Best Workcation Destinations for 2026: 15 Cities With Wifi, Coworking, and Lifestyle Perks
Digital Nomad·11 min read·April 14, 2026

Best Workcation Destinations for 2026: 15 Cities With Wifi, Coworking, and Lifestyle Perks

Best Workcation Destinations for 2026: 15 Cities With Wifi, Coworking, and Lifestyle Perks

TL;DR: The best workcation destinations in 2026 combine fast reliable internet (50 Mbps minimum for video calls), coworking options under $200/month, a visa path that does not require monthly border runs, and enough lifestyle upside to justify the move. This guide covers all 15 with real numbers.

The wifi at every Lisbon cafe drops mid-meeting the moment your client in New York starts sharing their screen. You booked a workcation and ended up working in a hotel room with a view you never actually saw because you were glued to Slack for eight hours. Your monthly budget got eaten by coworking memberships you joined on day two, used twice, and felt too guilty to cancel. You picked a time zone that sounded reasonable on paper and then realised your stand-ups land at 11pm local time every single day. You told yourself you would explore on weekends and then spent both days catching up on the work week that the wifi situation destroyed.

Remote work has not solved the hard parts of working from somewhere new. It has just relocated them. Knowing which cities actually work for a two to eight week stay, at a budget you will not regret in month two, with infrastructure that holds up under real usage, is the research most workcation guides skip.

This post does not skip it.

A laptop on a wooden cafe table beside a sunlit window Photo by Dario Raijman on Unsplash

Key Takeaways

  • Monthly all-in costs (rent plus food plus coworking) range from $900 in Chiang Mai to $2,800 in Tokyo, depending on the city and your lifestyle floor.
  • Visa friendliness matters more than most people budget for. Countries with dedicated digital nomad visas save you the mental overhead of calendar-watching border dates.
  • Wifi speed at coworking spaces averages 200 to 500 Mbps in most cities on this list. Cafe wifi is the variable. Never rely on it for anything you cannot afford to drop.
  • Time zone fit is underrated. A five-hour overlap with your team's core hours is the real baseline, not "somewhere in Europe" as a vague goal.
  • The cities that feel best for workcations are not always the ones that rank highest on cost. Coworking community density, walkability, and month-to-month rental availability matter as much as the dollar figure.
  • If you are comparing more than three cities at once, let Travel Anywhere do the shortlisting. It pulls real-time data on visa status, costs, and coworking options so you are not spreadsheet-building at midnight.

What Actually Makes a Great Workcation Destination in 2026?

The romanticised version: pick a city that looks good in photos, book a cool Airbnb, and do your job from a sunlit cafe. The real version: confirm the internet is fast enough for video calls before you sign a lease, figure out whether your visa situation is legal for more than 30 days, and make sure the time zone does not require you to be online at 2am.

Here is the actual framework.

Wifi speeds. The minimum for a reliable video call is 25 Mbps upload and download. For screen sharing, file transfers, and team calls running simultaneously, 50 Mbps is the practical floor. Coworking spaces in every city on this list hit 100 to 500 Mbps consistently. Cafe wifi is city-dependent and often lower. If you have one or two critical daily calls, get a local SIM with a hotspot plan as backup. In most of the cities here, a 30-day data SIM costs $10 to $25.

Time zone fit. The US East Coast (UTC-5) overlaps comfortably with Lisbon (UTC+0 or +1), Medellín (UTC-5), and Mexico City (UTC-6). For teams running on UTC, Western Europe is natural. For Australia and Asia-Pacific teams, Southeast Asia is the obvious choice. This sounds obvious until you are in Bali at 6am taking calls before sunrise because you did not think it through.

Coworking density. Cities with three or more established coworking spaces give you real options: day passes when you do not want a membership, backup spaces when your usual one is fully booked, and community diversity. Nomad List data shows Lisbon, Mexico City, and Medellín consistently ranking in the top ten for coworking density globally.

Cost of living. The useful number is the all-in monthly figure: one bedroom in a central or nomad-popular neighbourhood, daily food budget at a mix of local spots and occasional sit-down restaurants, and a hot-desk coworking membership. The cities below include this number calculated at that standard.

Visa friendliness. Countries with a dedicated digital nomad visa or a liberal tourist visa policy (90 days or more) reduce the admin burden significantly. Countries that technically allow tourism but have ambiguous enforcement create grey-area stress you do not need while you are trying to focus.


