Work setup that actually works for remote weeks
Most furnished apartments in Mexico City market themselves as "work-friendly" and deliver a laptop tray and a slow router. The Roma Norte loft was put together with a different question: what would you actually need to run a productive month from this apartment?
Full-size external display at the Roma Norte loft. Code reviews, design work, and spreadsheets at a real resolution — not a 13-inch laptop screen for a whole month.
A proper work zone designed for video calls and long focus sessions. The setup is separated from the living and sleeping areas so work time has its own context.
Reliable fiber internet for Zoom-heavy workweeks, large file transfers, and concurrent devices. Guests consistently report strong, stable connectivity.
Roma Norte building rooftop — a genuine reset between deep work blocks. Rare at this price point in CDMX.
Building gym in Roma Norte. Saves the cost and commute of a separate gym membership for stays of any length.
All properties include self check-in with detailed instructions sent before arrival. Late flights and irregular schedules are normal — not a problem.
Available units for digital nomads in CDMX
Three formats that cover the most common remote-work scenarios: a flagship work-focused loft in Roma Norte, a spacious two-bedroom for nomad pairs or hack weeks, and a quieter private-room option in Narvarte.
Chic Nomad Loft — Roma Norte
The strongest remote-work setup in the StayWork lineup. Best for solo nomads or pairs who want walkability, cafe density, and a home office that doesn't require a workaround.
- 1 bed, 1 bath — up to 2 guests
- 27″ QHD monitor + dedicated desk
- Fiber Wi-Fi, rooftop pool, gym
- Walking distance to Parque México and Roma Norte cafes
- Strong fit for 1–3 month stays
Narvarte 2BR — Near Parque Delta
Spacious furnished apartment for two nomads working different schedules, a nomad + partner setup, or anyone who wants a calmer neighborhood and more room to spread out.
- 2 bedrooms, 2 baths — up to 4 guests
- Full kitchen, living area
- Near Parque Delta and metro lines
- Quieter residential block — good for focus-heavy months
- Better value per square meter than Roma Norte
Narvarte Private Room
Lower-cost monthly option for solo nomads traveling light who want a comfortable furnished base and a sensible neighborhood without paying for an entire apartment.
- Private room with private bath
- Natural light, desk corner
- Transit-friendly Narvarte location
- Best value entry for extended CDMX stays
Roma Norte vs Narvarte for remote workers
The right neighborhood depends less on what looks good on a map and more on how your workday is actually structured. Both areas work for remote work — they just optimize for different things.
Roma Norte — walkable, cafe-dense, energetic
Roma Norte is the top choice if your workday benefits from neighborhood texture: good coffee within walking distance, coworking spaces a few blocks away, and a pedestrian-friendly environment that makes it easy to take a real break without getting in a car.
- Walking distance to Parque México and dozens of independent cafes
- Active street life — good for solo nomads who want social density
- Rooftop pool and gym in the building
- QHD monitor and dedicated desk in the loft
- Higher nightly price — the tradeoff for the amenity set
Narvarte — quieter, practical, better value
Narvarte suits nomads who work best from home with fewer distractions and want a calmer neighborhood at the end of the workday. Metro access and Parque Delta make the logistics easy; the lower cost-per-month makes the budget math easier too.
- Near Parque Delta and the Narvarte market
- Metro line access — easy rides to Condesa, Roma, Centro
- Residential blocks — better for deep-focus months
- Larger apartments for the same or lower price
- Good fit for pairs or anyone on a tighter monthly budget
Still deciding? Our guide to Roma Norte vs Narvarte breaks down the tradeoffs in more detail — neighborhood feel, daily logistics, and which type of stay each one suits best.
Why Mexico City works for digital nomads
CDMX has grown into one of the most established remote-work bases in Latin America — not because of hype, but because the fundamentals are solid. Here is what actually matters if you are evaluating the city as a base:
CST in winter, CDT in summer. Overlaps well with US East Coast business hours and catches European mornings before noon. One of the most practical timezones in the Americas for international remote teams.
