Koven Coworking
17 Rue Bouquière
Search 78 coworking spaces in Bordeaux, France. From hot desks to private offices, find the right workspace with transparent pricing and real user reviews.
Bordeaux has reinvented itself over the past decade, and its coworking scene is part of that story. The city now counts 82 flexible workspaces, with day passes averaging €22.84 and monthly memberships at €262. For a city that draws remote workers with its food, architecture, and proximity to the Atlantic coast, the workspace infrastructure has caught up with the lifestyle appeal.
Bordeaux Centre holds the majority of options. Le Numéro Cinq (€25/day) and myWO Bordeaux Grand Théâtre (€23/day) both operate near the Place des Quinconces, where the tram lines converge and the restaurant scene is excellent. This is prime territory for freelancers who want to step out for lunch in a city that takes lunch seriously.
The Chartrons district, the old wine merchants' quarter north of the centre, has quietly become a coworking neighborhood. Ocube Coworking charges €18/day with monthly plans from €181 — one of the best value propositions in the city. The area retains its antique dealers and wine bars but now also hosts design studios and tech startups.
Bordeaux Maritime, around the Bassins à Flot and the Cité du Vin, represents the city's newer development zone. L'artichaut Bordeaux operates here at €29/day but with a surprisingly low monthly rate of €183, suggesting they're pricing to attract committed members rather than drop-ins. The neighborhood is still developing, which means fewer lunch options but more space and light.
Bordeaux Lac, near the convention center, serves a corporate clientele. myWO Bordeaux Lac (€15/day, €293/month) is aimed at professionals who need meeting rooms and a registered address more than community vibes. SugArfree in Bordeaux Sud (€18/day) rounds out the geography with a focus on creative professionals.
The €14–€29 range covers the full market, with the sweet spot around €18–€25. Bordeaux is priced identically to Nantes and Lyon, which makes sense — all three are regional French cities with similar economic profiles. The monthly picture varies more: Ocube at €181 and L'artichaut at €183 sit well below the €262 average, while SugArfree (€326) and myWO Lac (€293) push the upper end.
Bordeaux attracts a specific type of remote worker: people who could live in Paris but chose not to. The TGV puts Gare Montparnasse 2h04 away, close enough for weekly client meetings. The cost of living is 20–25% below Paris, the food is better per euro spent, and the ocean is 45 minutes by car. Bordeaux's coworking population tends to be slightly older and more established than Barcelona's or Lisbon's — fewer backpack nomads, more 35-year-olds with mortgages and clients.
The wine industry also contributes. Export managers, sommeliers building their brands, wine tech startups — there's a niche but real segment of Bordeaux's coworking community tied to the region's signature industry.
17 Rue Bouquière
25 Rue Commandant Charcot
229 Rue Judaïque
Ilot Quai 8.2, Bâtiment E1 31 Rue d'Armagnac
31 Allée de Chartres
Place Saint-Martial
Centre Les Grands Hommes Place des Grands Hommes
81 Boulevard Pierre 1er LE BOUSCAT
64 Rue Amédée Saint-Germain
335 Rue Georges Bonnac
20 Rue de la Gare d'Orléans
32 allée Boutaut CS80112
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