Which Cities Are the 15 Best Workcation Destinations for 2026?

1. Lisbon, Portugal

Monthly cost: $2,000 to $2,500 (rent $1,100 to $1,400, food $400 to $500, coworking $150 to $200)

Wifi: Coworking spaces at 150 to 400 Mbps. Home fibre widely available. Cafe wifi averages 20 to 50 Mbps.

Visa: Portugal Digital Nomad Visa (D8) requires proof of $3,279/month income (2026 threshold). Standard Schengen 90-day rule for tourists if you do not qualify.

Time zones: Best for US East Coast and European teams. UTC+1 in summer, UTC+0 in winter.

Coworking: Coworker Lisbon, Second Home, Heden, and a dozen independent spaces. Day passes run $15 to $25. Monthly hot desks average $180.

What most workcationers get wrong: They base themselves in Príncipe Real or Bairro Alto, which are beautiful but not the best value for a month-long stay. Mouraria and Intendente have comparable walkability, better local restaurants, and rents $200 to $300 per month cheaper.

Ideal stay: 4 to 8 weeks. Long enough to settle into a neighbourhood rhythm rather than tourist mode.

Lisbon is consistently one of the top-ranked cities on Nomad List for a reason. The infrastructure works, the English proficiency is high, and the food-to-cost ratio is legitimately good by Western European standards. Build your Lisbon workcation itinerary on Travel Anywhere before you book anything.


2. Mexico City, Mexico

Monthly cost: $1,400 to $1,900 (rent $700 to $1,000, food $300 to $400, coworking $120 to $180)

Wifi: Coworking at 100 to 300 Mbps. Residential fibre in Roma Norte and Condesa at 50 to 100 Mbps. Cafe wifi variable, 10 to 40 Mbps.

Visa: US, EU, and most passport holders get 180 days visa-free. No income proof required.

Time zones: Same as US Central. Ideal for US teams coast to coast.

Coworking: WeWork, Selina Roma Norte, Homework, and a growing independent scene. Monthly hot desks at $120 to $160.

What most workcationers get wrong: Staying in Polanco, which is the expensive expat neighbourhood with none of the character. Roma Norte or Condesa give you the cafe culture, walkability, and taco spots. Santa Maria la Ribera is for the budget-conscious and works well if you do not mind a longer walk to the coworking cluster.

Ideal stay: 3 to 6 weeks. The city rewards repeat visits with deeper neighbourhood familiarity.


3. Medellín, Colombia

Monthly cost: $1,100 to $1,600 (rent $500 to $800, food $250 to $350, coworking $100 to $150)

Wifi: El Poblado and Laureles coworking spaces at 100 to 250 Mbps. Residential internet solid. Cafe wifi inconsistent outside main nomad zones.

Visa: 90 days visa-free for most passports. Extendable once for another 90 days.

Time zones: UTC-5. Same as US East Coast. Excellent for US teams.

Coworking: Selina Medellín, Atomhouse, Copernico, OP Coworking. Day passes at $10 to $15.

What most workcationers get wrong: El Poblado is the obvious choice and also the most overpriced. Laureles is quieter, more local-feeling, cheaper by $150 to $200/month on rent, and has a better coworking cluster for serious work days.

Ideal stay: 4 to 8 weeks. Medellín benefits from taking time to move beyond the tourist-facing areas.


4. Canggu, Bali

Monthly cost: $1,200 to $1,700 (rent $500 to $900, food $200 to $300, coworking $80 to $150)

Wifi: Dojo Bali and Outpost run at 150 to 300 Mbps. Residential wifi varies from 20 to 80 Mbps. Cafe wifi is unreliable and the main complaint from nomads here.

Visa: Indonesia's new Second Home Visa and E33G (Nomad Visa) both valid for 5 years. Standard visa on arrival: 30 days, extendable once. New E33G requires proof of $2,000/month income.

Time zones: UTC+8. Best for Australian teams, Southeast Asia teams, and US West Coast teams willing to start early or go async.

Coworking: Dojo Bali (the benchmark), Outpost, Potato Head Studios. Dojo monthly membership at $130 to $170.

What most workcationers get wrong: Relying on villa wifi for calls. Canggu's residential internet is notoriously inconsistent. Always budget for a coworking membership. The $130 is not optional overhead here.

