Palma Coliving Review (2026): Barcelona, Valencia & Mallorca
Live & Work in Paradise.

What Is Palma Coliving?
Palma Coliving is a premium boutique coliving brand operating across three Spanish cities — Barcelona, Valencia, and Mallorca — built specifically for digital nomads, remote workers, and entrepreneurs who want more than a room with WiFi. Founded in August 2020 by Matthieu Zeilas and Hugo Grange, it has grown from a single villa in Mallorca into a multi-city operation with 45+ rooms, 500+ guests annually from 25+ nationalities, and three consecutive nominations for Best Nomad Coliving at the Coliving Awards (2022, 2023, and 2024).
The numbers behind the scenes are arguably more telling than the marketing: a 30% guest return rate, nearly 50% of bookings coming from referrals, and an average stay of six weeks — with many month-long bookings extending to four to six months. These aren't metrics you manufacture. They come from building something people actually want to stay in.
This review covers all three locations honestly — including where Palma Coliving genuinely excels and where real guests have found it falls short.
Palma Coliving is best for:
✓ Remote workers and freelancers who want villa-style community living in Spain
✓ Digital nomads staying 1–3+ months with flexibility to hop between cities
✓ People who value curated community over large anonymous crowds
✓ Anyone who wants sun, beaches, and a productive work environment year-round
✓ Professionals tired of working alone in Airbnbs with no social infrastructure
View Palma Coliving availability on CoDNX →
Who Founded Palma Coliving — and Why It Matters
Most coliving brands are built by property investors who spotted the digital nomad trend. Palma Coliving is built by two people who were the target market.
Matthieu Zeilas grew up in France, built a career in luxury brand management, and passed through Station F — Europe's largest startup incubator — before reaching a simple conclusion: despite years of international work, he couldn't find coliving spaces that delivered both genuine quality and genuine community. So he built one himself. He launched Lucky Paradise in Palmanova, Mallorca in August 2020: the first Palma Coliving property and the prototype for everything that followed.
Hugo Grange was simultaneously launching his own coliving in Valencia. He and Matthieu recognised the complementary nature of what they were each building — Matthieu's luxury hospitality instinct alongside Hugo's operational skill — and merged efforts. Their partnership formed the foundation of what Palma Coliving has become.
Five years later, Hugo's own public account of the journey is notably honest. The company went through a difficult period that required hard decisions, including parting with team members, and operated with zero paid marketing through much of 2025. Despite that, they achieved 67% revenue growth year-on-year, reached €0.5M in 2025 revenue, and maintain a 4.67-star rating across 250+ reviews. That's the kind of resilience that comes from genuinely believing in what you're building — not from following a trend.
Barcelona (Casa Turull): The Flagship
The Location
Casa Turull sits in El Coll, a quiet residential neighbourhood on the hillside above Gràcia, immediately adjacent to Park Güell. This is not central Barcelona — and that's entirely the point. You're 10–15 minutes from the centre by public transport or bike, but removed from the noise, pollution, and tourist density that makes central Barcelona exhausting to actually live in for a month.
Getting around:
Public transport: Bus and metro connections to central Barcelona; single ticket €2.40, T-10 card recommended
By bike: Extensive bike lanes throughout Barcelona; rental from €12–15/day
On foot: 10 minutes to Gràcia's cafes and restaurants; 5 minutes to Collserola forest
Nearby:
Park Güell: immediate neighbour
Gràcia neighbourhood (restaurants, bars, daily life): 10-minute walk
Viding Gym: 15-minute walk
City centre: 10–15 minutes by public transport
The Property
Casa Turull is Palma Coliving's largest and most ambitious property: a 3,200m² boutique villa with a 2,600m² private garden — a scale that's genuinely exceptional for a city property anywhere in Spain, let alone in Barcelona.