US, Canadian, EU, and UK passport holders can enter Mexico as tourists for up to 180 days — no visa application, no waiting period. Enough time for a serious stay or two back-to-back trips.
Rent, food, and transport are meaningfully lower than comparable cities in the US or Europe. A productive month in Roma Norte or Narvarte typically costs a fraction of what the same setup would run in New York, Berlin, or Lisbon. See our 2026 cost-of-living guide for CDMX nomads.
Mexico City is one of the best-connected cities in the Americas. Direct routes to New York, LA, Chicago, Miami, Houston, Madrid, Amsterdam, and dozens of other hubs make it easy to stay mobile or get a client visit done without a layover nightmare.
Roma Norte, Condesa, and Narvarte are genuinely walkable neighborhoods with grocery stores, restaurants, cafes, parks, and pharmacies in close range. You don't need a car to have a good daily routine.
Enough remote workers already based in CDMX that finding a coworking buddy, a running group, or a language exchange is easier than in cities where you are pioneering the scene.
Apartment photos — Roma Norte & Narvarte
Frequently asked questions
What is the Wi-Fi speed at the Roma Norte loft?
The Roma Norte loft has fiber internet with speeds suitable for video calls, large file transfers, and multiple concurrent devices. Guests report stable connectivity through Zoom-heavy workweeks without issues.
Is Mexico City safe for digital nomads?
Roma Norte and Narvarte are two of the safest, most walkable neighborhoods in the city. Both areas have dense street activity during the day and active restaurant and bar scenes in the evening. Standard urban awareness applies — the same common sense you would use in any large city. Read how other remote workers experience it in our solo remote-worker month in CDMX guide.
Do I need a digital nomad visa for Mexico?
Mexico does not currently have a formal digital nomad visa. Most nationalities (US, Canada, EU, UK, and many others) enter as tourists for up to 180 days — no special application needed. Check your specific passport requirements before travel, as the 180-day limit is granted at the discretion of the immigration officer.
How does booking directly compare to Airbnb?
Direct bookings through StayWork CDMX typically offer better rates (especially for monthly stays), more direct communication with the host, and more flexibility on check-in logistics. Email info@stayworkcdmx.com with your dates and we will send a quote within 24 hours.
Are there coworking spaces near the Roma Norte loft?
Several coworking spaces are within a short walk or ride from Roma Norte. Most guests work from the apartment most of the time (the monitor and desk make it easy) and use neighborhood cafes for meetings or a change of scenery. See our Roma Norte coffee shop guide for which cafes actually hold up for laptop work.
What is included in a furnished monthly stay?
Monthly stays include fully furnished apartments with kitchen basics, linens, towels, and work-ready amenities depending on the unit. The Roma Norte loft adds the external monitor and building gym and pool access. Monthly pricing and what is bundled in utilities is confirmed before booking. See the full monthly guide: monthly apartments in Mexico City.
Related guides for remote workers in Mexico City
A month in CDMX as a solo remote worker
First-person breakdown of the logistics, neighborhood tradeoffs, and what to expect from a full month working remotely in Mexico City.
Coffee shops for remote work in Roma Norte
Which cafes actually work for laptop sessions, calls, and long focus blocks — and which ones are better saved for a Sunday brunch.
Cost of living in CDMX for nomads (2026)
Rent, food, transport, coworking, and lifestyle costs broken down by neighborhood and spending style.
Roma Norte vs Narvarte — which neighborhood fits you?
A direct comparison of the two main StayWork neighborhoods for remote workers: daily feel, logistics, and who each one suits.
Digital nomad desk setup in CDMX
How to set up your home office when you are working from a furnished apartment — what to bring, what to buy locally, and what the loft already covers.
Monthly apartments in Mexico City
If your stay is stretching past 30 nights, this is the full guide to monthly furnished apartments — pricing, what to expect, and how to book direct.
Ready to set up your CDMX base?
Tell us your neighborhood preference, travel dates, and whether you are solo or with a partner — we'll match you with the right unit.
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