Ideal stay: 2 to 6 weeks. Longer and the novelty of the scene fades fast.


5. Chiang Mai, Thailand

Monthly cost: $900 to $1,300 (rent $300 to $500, food $200 to $300, coworking $60 to $120)

Wifi: CAMP, Punspace, and other coworking spaces at 100 to 200 Mbps. Residential fibre widely available and reliable. One of the best infrastructure-to-cost ratios on this list.

Visa: Thailand LTR (Long-Term Resident) Visa for remote workers requires $80,000/year income. Standard tourist visa: 60 days with one 30-day extension. Thailand also offers 90-day non-immigrant visas at embassies abroad.

Time zones: UTC+7. Works well for Australian teams and Southeast Asia. Hard for US East Coast (13-hour gap).

Coworking: Punspace Nimman, CAMP, Yellow, Mango Digital Nomad Space. Monthly hot desks as low as $60 to $80.

What most workcationers get wrong: Underestimating the visa complexity for stays beyond 60 days. The 30-day extension gets you to 90 days but requires you to plan your exit date. For a 2-month stay with buffer, arriving on a non-immigrant visa from a nearby consulate is cleaner.

Ideal stay: 4 to 8 weeks. Chiang Mai rewards routine. The city is built for it.


6. Tbilisi, Georgia

Monthly cost: $1,000 to $1,400 (rent $400 to $600, food $250 to $350, coworking $80 to $130)

Wifi: Impact Hub Tbilisi and Fabrika coworking at 100 to 200 Mbps. Residential fibre improving rapidly. Cafe wifi solid in the main areas, 20 to 60 Mbps.

Visa: 365 days visa-free for EU, US, and most passport holders. No registration required. One of the most generous entry policies for remote workers in the world.

Time zones: UTC+4. Overlaps cleanly with Central and Western Europe. 9-hour gap from US East Coast.

Coworking: Impact Hub, Fabrika (the converted factory complex is genuinely one of the best coworking environments anywhere), Garage. Monthly memberships at $80 to $110.

What most workcationers get wrong: Assuming it is a stepping stone and not a destination. Tbilisi has underrated food, a strong expat-and-local social mix, and costs that make most other cities look expensive. People who stay two weeks consistently wish they had stayed four.

Ideal stay: 4 to 8 weeks.


7. Buenos Aires, Argentina

Monthly cost: $1,100 to $1,600 (rent $500 to $800 at blue-rate pricing, food $200 to $300, coworking $80 to $140)

Wifi: AreatreBA, Urban Station, and WeWork at 100 to 250 Mbps. Residential internet at 50 to 100 Mbps.

Visa: 90 days visa-free for most Western passports, extendable with a brief border crossing to Uruguay.

Time zones: UTC-3. Strong overlap with US East Coast and Europe simultaneously, which is rare.

Coworking: AreatreBA (multiple locations), Regus, Urban Station, La Maquinista. Monthly hot desks at $80 to $120.

What most workcationers get wrong: Exchanging currency at the official bank rate. The blue rate (informal but widely used and openly available) gives you 50 to 70 percent more Argentine pesos per dollar. Using a dollar-denominated debit card at a Western Union or exchange house is standard practice for foreigners.

Ideal stay: 3 to 6 weeks.


8. Cape Town, South Africa

Monthly cost: $1,500 to $2,100 (rent $700 to $1,100 in Sea Point or De Waterkant, food $300 to $400, coworking $120 to $180)

Wifi: The Working Space, Workshop17, and Bandwidth Barn at 100 to 300 Mbps. Load shedding (rolling power outages) affects residential internet. Coworking spaces have generator backup; your Airbnb may not.

Visa: South Africa gives 90 days visa-free to EU and US passport holders. No remote worker specific visa yet, though the country has been discussing one since 2023.

Time zones: UTC+2. Cleanest fit for European teams. 7-hour gap from US East Coast.

Coworking: Workshop17 (multiple locations, professional environment), The Bureaux, Bandwidth Barn. Day passes at $15 to $20.

What most workcationers get wrong: Ignoring load shedding schedules. Eskom publishes the schedule 24 hours ahead. Download the EskomSePush app, check before every morning that requires reliable connectivity, and always have a coworking backup planned for Stage 4 or above days.

Ideal stay: 3 to 5 weeks. The lifestyle is exceptional but the infrastructure variable makes longer stays logistically heavier.


