#4 in Panama City

Nomada Eatery

Casco Viejo ยท Panama City, Panama. A laptop-friendly cafe verified for remote workers and digital nomads.

7/10
Work Score
30 Mbps
WiFi Speed
$3
Coffee Price

Panama City has 5 laptop-friendly cafes in our guide, and Nomada Eatery ranks #4 with a work-friendly score of 7/10. WiFi runs at 30 Mbps. Power outlets are available throughout the cafe. Perfect for casual working sessions.

Work-Friendly Assessment

#4
in Panama City

๐Ÿ‘ Solid Pick

Score is close to the Panama City average of 7.8/10.

Video callsLong sessionsBudget-friendlyDigital nomads
WiFi Speed30%

30 Mbps ยท city average 30 Mbps

Power Availability100%
Noise Control65%
Seating Comfort70%

About Nomada Eatery

Nomada Eatery occupies a multi-level colonial building on Calle 9na Este in Casco Viejo, Panama City's UNESCO-listed old quarter. Three distinct spaces define the experience: a rustic main room with exposed stone walls and wooden beams, a shaded terrace with a small stage for live events, and a rooftop sky bar that opens for evening drinks with views over the old quarter's rooftops and the Pacific beyond. The aesthetic lands somewhere between rustic tavern and avant-garde gallery, attracting a crowd of traveling creatives, Casco Viejo residents, and the growing digital nomad community that has made the old quarter its base.

The work setup benefits from the venue's scale and variety. WiFi connects at 30 Mbps, reliable for video conferencing, cloud collaboration, and standard remote work tasks. Power outlets are available across the main room and terrace seating areas. The moderate noise level varies by zone โ€” the main room carries kitchen and conversation sounds, while the shaded terrace tends quieter during daytime hours before events begin. Seating is comfortable across all three spaces, with the terrace offering the best balance of airflow, shade, and relative calm for laptop work.

Coffee averages $3, notably affordable against Casco Viejo's generally upscale dining prices, and the food menu spans from breakfast through late dinner with a Latin American creative bent. The midnight closing time is the standout practical feature โ€” few cafes in Panama City let you work through dinner and into the evening without pressure to leave. Hours run 8:00 AM to midnight, a sixteen-hour window. The Casco Viejo location is walkable from most old quarter accommodations and connected to the broader city via Cinco de Mayo Metro. Best suited to nomads who want a versatile all-day venue that transitions naturally from workspace to restaurant to rooftop bar.

Key Highlights

1

Three Distinct Spaces

Main room, shaded terrace with stage, and rooftop sky bar โ€” choose your environment by time of day and mood

2

Open Until Midnight

Sixteen-hour window from 8 AM to midnight in Casco Viejo โ€” work through dinner without pressure to leave

3

$3 in Casco Viejo

Notably affordable against the old quarter's upscale dining scene, with a full Latin American creative menu

4

30 Mbps With Outlets

Reliable WiFi and power access across the main room and terrace for sustained remote work sessions

5

UNESCO Old Quarter

Colonial building on Calle 9na Este in Panama City's UNESCO-listed Casco Viejo, near Cinco de Mayo Metro

Compare to Other Cafes

FeatureNomada Eatery@Work CafรฉCabrera Coffee Brew HouseMentiritas Blancas
Work Score7/109/108/108/10
WiFi Speed30 Mbps50 Mbps25 Mbps30 Mbps
Power OutletsYesYesYesYes
Coffee Price$3$3$3$3
Noise Levelmoderatequietquietquiet

Why Panama City for Remote Work?

Operating on US dollars with Central America's fastest internet, Panama City removes two of the biggest friction points for remote workers. Fixed broadband averages 269 Mbps, with fiber plans from +Movil starting at just $35/month for 300 Mbps symmetrical โ€” some of the best value broadband in Latin America. The five best laptop-friendly cafes average 30 Mbps WiFi, and coffee costs about $3.20 at work-oriented spots, climbing to $3.50 at specialty shops serving prized Geisha beans from Boquete. San Francisco, Casco Viejo, and the banking district around Obarrio concentrate the densest cluster of nomad-friendly cafes and coworking spaces, with Selina Casco Viejo offering $10 day passes.

The digital nomad community is medium-sized and skews toward business professionals and finance workers drawn by the same GMT-5 timezone as the US East Coast. English proficiency is high in the banking sector and tourist areas, making daily life straightforward for non-Spanish speakers. At $2,000 per month, Panama City costs more than most Latin American alternatives but delivers modern infrastructure, an efficient metro system, and excellent healthcare including a Johns Hopkins-affiliated hospital. The country charges no tax on foreign-sourced income, and the dedicated digital nomad visa grants up to 18 months of legal residency for those earning $3,000 monthly.

