Group of people working on laptops in a bright, modern coworking space

Remote Work

Digital Nomad Guide to Angola

Angola is not on any digital nomad "top 10" list — and that's exactly the point. For remote workers who've exhausted the usual hubs, Angola offers a frontier experience: emerging infrastructure, zero nomad crowds, Atlantic Ocean lifestyle, and a culture that will genuinely surprise you.

Internet & connectivity in Angola

Fixed Internet

WiFi & Fiber Connections

  • Angola's internet infrastructure has improved dramatically thanks to investments in undersea fiber cables (WACS, SACS, Monet)
  • Fiber broadband is available in parts of Luanda, particularly the Talatona, Miramar, and Marginal areas
  • Hotel WiFi speeds in Luanda's better properties range from 10–50 Mbps download — adequate for video calls
  • Serviced apartments with fiber connections are the best option for extended stays and reliable work
  • Outside Luanda, fixed broadband is rare — mobile data becomes your primary connection
  • WiFi in cafes and restaurants is hit-or-miss; always test speeds before settling in for a work session
  • Download speeds can drop significantly during evening peak hours (7–11 PM) — schedule important calls for mornings

Mobile Data

SIM Cards & 4G Coverage

  • Unitel: Angola's largest network with the widest 4G coverage. The top choice for digital nomads
  • Movicel: Second network, decent urban coverage. Good as a backup SIM
  • Buy a SIM at the airport on arrival or at any branded shop — passport required for registration
  • 4G data packages: approximately $10–20 USD for 5–10 GB, valid for 30 days
  • 4G speeds in Luanda: typically 5–15 Mbps download, 2–8 Mbps upload
  • Outside cities, expect 3G speeds of 1–5 Mbps, sufficient for email and messaging but not video calls
  • Top up via Unitel shops, Multicaixa ATMs, or the Multicaixa Express mobile app
  • Tethering your phone to your laptop is the most reliable mobile work setup

Power

Electricity & Backup

  • Power outages are a daily reality across Angola, including Luanda. Outages can last minutes to hours
  • Upscale hotels and serviced apartments typically have generators that kick in within seconds
  • Budget accommodation may not have backup power — confirm before booking
  • Essential gear: a high-capacity power bank (20,000+ mAh) to keep your phone and mobile hotspot running
  • A laptop with good battery life (8+ hours) is critical — you'll work unplugged more often than expected
  • Consider a small UPS (uninterruptible power supply) if renting an apartment for an extended stay
  • Plug type: Angola uses Type C (European two-pin) outlets at 220V. Bring a universal adapter

Coworking & work spaces in Angola

Dedicated Coworking Spaces

Luanda's coworking scene is small but growing. Impact Hub Luanda is the most established, offering hot desks, meeting rooms, and a community of local entrepreneurs and international professionals. Newer spaces focused on the tech and startup ecosystem have opened in Talatona and the Baixa district. Day passes typically cost $15–25 USD, with monthly memberships around $150–250. Facilities usually include WiFi, power backup, printing, and coffee. Outside Luanda, formal coworking spaces essentially don't exist yet.

Hotel Lobbies & Cafes

Many digital nomads in Angola work from hotel lobbies, restaurants, and cafes. Upscale Luanda hotels (Epic Sana, InterContinental) have reliable WiFi and comfortable lobby areas, though buying a coffee or lunch is expected. Several cafes along the Marginal and in the Talatona district have good WiFi and laptop-friendly setups. The cafe culture is growing — look for spots with outlets near tables and air conditioning. Test the WiFi speed before committing to a full work day. The best café WiFi in Luanda typically runs 5–15 Mbps.

Serviced Apartments

For stays of a month or longer, a serviced apartment with fiber internet is the best setup. Several buildings in Talatona, Miramar, and Alvalade offer furnished apartments with WiFi, backup power, cleaning service, and security. Expect to pay $800–1,500/month for a one-bedroom. This gives you a reliable home office setup — critical when public WiFi is inconsistent. Negotiate internet speed before signing; ask for a speed test. Some buildings have shared generator backup that covers the entire building during outages.

Working Outside Luanda

Remote work outside Luanda is challenging but possible for nomads with flexible connectivity needs. Benguela and Lobito have decent 4G coverage and a handful of hotels with reasonable WiFi. Lubango has a small but growing tech scene. In smaller towns and rural areas, you'll rely entirely on mobile tethering at 3G speeds. If your work allows for async communication (email, document editing, project management) rather than constant video calls, Angola's secondary cities become viable. Always have a backup plan for connectivity.

Cost of living for digital nomads

Luanda

Monthly Costs in the Capital

  • Accommodation: $800–1,500/month for a furnished one-bedroom apartment; $50–150/night for mid-range hotels
  • Coworking/workspace: $100–250/month for a coworking membership; free–$10/day for cafe working
  • Food: $400–600/month — local restaurants $5–10/meal, expat restaurants $15–30/meal, groceries $200–300/month
  • Transport: $150–300/month — taxis, fuel, or candongueiro minibuses
  • Mobile data: $30–50/month for generous data packages on Unitel
  • Health/gym: $50–100/month for a gym membership in Luanda
  • Total estimate: $1,700–3,000/month depending on lifestyle choices

Outside Luanda

Costs in Benguela, Lobito & Lubango

  • Accommodation costs drop 30–40% outside the capital — decent rooms from $30–60/night, apartments from $400–800/month
  • Local food is significantly cheaper — full meals from $3–7 at local restaurants
  • Transport costs decrease as distances are shorter and traffic is lighter
  • Entertainment and lifestyle costs are lower across the board
  • The trade-off: fewer coworking options, slower internet, less English spoken, fewer imported goods
  • Estimated monthly budget for secondary cities: $1,200–2,000
  • Benguela and Lobito offer the best balance of affordability, connectivity, and quality of life outside Luanda