9. Da Nang, Vietnam

Monthly cost: $900 to $1,300 (rent $350 to $600, food $150 to $250, coworking $60 to $100)

Wifi: Coworking spaces at 100 to 200 Mbps. Residential fibre broadly available and fast. Vietnam has surprisingly robust internet infrastructure for the cost level.

Visa: Vietnam's 90-day e-visa for most passports. Valid, single entry, extendable once. Renewed in August 2023 from the previous 30-day policy.

Time zones: UTC+7. Same as Chiang Mai. Best for Australia and Southeast Asia.

Coworking: CoCoHub, Toong, ClickSpace. Monthly memberships at $60 to $90.

What most workcationers get wrong: Undervaluing the beach proximity. Da Nang has both a functional working city and a beach within a 10-minute ride. Most people park themselves in the city centre and treat the beach as a weekend destination. Living near My Khe Beach and commuting to a coworking spot is actually viable and worth the mild extra logistics.

Ideal stay: 3 to 6 weeks.


10. Tallinn, Estonia

Monthly cost: $1,800 to $2,400 (rent $900 to $1,300, food $350 to $450, coworking $150 to $200)

Wifi: The best internet infrastructure on this list. Coworking spaces at 200 to 600 Mbps. Public wifi throughout the old town. Estonia has consistently ranked as one of the top five countries for digital infrastructure globally.

Visa: Estonia Digital Nomad Visa (valid 1 year) for non-EU remote workers. Requires proof of $4,500/month income. EU passport holders can stay indefinitely as EU residents.

Time zones: UTC+3. Best for European and Middle Eastern teams. Strong overlap with UK morning hours.

Coworking: Ülemiste City, Spring Hub, Lift99 (startup-focused but open to visiting workers). Monthly memberships at $150 to $200.

What most workcationers get wrong: Treating Tallinn as a brief tech tourism stop. The Digital Nomad Visa makes it a legitimate long-stay option, and the quality of the coworking and startup community is genuinely high. The cold-weather trade-off is real from October through March.

Ideal stay: 4 to 8 weeks.


11. Belgrade, Serbia

Monthly cost: $1,100 to $1,600 (rent $500 to $800, food $250 to $350, coworking $80 to $130)

Wifi: Coworking spaces at 100 to 300 Mbps. Residential fibre solid and affordable. One of the most underrated internet cities in Europe.

Visa: Serbia is outside the EU and Schengen. Most passport holders get 90 days visa-free, and Serbia does not count toward the Schengen 90/180 rule. This makes it a strategically useful stop for people managing European visa limits.

Time zones: UTC+1/+2. Matches Western Europe.

Coworking: Impact Hub Belgrade, StartIT Centre, Stardust Coworking. Monthly memberships at $80 to $110.

What most workcationers get wrong: Missing that Belgrade runs late. If you are on a US time zone, the city's social rhythm actually works in your favour. Your call hours are late morning local, leaving the evening free on Belgrade time.

Ideal stay: 3 to 5 weeks.


12. Las Palmas, Gran Canaria

Monthly cost: $1,600 to $2,200 (rent $800 to $1,100, food $350 to $450, coworking $130 to $180)

Wifi: SyncoSpace, Coworking Las Palmas, and The Corner at 100 to 250 Mbps. Fibre availability strong across the city.

Visa: Part of Spain (EU). EU citizens unrestricted. Non-EU: 90-day Schengen rule. Spain's Digital Nomad Visa is available and grants 1-year residency with renewal.

Time zones: UTC+0/+1. Same or one hour behind mainland Europe. Matches UK hours exactly.

Coworking: SyncoSpace (purpose-built, strong community), Wayco, Coworking Las Palmas. Day passes at $18 to $25.

What most workcationers get wrong: Picking accommodation in the tourist south (Maspalomas) instead of Las Palmas city. The capital has the coworking density, the local food scene, and the surfable city beach (Las Canteras). The south is hotels and package holidays.

Ideal stay: 4 to 8 weeks. February and March specifically are the sweet spot for weather and lower rental prices before summer.


13. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Monthly cost: $1,100 to $1,600 (rent $500 to $800, food $200 to $300, coworking $80 to $150)

Wifi: Co-labs, Colony, and Regus at 100 to 400 Mbps. Residential internet fast and reliable. Malaysia has strong telecommunications infrastructure relative to its cost level.