Humidity hovers around 80% year-round and the rainy season stretches seven months from May through November, with October bringing the heaviest downpours in intense afternoon bursts. Some neighborhoods outside the tourist and expat zones carry real safety risks at night โ€” Calidonia, Santa Ana, and El Chorrillo should be avoided after dark, and phone snatching is the most common petty crime. The city can feel generic with its American-style skyline and mall culture, lacking the street food depth and colonial charm of neighbors like Mexico City or Cartagena. Bureaucratic processes from banking to government offices move at a deliberately slow pace, so patience and basic Spanish go further than urgency.

Tips for Working From Cafes in Panama City

๐ŸŒ
Panama City Tip

Get +Movil 300 Mbps fiber

At $35/month for symmetrical 300 Mbps, +Movil offers the best broadband value in Latin America. Setup takes 2-3 business days in fiber-covered neighborhoods like San Francisco and Punta Pacifica. This beats any cafe WiFi and eliminates coworking costs entirely.

๐Ÿ’ก
Panama City Tip

Time work around afternoon rain

May through November brings intense downpours between 2-5 PM that flood streets and stall traffic. Schedule outdoor commutes and cafe runs for mornings when skies are typically clear, and keep your laptop in a waterproof bag for the inevitable caught-in-the-rain moments.

โšก
Panama City Tip

Eat at fondas for $4-7 lunches

Panama City has nearly 4,000 fondas serving heaping plates of rice, beans, meat, plantains, and a drink for $4-7. These no-frills lunch counters are where locals eat daily and offer far better value than the tourist-oriented restaurants in Casco Viejo.

โ˜•
Tip 1

Buy Every 2-3 Hours

Order a drink or snack every couple of hours to support the cafe and keep your seat.

๐Ÿ“ถ
Tip 2

Test WiFi First

Run a quick speed test before settling in to avoid surprises during important calls.

๐Ÿ•
Tip 3

Visit Off-Peak

Arrive 8-11am or 3-5pm to grab the best seats and the fastest WiFi.

๐ŸŽง
Tip 4

Bring Headphones

Noise-cancelling headphones are essential for blocking lunch rushes and chat.

๐Ÿ”‹
Tip 5

Carry a Power Bank

Outlets aren't guaranteed everywhere โ€” a backup keeps you working.

๐Ÿคซ
Tip 6

Respect Quiet Zones

Take long video calls outside or in coworking spaces, not in quiet cafes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do digital nomads need a special visa to work remotely in Panama City?
US and Canadian citizens get an automatic 180-day tourist stamp on arrival with no visa needed. For legal remote work status, the Panama Digital Nomad Visa costs $300 total and grants 9 months extendable to 18, requiring proof of $3,000 monthly income and health insurance. Panama has cracked down on border runs, so the nomad visa is worth obtaining for stays beyond six months.
What timezone advantages does Panama City offer for remote workers?
Panama operates on GMT-5 year-round with no daylight saving changes, matching US Eastern Standard Time permanently. This makes it ideal for remote workers with US-based teams or clients, allowing real-time collaboration during normal business hours without the timezone math required from European or Asian bases.
How safe is Panama City for working from cafes with a laptop?
Safe in the right neighborhoods. San Francisco, Casco Viejo, El Cangrejo, and Costa del Este are well-policed and comfortable for daytime laptop work. Use Uber rather than walking after dark, keep electronics concealed on the street, and avoid displaying expensive gear in transit. Phone snatching is the primary petty crime risk, concentrated outside the main expat zones.
Are cafes in Panama City laptop-friendly for remote workers?
Yes, Panama City has a strong cafe culture that welcomes remote workers and digital nomads. We've verified 5 laptop-friendly cafes that explicitly cater to people working with laptops, providing reliable WiFi, power outlets, and comfortable seating for long sessions.
Do I need to buy something to use WiFi at cafes in Panama City?
Yes, the standard etiquette in Panama City is to make a purchase to use the WiFi. Most cafes expect you to order at least one drink per visit, with another small purchase every 2-3 hours if you're staying long. WiFi passwords are usually printed on receipts or available at the counter.
What's the average WiFi speed at cafes in Panama City?
Across the cafes we've tested in Panama City, the average WiFi speed is 30 Mbps. This is generally fast enough for video calls, file uploads, and standard remote work tasks. Speeds vary by location โ€” our rankings sort cafes by tested speed.
Which neighborhood has the best cafes for working in Panama City?
Panama City has multiple neighborhoods popular with remote workers, each with its own cafe scene. Our city guide lists cafes by neighborhood so you can pick spots near your accommodation or coworking space.
Are power outlets common in Panama City cafes?
Power outlet availability varies in Panama City. Newer specialty cafes designed for nomads typically have outlets at most tables, while traditional coffee shops may have only a few. Our guide marks which cafes have verified outlets.

Plan your stay in Panama City

Get the full city guide with cost of living, neighborhoods, visa info, and more โ€” everything a digital nomad needs.