Capacity: Up to 15 residents
What the space includes:
Multiple private bedrooms and suites (room configurations vary; single bedrooms not currently offered)
Fully equipped professional coworking space with ergonomic chairs and extra screens
2,600m² private garden with swimming pool and BBQ areas
Sauna (rare in any coliving)
Two fully equipped kitchens with designated fridge space per resident
Large dining room
Communal living area with projector and screen for film nights
Billiards
Pet-friendly designated areas (pre-approval required, max 15kg)
Honest note on the property: One detailed independent review noted that during their stay the WiFi was severely disrupted for an extended period due to a provider issue, and that Palma's communication and solution-finding during this period was inadequate. This is the most substantive infrastructure complaint across all locations — worth knowing before booking if uninterrupted connectivity is non-negotiable for your work.
View Casa Turull Barcelona availability →
Valencia (Villa Huerta): The Underrated One
The Location
Valencia is consistently ranked among the world's top cities for digital nomads — InterNations named it the number one city to live in — and Villa Huerta is positioned to take full advantage. The property sits in the Valencia countryside near the beach: a location that gives you city access without city noise, and Mediterranean coast access without paying Barcelona or Mallorca prices.
Getting around:
Free bike provided during your stay (60 bus lines, 5 metro lines, 4 tram lines across the city)
Beach: 10-minute bike ride
Valencia city centre: accessible by public transport; bus tickets from €1.50
Nearby:
Supermarket: walking distance
Restaurants: walking distance
Beach: 10 minutes by bike
Valencia city centre: 15–20 minutes by public transport
Honest note on the location: Valencia is Palma Coliving's best-value proposition — the city ranks #1 globally for nomad-friendliness, prices are lower than Barcelona and Mallorca, and the finca setting is genuinely beautiful. However, one guest noted that in summer the rural location means Uber trips are expensive and some things aren't walkable. The free bike largely resolves this, but it's worth knowing if you prefer pedestrian convenience.
The Property
Villa Huerta is a 500-year-old Valencian countryside finca with 750–800m² of space, restored over three months to preserve the original stone-wall architecture while adding modern coliving infrastructure.
Capacity: Up to 10 residents
What the space includes:
10 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, 2 kitchens, 3 living rooms
Dedicated coworking space with ergonomic chairs and WiFi
Private desk in every room (except single rooms)
Swimming pool and terraces
Spacious garden
Lounge areas for video calls
Free bike rental for the duration of your stay
The thick stone walls naturally regulate temperature — a genuine advantage in the Valencia summer — though some summer guests have noted mosquito issues in warmer months when windows need to be open.
View Villa Huerta Valencia availability →
Mallorca: Where It All Started
The Locations
Palma Coliving operates two distinct Mallorca properties, giving it the broadest range of the three cities.
Villa Armadans — the original-style property, a 1,000m² villa with rooftop access, jacuzzi, terraces, and extensive common areas. Up to 20 residents. Pet-friendly (pre-approval required). Two-week minimum stay available — the only Palma location currently offering sub-30-day flexibility without a Freedom Pack.
Townhouse Gomila — a more urban-positioned property in the Gomila neighbourhood, close to restaurants, shops, and Santa Catalina. Single bedrooms with private bathrooms only, from €1,500/month. The most city-connected of all Palma Coliving properties, with quick bus access to beaches and city centre.
Why Mallorca Works Year-Round
Mallorca has 300 days of sunshine annually and genuinely mild winters — around 18°C during sunny winter days, cooler evenings. The Sunday Times has described Palma de Mallorca as one of the best places to live in the world. The island's infrastructure (Palma Airport is one of Europe's busiest) makes it unusually easy to reach from across Europe, and the combination of beach, mountain, and city access within 30–40 minutes means lifestyle variety is built into the location.
Getting around Mallorca:
Airport: 30–40 minutes by bus, taxi, or rental car
City centre: bus access; Santa Catalina neighbourhood (bars, restaurants, nightlife) nearby to Gomila
Beach: quick bus ride from Gomila; within reach of Villa Armadans by bike or transport
View Mallorca coliving availability →
Pricing: How Much Does Palma Coliving Cost?