Visa: Malaysia My Digital Nomad Pass (DE Rantau) launched in 2022. 12-month validity. Requires $24,000/year income proof. Standard tourist visa: 30 to 90 days depending on passport.

Time zones: UTC+8. Works for Australia and Southeast Asia teams.

Coworking: Co-labs Coworking (multiple locations, strong community), Colony KLCC, Common Ground. Monthly memberships at $100 to $150.

What most workcationers get wrong: Treating Kuala Lumpur as just a transit hub. The city has genuinely excellent food at every price point, one of the more underrated cafe cultures in Southeast Asia, and month-to-month furnished apartments at prices that make Bali look overpriced.

Ideal stay: 3 to 6 weeks.


14. Tokyo (Setagaya / Shimokitazawa), Japan

Monthly cost: $2,000 to $2,800 (rent $1,100 to $1,500 in central wards, food $400 to $600, coworking $150 to $250)

Wifi: Coworking spaces at 200 to 500 Mbps. Japan's residential fibre is among the fastest in the world. Almost zero connectivity concerns here.

Visa: Japan does not yet have a formal digital nomad visa, though a cultural activity visa and the recently expanded digital nomad program (announced late 2024) cover 6-month stays for qualifying remote workers from specific countries. Standard tourist: 90 days for most Western passports.

Time zones: UTC+9. Works for Australia, New Zealand, and Southeast Asia teams. 14-hour gap from US East Coast.

Coworking: Fabbit, The Terminal, Regus, and a large co-working space at almost every major train station. Monthly memberships at $150 to $220.

What most workcationers get wrong: Staying in Shinjuku or Shibuya for a month-long stay. Both are overwhelming at that timescale. Setagaya and Shimokitazawa are quieter residential wards with good transit links, a genuinely local feel, and lower rental costs by $200 to $300 per month.

Ideal stay: 3 to 5 weeks. The higher cost makes longer stays harder to justify unless Japan is a specific priority.


15. Bansko, Bulgaria

Monthly cost: $900 to $1,300 (rent $350 to $600, food $200 to $300, coworking $80 to $120)

Wifi: Coworking Bansko (the original digital nomad coworking space in a ski resort) at 100 to 200 Mbps. The town has leaned into its nomad reputation and the infrastructure reflects it.

Visa: Bulgaria is EU but not Schengen (as of 2026). 90 days visa-free for most passports, and it does not count toward your Schengen days. Bulgaria's EU accession to full Schengen was confirmed but the digital nomad visa picture is still developing.

Time zones: UTC+2/+3. Works for European teams.

Coworking: Coworking Bansko (the anchor space), several newer spaces that have opened as the nomad scene grew. Monthly memberships at $80 to $100.

What most workcationers get wrong: Only considering it in winter ski season. Bansko in summer (June through September) is hiking country, cooler than the coastal options, and arguably better value because seasonal demand drops. The coworking scene runs year-round.

Ideal stay: 3 to 6 weeks.


How Do You Actually Choose Between These 15 Cities?

Start with the three constraints that cannot be negotiated: your time zone, your visa situation, and your monthly budget ceiling.

If you are on a US East Coast team with a hard budget of $1,500 per month all-in, your realistic shortlist is Medellín, Buenos Aires, and Mexico City. All three are in the same rough time zone band and all three hit that budget ceiling.

If you are a European remote worker with a 90-day Schengen limit, Belgrade and Georgia give you legal stays that do not eat your Schengen allocation. Bansko is useful for the same reason if you want to stay in Europe proper.

If internet reliability is non-negotiable because you are an engineer doing live deploys or a therapist doing video sessions, Tokyo, Tallinn, and Lisbon are at the top. Estonia and Japan specifically have infrastructure that most Western cities cannot match.

For planning specifics, comparing time zones, and matching visa status to your passport, Travel Anywhere handles that in minutes instead of the two-hour spreadsheet session most people end up doing.

If you are combining this with a conference trip or a company offsite, the broader bleisure trip planning guide covers how to structure the overlap between work commitments and personal travel time.


What Do You Actually Need Packed for a 2-8 Week Workcation?

