location and your living location.
This doesn't mean you shouldn't explore. But it means the "travel the world and save money" narrative is only true if you're disciplined about where you go and how often you move.
When 'Cheaper' Isn't Actually Cheaper
Some destinations that look like bargains on paper end up costing as much as or more than staying home. Here's when the math breaks down.
When you eat out constantly. Cooking at home in Medellin is genuinely cheap. Eating at Western-friendly restaurants in El Poblado three times a day is not. The gap between local lifestyle costs and "expat bubble" costs can be 2-3x in many cities. If you default to Uber Eats, brunch spots, and craft cocktail bars, you'll spend European prices in a Latin American city.
When you prioritize convenience over value. The serviced apartment in the expat neighborhood with the English-speaking landlord and the pool costs EUR 1,200/month. The local apartment two neighborhoods over costs EUR 500. Same city, very different economics. Many remote workers never leave the convenience zone and then wonder why the city isn't as cheap as promised.
When healthcare surprises hit. Travel insurance has coverage gaps. Dental work, mental health care, and pre-existing conditions are often excluded or capped. An unexpected root canal in Bangkok costs EUR 300-500. Good, but if you've been skimping on insurance and need something more serious -- an MRI, specialist consultation, or surgery -- the bills escalate fast. Budget for real health insurance, not the cheapest policy you can find.
When the timezone costs you clients. Choosing Bali because it's cheap but losing a client who needs CET-timezone availability is a net negative. A EUR 500/month savings on rent means nothing if you lose a EUR 5,000/month contract because you couldn't make the meeting times work. Pick locations that are compatible with your income sources, not just your expense targets.
When you move too often. As covered above, every move has direct and indirect costs. The person who spends 3 months in Tbilisi, 3 months in Valencia, 3 months in Medellin, and 3 months at home has 4 transition periods. The person who stays in Valencia all year has zero. The financial difference is significant -- easily EUR 3,000-8,000/year in transition costs alone.
The bottom line: location independence saves money when you're intentional. Pick a base, stay for a meaningful period, live somewhat locally, and resist the urge to optimize for novelty over economics. The biggest savings come not from choosing the cheapest city but from choosing a good city and staying long enough to stop paying the newcomer premium.