Pricing varies by location, room type, season, and stay length. All rates are all-inclusive: accommodation, utilities, fibre WiFi (with backup line), coworking, weekly events, cleaning, linens, and unlimited coffee, tea, filtered water, and fresh fruit.
Current Monthly Rates (per person)
Location | Room Type | Monthly Rate |
Valencia (Villa Huerta) | Shared/double room | From €1,050/month |
Mallorca (Gomila Townhouse) | Single, private bathroom | From €1,500/month |
Mallorca (Villa Armadans) | Double/shared room | From €1,650/month |
Mallorca (Villa Armadans) | Single room | From €1,795/month |
Barcelona (Casa Turull) | Double/shared room | From €1,950/month |
Mallorca (Villa Armadans) | Double/shared, couple | From €2,400/month |
Winter discount: Up to 20% off all prices between 1 November and 1 March.
Couple/partner stays: +15% on total price (instead of +30% for short stays).
Priority Pass Membership: 10% off all stays, or up to 20% off on 3-month commitments.
Freedom Pack: For nomads not ready for a 30-day commitment — pre-purchased night blocks usable in minimum 5-night stays across all Palma locations. Transferable to a friend. Auto-upgrade to en-suite when available.
Klarna instalment payments: Available on selected bookings.
What's Included at All Locations
Private bedroom (shared or private bathroom depending on room type)
24/7 coworking space access with ergonomic chairs, extra screens
Guaranteed high-speed fibre WiFi + backup line
All utilities (no deposits, no extra fees)
Weekly cleaning
Linens, towels, basic toiletries
Unlimited coffee, tea, filtered water, fresh seasonal fruit
Weekly community events and programming
On-site Happiness Officer
What's Not Included
Food and groceries
Travel to/from the location
Optional excursions and activities
Car or bike rental beyond the Valencia free bike
Amenities & What's Included
Barcelona (Casa Turull)
3,200m² boutique villa, 2,600m² private garden
Pool, sauna, BBQ area
Professional coworking with ergonomic chairs and extra monitors
Two fully equipped kitchens with designated fridge space per resident
Large dining room
Communal living area with projector and screen
Billiards
Pet-friendly designated areas (pre-approval, max 15kg)
Public transport links to central Barcelona
Valencia (Villa Huerta)
500-year-old restored stone finca, 750–800m²
Swimming pool, terraces, spacious garden
Dedicated coworking + private desk in every room (except single)
2 kitchens, 3 living rooms
Free bike for the duration of your stay
10-minute bike ride to the beach
Mallorca (Villa Armadans)
1,000m² villa with rooftop access and jacuzzi
Pool, terraces, extensive common areas
Coworking and common areas
Pet-friendly designated areas (pre-approval, max 15kg)
2-week minimum stay available (only Palma location with this option)
Mallorca (Townhouse Gomila)
Urban townhouse in Gomila neighbourhood
Single bedrooms with private bathrooms only
Close to Santa Catalina district (restaurants, bars, nightlife)
Quick bus access to beaches and city centre
Community: The Real Differentiator
Palma Coliving's strongest asset isn't the villas, the pools, or even the locations. It's the community architecture — the systems that make genuine connection between residents consistently possible rather than accidental.
The Happiness Officer
Every Palma Coliving location has a dedicated, on-site Happiness Officer whose role is to welcome new arrivals, organise events, facilitate introductions, and ensure the social fabric of the space functions. This isn't a part-time role or a front-desk position — it's a full-time investment in community quality that separates Palma Coliving from spaces where community is promised but unmanaged.
Guest reviews cite specific Happiness Officers by name more than almost any other element of the experience. Aga, Agnieszka, Hugo, and Natalia all appear in reviews as individuals who meaningfully shaped people's stays. That specificity is the signal: when guests remember the person, not just the role, the role is working.