The gear list is shorter than most travel blogs suggest. The non-negotiables:

A travel router (TP-Link N300 or equivalent, $25 to $35) that lets you plug into slow hotel or Airbnb wifi and share a stronger signal. Useful in about 30 percent of situations. A local SIM with data as a hotspot backup, which in every city on this list costs $10 to $25 for 30 days of workable data. A noise-cancelling headset (not just earphones) for calls from cafes, shared spaces, and anywhere with ambient noise. A universal power adapter if you are moving across regions. A portable SSD for local backups, especially relevant if you are doing video work.

That is the functional list. Everything else is comfort, not requirement.


FAQ: Workcation Destinations

Is it legal to work remotely from a tourist visa?

The legal position varies by country and is not universally settled. In practice, most countries' tourist visa terms do not explicitly address remote work for a foreign employer. The countries on this list that have introduced specific digital nomad visas (Portugal, Estonia, Malaysia, Georgia by policy if not formal visa) are the cleanest from a compliance perspective. For the others, the common practical interpretation is that working for a foreign company and receiving income from outside the country is different from working for a local employer, and enforcement is minimal. That said, if your company has specific legal requirements or you want zero ambiguity, the countries with formal nomad visas are the right choice.

What is a realistic all-in monthly budget for a workcation in 2026?

At the low end: $900 to $1,100 in Chiang Mai, Bansko, or Da Nang. Mid-range: $1,300 to $1,800 in Medellín, Mexico City, Belgrade, or Tbilisi. Higher end: $1,800 to $2,500 in Lisbon, Cape Town, Tallinn, or Las Palmas. Tokyo is the outlier at $2,000 to $2,800 depending on neighbourhood.

Do I need a coworking membership or can I just use cafes?

Cafes work for focus work and asynchronous tasks. They break down on two fronts: video calls (ambient noise, variable wifi) and all-day productivity (you will eventually feel the pressure to buy something every two hours). For a stay of two weeks or more, a day-pass coworking arrangement is the minimum. For four weeks or more, a monthly membership is almost always cheaper than day passes and meaningfully better for focus.

Which cities on this list are best for solo workcationers who want community?

Medellín, Chiang Mai, Lisbon, and Canggu have the most established nomad communities with recurring events, coworking socials, and existing Slack and WhatsApp groups. Bansko is disproportionately community-dense for its size. If finding people to have dinner with on week two matters to you, these five are the priority shortlist.

How do I handle healthcare while on a workcation?

For stays under 90 days, most people rely on travel insurance rather than local health coverage. SafetyWing's Nomad Insurance covers remote workers and runs approximately $42 per month for standard coverage. For stays approaching or exceeding 90 days in EU countries, the digital nomad visa programs (Portugal D8, Estonia DNV) include access to the national health system after registration. If you prefer no-alcohol travel or have specific health considerations, the sober-curious travel destinations guide covers cities where the social and wellness infrastructure is built around lifestyle options beyond nightlife.

Is the free AI trip planner useful for planning a workcation?

Yes, specifically for the destination shortlisting and logistics structure. The best free AI trip planners comparison covers the tools that handle workcation planning well versus the ones better suited for vacation itineraries.

What is the single biggest workcation mistake people make?

Not testing the rental's internet before committing to more than one week. Always request a speed test result from the host before signing anything. The number of people who arrive to 8 Mbps upload speed and a lease they cannot get out of is higher than it should be given that this is a solvable problem.


Which Workcation Destination Is Right for You?

The 15 cities above are not equal. They have different cost floors, different visa paths, different infrastructure levels, and different community densities. Picking the right one comes down to being honest about your three non-negotiable constraints: time zone fit, budget ceiling, and legal clarity on your visa situation.

Once those are set, the rest is preference. Most cities on this list will give you a better working environment than your apartment back home, a better food situation than your regular lunch rotation, and a better cost-to-lifestyle ratio than you are currently getting.

The mistake is spending three weeks researching instead of deciding. Use Travel Anywhere to shortlist your workcation destination in about ten minutes, then spend the rest of that time booking.


Sources


Disclaimer: Costs and visa policies change. All figures in this guide to the best workcation destinations for 2026 reflect conditions as of April 2026. Verify current visa requirements with the relevant embassy before booking. Travel Anywhere is not a legal or immigration advisor.

Rachel Caldwell

Rachel CaldwellEditorial Director, TravelAnywhere

Rachel Caldwell is the Editorial Director of TravelAnywhere. She leads the editorial team behind every guide on travelanywhere.blog, focusing on primary research, honest budget math, and recommendations the team would book themselves. Last reviewed April 14, 2026.