Comparison

How Angola Compares

  • Angola is significantly more expensive than popular nomad hubs like Bali, Chiang Mai, or Medellin
  • Comparable in cost to working from Lisbon, Cape Town, or Nairobi — but with less optimized nomad infrastructure
  • The value proposition is not cost savings but uniqueness — virtually zero digital nomads, genuine cultural immersion, and undiscovered landscapes
  • Internet reliability is the biggest gap compared to established nomad destinations
  • For nomads billing in USD or EUR, the Kwanza exchange rate makes local goods and services affordable
  • Imported goods (electronics, specialty foods, international brands) remain expensive

Best cities for digital nomads in Angola

Luanda — The Only Full Option

Luanda is realistically the only city where you can work remotely full-time with reliable connectivity. It offers fiber internet, coworking spaces, a social expat community, international restaurants, and nightlife. The downsides are cost and traffic. Base yourself in Talatona (modern, good connectivity) or Miramar (central, residential) for the best nomad experience. Ilha de Luanda is great for after-work relaxation with beachfront restaurants and sunset views. Allow 2–4 weeks to settle into a productive routine.

Benguela — The Relaxed Alternative

Benguela is Angola's most pleasant city — colonial architecture, quiet beaches, and a slower pace. 4G coverage is decent, and several hotels offer usable WiFi. Costs are 30–40% lower than Luanda. The trade-off is fewer workspace options and slower connections. Ideal for nomads whose work is primarily asynchronous (writing, design, project management) rather than constant video calls. The nearby resort town of Lobito adds variety. A month in Benguela after a month in Luanda makes for an excellent nomad rotation.

Lubango — The Highland Base

Lubango sits at 1,760 meters in Angola's southern highlands, offering a cooler climate, stunning scenery (including the famous Tundavala Gap), and a small but energetic local tech community. 4G coverage is available in the city center. Accommodation is affordable, and the city has a university campus that adds youthful energy. Internet reliability is a step below Luanda, but improving. Best for nomads who want a truly off-the-beaten-path experience combined with highland hiking and photography.

Nomad-Friendly Tips

Wherever you base yourself: always have two internet sources (WiFi + mobile tethering), keep your laptop fully charged, schedule critical calls for morning hours when bandwidth is best, use cloud-based tools that sync offline, set client expectations about occasional connectivity issues, and build buffer time into deadlines. The WAT timezone (UTC+1) is excellent for European clients and manageable for US East Coast (6 hours behind). Angola is one hour ahead of London and the same as most of West/Central Africa.

Digital Nomad Angola FAQ

Is Angola good for digital nomads?

Angola is an unconventional but increasingly viable digital nomad destination — best suited for adventurous remote workers who've already experienced the usual hubs. The pros: a genuinely unique cultural experience, growing internet infrastructure in Luanda, virtually zero nomad competition, Atlantic coastline lifestyle, and a timezone (WAT, UTC+1) that aligns perfectly with European clients. The cons: internet can be unreliable outside Luanda, Luanda's cost of living is higher than typical nomad destinations, coworking infrastructure is still developing, power outages are routine, and the visa process requires planning. It's a frontier nomad experience, not an optimized one.

How fast is the internet in Angola?

Internet speeds vary significantly by location and connection type. In Luanda, fiber broadband in serviced apartments and hotels can reach 20–50 Mbps download — adequate for video conferencing and most remote work. 4G mobile data (Unitel or Movicel) delivers 5–15 Mbps in Luanda and other major cities. Outside the capital, speeds drop to 3G levels (1–5 Mbps), sufficient for email and messaging but challenging for video calls. Peak evening hours (7–11 PM) see reduced speeds everywhere. Angola's infrastructure is improving yearly with new undersea cable capacity, but reliability remains the bigger issue — power outages interrupt connectivity regularly.

Are there coworking spaces in Angola?

Luanda has a small but growing coworking scene. Impact Hub Luanda is the most established space, offering hot desks, meeting rooms, and a community of local entrepreneurs. Newer spaces have opened in the Talatona and Baixa districts. Day passes cost $15–25, monthly memberships $150–250. Many remote workers also use hotel lobbies and cafes along the Marginal as informal workspaces. Outside Luanda, formal coworking essentially doesn't exist — you'll work from hotel WiFi, cafes, or mobile tethering. The scene is developing rapidly alongside Angola's growing tech and startup ecosystem.

What SIM card should I get for mobile data in Angola?

Unitel is the top choice, offering Angola's widest 4G network coverage. Buy a SIM at the airport arrivals hall or any Unitel shop in the city — you'll need your passport for registration. Data packages cost approximately $10–20 for 5–10 GB, valid for 30 days. Consider also getting a Movicel SIM as backup when Unitel's network is congested. Top up via Unitel shops, Multicaixa ATMs, or the Multicaixa Express mobile payment app. Enable tethering on your phone plan and use it as your primary mobile hotspot. Having two networks on two phones gives you redundancy — critical for important calls and deadlines.

What does it cost to live in Angola as a digital nomad?

In Luanda, expect to spend $1,700–3,000 per month: furnished apartment ($800–1,500), food ($400–600), transport ($150–300), coworking ($100–250), mobile data ($30–50), and miscellaneous ($200–300). Outside Luanda in cities like Benguela or Lobito, costs drop to roughly $1,200–2,000 per month. Angola is more expensive than Southeast Asian or Latin American nomad hubs, comparable to Lisbon or Cape Town. The value isn't in cost savings — it's in the unique, uncrowded experience. For nomads earning in USD or EUR, the Kwanza exchange rate keeps local goods and dining affordable.