The Selection Process
Every guest goes through an application and interview before booking. This isn't bureaucracy — it's the mechanism that makes Palma Coliving's community consistent. Guests who arrive have already demonstrated values alignment. The result is a group of people who are there for the same reasons, which makes genuine connection significantly easier.
Weekly Programming
Events at Palma Coliving are regular, varied, and — crucially — not mandatory. The structure exists to make spontaneous community easier, not to replace it.
Social events: Tapas nights, themed dinners, bachata dance sessions, movie nights with projector, wine tastings, paella lunches with local chefs
Wellness: Yoga (typically 2–3 times per week; note: one guest reported this wasn't offered during their stay, so confirm current schedule before booking), meditation, Chi Gong, fitness sessions
Professional: Networking workshops, peer-to-peer skill sharing, co-creation sessions, masterminds
Cultural: Local outings, island and city exploration, seasonal events (Las Fallas in Valencia, local festivals in Mallorca)
Community-led: Residents are actively encouraged to organise their own sessions based on their skills
In Mallorca specifically, Palma Coliving has hosted weekly digital nomad events gathering roughly 1,000 people annually — making the community radius significantly larger than the 20-person villa capacity suggests.
Who You'll Be Living With
The average Palma guest is 32 years old, arrives solo, and stays for six weeks. They're typically digital nomads, freelancers, remote employees, or entrepreneurs — professionally established, socially open, and looking for connection alongside productivity. Palma describes the atmosphere directly and accurately: social but not a party place, productivity-focused with meaningful connection.
Pros & Cons
Pros
Five years of genuine refinement. Palma Coliving has been iterating the same model since 2020 across multiple properties and cities. The community systems, the Happiness Officer role, the event programming — all of it has been shaped by hundreds of real stays and thousands of pieces of real feedback.
Three locations, one community. Guests build relationships at one Palma Coliving property and carry them across cities. The Freedom Pack and Priority Pass Membership make multi-location stays genuinely flexible. Many guests return to different properties within the same community network.
Spain's unbeatable lifestyle advantage. ~300 days of sunshine across all three cities. Mediterranean climate year-round. World-class food, transport infrastructure, and quality of life at costs significantly below northern Europe. Spain is consistently ranked the #1 country for digital nomads by multiple independent sources.
Boutique scale maintained. Maximum 10–20 residents per property. Not 80, not 150. This is a deliberate cap that makes real community possible — and Palma has held to it while growing the brand rather than inflating individual property sizes.
Proven traction metrics. 30% return rate, 50% referral bookings, 4.67 stars across 250+ reviews, 95% direct bookings with zero paid acquisition. These are independently verifiable numbers that tell you something marketing language can't.
Flexibility options. The Freedom Pack (5-night minimum blocks), Klarna payment instalments, couple pricing (+15% rather than full second-person pricing), and the winter 20% discount make Palma meaningfully more accessible than its headline monthly rates suggest.
Cons
WiFi reliability concerns at Barcelona. The most substantive complaint across all locations involves a prolonged WiFi outage at Casa Turull Barcelona, and a perception that Palma's response and communication during the issue was inadequate. For anyone whose income depends on consistent connectivity, this warrants a direct conversation with the team before booking.
Inconsistent programming delivery. Some guests have noted that amenities advertised on the website (yoga classes 2–3 times per week, specifically) weren't available during their actual stay. The gap between marketed and delivered programming is worth probing before booking.
Booking and room management issues. One independent review noted multiple guests had to switch rooms during their stay, sometimes arriving to unclean or occupied rooms. This points to operational gaps in booking management that don't match the premium positioning.
Not cheap. Valencia from €1,050/month is competitive. Barcelona from €1,950/month and Mallorca peak rates up to €2,400/month for couples are real money, even all-inclusive. The value case is solid when you factor in the eliminated costs (coworking membership, utilities, social infrastructure), but the headline numbers require a genuine budget.
