Madeira Remote — Coliving in the Atlantic
Perched in the heart of Funchal on the island of Madeira, Madeira Remote is a coliving and coworking concept built for remote workers who want more than just a desk and a bed. It is powered by Madeira Friends, an international community that has been growing the island's nomad scene since 2020 and now counts over 17,000 Instagram followers.
What's Included
A stay at Madeira Remote covers a surprising amount of ground for the price:
- Private furnished room in Funchal, starting from €35/night
- Hot desk access at the Madeira Friends Hub coworking space
- High-speed WiFi, all utilities, and weekly cleaning
- Madeira Discounts Card — 60+ local partners with deals on restaurants, gyms, water sports, surf lessons, scooter rentals, spa, and more
- Minimum 7 nights booking two months out (3 nights for current/next month)
Every resident also gets automatic entry into the broader Madeira Friends events calendar, which logs more than 800 events per year — and almost all of them are free.
Community at the Core
This is where Madeira Remote genuinely stands out from a standard coliving. The Madeira Friends network organizes a relentless calendar of experiences: Tuesday community lunches rotating through local restaurants, Sunday levada hikes and sea-cliff walks, skill-share workshops covering AI, marketing, breathwork, and photography, rooftop yoga, sunset BBQs, Portuguese language classes, beach clean-ups, and NGO volunteer days.
For nomads who have struggled to build genuine connections while traveling, this kind of built-in social infrastructure is rare. Madeira has a reputation for being unusually welcoming to remote workers — the island launched one of Europe's first official Digital Nomad Village programs in 2021 — and Madeira Remote sits at the center of that ecosystem.
The Island
Madeira is a Portuguese archipelago in the Atlantic, roughly 1,000 km southwest of Lisbon. Funchal, the capital, has reliable flights to major European hubs, a mild subtropical climate year-round, relatively low cost of living compared to mainland Portugal, and dramatic natural scenery — volcanic peaks, levada irrigation trails through forests, black-sand beaches, and cliffs over the Atlantic.
For remote workers weighing their next base, Madeira offers a rare combination: EU residency access for European passport holders, a growing English-speaking expat community, fast broadband infrastructure, and outdoor activities that make weekends genuinely worthwhile.
Who It's For
Madeira Remote appeals to solo nomads who want a ready-made social circle without sacrificing privacy, and to longer-stay remote workers who want a structured base rather than a series of Airbnb rotations. The week-minimum policy keeps the vibe from feeling like a constant hostel turnover, and the discounts card makes exploring the island more affordable.
If you want island life with a built-in tribe rather than a transient stopover, Madeira Remote is one of the most well-integrated coliving options in southern Europe.