Rural Valencia location trade-offs. Villa Huerta's countryside setting is genuinely beautiful and creates a strong community atmosphere — but in summer, the lack of AC (offset by the thick stone walls), mosquito issues with open windows, and the need for a bike or Uber to reach anything by road are real considerations for guests who prioritise walkable urban convenience.
Growth pressures. Palma Coliving is actively seeking investment to scale toward 700 beds across Southern Europe. As any founder-operated boutique coliving grows, the risk is that the community intimacy that makes it work gets diluted. This isn't a present problem — it's a watch factor for future stays.
Who Is Palma Coliving For — and Who Should Skip It
Palma Coliving is a strong fit if you:
Work remotely and want sun, community, and professional infrastructure without the isolation of Airbnb living
Plan to stay at least a month (ideally 4–6 weeks) and want to build real connections, not just share a building with strangers
Value curated community — you want to know the people you're living with have been through an application process
Want flexibility across Spanish cities — the Freedom Pack and multi-location model suit nomads who like to move without losing community continuity
Are 25–45, professionally established, socially open, and not looking for a party hostel or a corporate hotel
Want to be in or near a European city — Barcelona and Mallorca offer genuine urban access alongside the villa-style community atmosphere
Palma Coliving is probably not the right fit if you:
Need flawless, enterprise-grade internet with zero tolerance for outages — the Barcelona WiFi incident is a real data point
Want guaranteed, structured daily programming — events are regular but not always delivered exactly as advertised
Need maximum walkability and urban convenience from your front door, especially in summer Valencia
Are looking for a large-scale networking hub with 100+ people
Plan a stay of only a few days (minimum is 30 nights at most properties; Villa Armadans offers 2-week minimum)
Are on a tight budget — Valencia is reasonable, but Barcelona and Mallorca peak rates are a genuine investment
The clearest test: if spending your working days in a 3,200m² villa next to Park Güell in Barcelona, or a 500-year-old stone finca near Valencia's beach, surrounded by a vetted group of 10–20 remote workers who all went through the same application process — sounds like the right version of your working life right now — Palma Coliving was built for exactly that.
How Palma Coliving Compares to Other European Colivings
Factor | Palma Coliving | ESCAPE Coliving | Selina | Outsite |
Community depth | ✓ Deep — 10–20, curated via interview | ✓ Deep — 15–30, curated | Mixed — large, transient | Moderate — varies |
Scale | Boutique (10–20 per property) | Small (15–30) | Large (50–200+) | Small–medium |
Locations | 3 Spanish cities | Alps + Mediterranean | Global chain | Mostly Europe/US |
Nature access | ✓ Beach, mountain, city — all within reach | ✓ World-class — Alps, Mediterranean | City-focused | Varies |
Urban access | ✓ Strong — Barcelona, Valencia, Palma | Limited — rural villages | ✓ Strong | Varies |
Founder-operated | ✓ Yes — Hugo & Matthieu | ✓ Yes — Haz & Fanny | No — VC-backed chain | Partially |
Coworking included | ✓ Always | ✓ Always | Extra cost at most locations | ✓ Yes |
Minimum stay | 30 nights (2 weeks at Villa Armadans; 5 nights with Freedom Pack) | 7 days (1 month recommended) | 1 night | 7 days typical |
Best for | City + community + Spain lifestyle | Nature + deep focus | City social scene | Remote work infrastructure |
Palma Coliving vs ESCAPE Coliving: These are the two most comparable founder-operated boutique colivings in Europe — both curated, both built around real community, both with strong track records. The meaningful difference is urban access versus nature immersion. Palma wins on city access, beach access, and multi-city flexibility across Spain. ESCAPE wins on deep nature (Swiss Alps, Crete), maximum quietness, and a slightly smaller community cap (15 vs 20). Many nomads who value both would be well served by doing both in the same year.
Palma Coliving vs Selina: Selina offers global reach, city locations, and hotel-style flexibility. Palma offers boutique villa quality, curated community, and a residential atmosphere that Selina's scale makes impossible. If you want 200 people and a rooftop bar, choose Selina. If you want 15 vetted people and a private pool, choose Palma.
Real Guest Reviews
Barcelona (Casa Turull)
"Palma Coliving in Barcelona is a hidden gem. It's just next to Park Güell up the hill — more calm and less polluted than the rest of the city. The house is spectacular, with its own swimming pool and sauna. The coworking is cool, sunny, and well-equipped. Two kitchens, a big dining room, a wonderful shared area with a projector. I had a really good time." — Verified guest ★★★★★
"It is my second time at a Palma Coliving and I couldn't have liked the experience more. Best of all, the people you meet — it creates a great environment to connect and help each other. They organize activities for colivers to get to know each other. I loved the tapas night. I will return without a doubt." — Verified guest ★★★★★
Valencia (Villa Huerta)
"The house is incredible — I couldn't believe it was a 500-year-old house. The decoration and common areas were super nice. The location is a plus, with the beach nearby. The community was the other very good thing — I met a lot of other remote workers, but also many locals. That made my experience go to another level. I would go again for sure." — Verified guest ★★★★★
"My first coliving experience — the bar was very high. Lots of space to work, rest, and connect with community." — Verified guest ★★★★★
Mallorca (Villa Armadans & Gomila)
"Absolutely loved my month here. From the moment I arrived, I felt so welcomed and at home. Everyone is super friendly and makes you feel like part of the community. The coworking space had everything I needed, and I was so productive — time flew by. I'll definitely be back." — Verified guest ★★★★★
"I booked 3 months in Mallorca and had an absolute blast. The space, the community, and the vibe were exactly what I was looking for. A special thanks to the Happiness Manager, who went above and beyond to make sure everyone felt welcomed and truly at home." — Verified guest ★★★★★
"It was my second time in the coliving and again I absolutely loved it. It's both the villa, the amazing community, and the island of Mallorca that I fell in love with — all of it made an unforgettable experience. The people make the experience, so a special thanks to Agnieszka for making all of this happen." — Verified guest ★★★★★
Honest Critical Reviews
"In terms of leisure and activities, Palma Coliving outdid itself — ten out of ten. There was never a dull moment. From sauna sessions to pool swims, yoga to Chi Gong. The perfect way to balance work and play." [Note from the same reviewer:] "My room was on a different floor from the shared bathroom, which I would have appreciated knowing in advance." — Verified guest, Barcelona ★★★★
"The facilities are amazing, very well kept and always clean. At the same time, there are a few areas that could be improved: I felt there could have been more effort from the management side to build community. The weekly agenda was mainly organized by the guests themselves, whereas I expected more initiative from the host side, especially considering the price point. The website mentions yoga classes 2–3 times per week, but unfortunately that wasn't offered during my stay." — Verified guest, Mallorca
Consistent themes across all positive reviews:
The Happiness Officer's individual impact on the stay is cited specifically and repeatedly
The properties consistently exceed visual expectations
Community quality — the people, the connections made — is the most-cited positive
Return visits and extended stays are a recurring pattern
Consistent themes across critical reviews:
Gaps between advertised programming and actual delivery
Operational booking management issues (room assignments, check-in readiness)
WiFi reliability at Barcelona specifically
Final Verdict: Is Palma Coliving Worth It?
Palma Coliving is one of the best-executed boutique coliving brands in Europe — and one of the most honest tests of what the category can actually deliver at premium price points. The properties are genuinely beautiful. The community architecture works. The Spain lifestyle advantage is real and significant. And five years of refinement shows in both the metrics (30% return rate, 50% referrals) and the specificity of guest praise.
It is not perfect. The gap between marketed and delivered programming, the WiFi incident at Barcelona, and the booking management issues in some guest accounts are real signals that operational consistency hasn't fully caught up with the quality of the physical spaces and community vision. These are solvable problems — and a brand with this trajectory is likely to continue solving them — but they're worth knowing before you pay Barcelona or Mallorca peak rates.
The value case is strongest in Valencia: the most affordable location, the most objectively nomad-friendly city in the ranking tables, and a property with its own genuinely distinctive character in the restored finca. Barcelona makes sense if city access and prestige of location matter to you. Mallorca is the original, and for good reason — if island life and the combination of beach and mountains in under an hour is the draw, nothing else in the Palma portfolio quite replicates it.
For the right person — someone who wants curated community in one of Europe's best countries for remote work, with the infrastructure to be genuinely productive and the space to be genuinely social — Palma Coliving delivers at a level most alternatives with similar branding simply don't.
View all Palma Coliving locations on CoDNX →
FAQ
What is Palma Coliving? Palma Coliving is a founder-operated premium boutique coliving brand with locations in Barcelona (Casa Turull), Valencia (Villa Huerta), and Mallorca (Villa Armadans and Townhouse Gomila). Founded in 2020 by Matthieu Zeilas and Hugo Grange, it offers all-inclusive remote work community living for digital nomads, freelancers, and entrepreneurs. It has been nominated Best Nomad Coliving at the Coliving Awards in 2022, 2023, and 2024.
How much does Palma Coliving cost? Monthly rates range from €1,050/month in Valencia to €1,950–2,400/month in Barcelona and Mallorca (peak season, depending on room type). All rates are all-inclusive: room, utilities, WiFi, coworking, weekly events, cleaning, coffee, and fresh fruit. A 20% winter discount applies November–March. The Freedom Pack offers 5-night minimum flexible stays. Priority Pass Membership gives 10% off all stays or up to 20% off 3-month commitments.
What is the minimum stay at Palma Coliving? The standard minimum stay is 30 nights across most locations. Villa Armadans in Mallorca offers a 2-week minimum. The Freedom Pack allows stays from 5 nights across all locations, purchased as a pre-paid night block.
Which Palma Coliving location is best? It depends what you're optimising for. Valencia is the best value and in the #1-ranked city globally for digital nomads. Barcelona has the most impressive property and best city access but the highest prices. Mallorca is the original — ideal for island lifestyle, beach access, and year-round sunshine. Many guests do multiple locations within the same community network.
Is Palma Coliving good for digital nomads? Yes — it's one of Europe's most established boutique colivings specifically designed for this demographic. The infrastructure (fibre WiFi + backup line, ergonomic coworking, private desks), community programming, and Spain's broader lifestyle advantage make it a strong fit for location-independent workers planning a 1–3 month base.
Is Palma Coliving worth the price? For guests who stay long enough to build genuine community (4–6 weeks minimum), the all-inclusive pricing eliminates the hidden costs of separate accommodation, coworking memberships, and building a social life from scratch. The 30% return rate and 50% referral booking rate are the most honest answer to this question. For Valencia, the value case is clear. For Barcelona and Mallorca peak rates, it requires treating the social and community value as part of the cost calculation.
How does Palma Coliving compare to Selina? Selina offers global reach, city-centre locations, and hotel-style flexibility with 50–200+ guests per property. Palma offers boutique villa quality, curated community via an application process, and a 10–20 person residential atmosphere. Selina is better if you want scale and urban nightlife. Palma is better if you want genuine community and villa-style living with vetted neighbours.
Can couples stay at Palma Coliving? Yes. Couples pay +15% on the total room price (rather than the standard +30% for short-stay extra guests). Most properties have double room configurations. Confirm availability in advance — some rooms, particularly at Gomila Townhouse, are single occupancy only.
Are pets allowed at Palma Coliving? Yes, at Casa Turull (Barcelona), Villa Huerta (Valencia), and Villa Armadans (Mallorca) — in designated areas only. Maximum weight 15kg. Pre-approval from the management team is required to confirm the right room is available.
Where can I book Palma Coliving? Through CoDNX: codnx.com
Last updated: 2026 | Based on founder interviews, independent guest reviews across multiple platforms, firsthand research, and verified public data.