Los Angeles coliving spans the Venice / Santa Monica creative belt, the Silver Lake / Echo Park scene, and the founder-heavy West Hollywood / Beverly Hills corridor. Expect roughly $900-2,800/month for an all-inclusive coliving room, with median around $1,600. Best months are Apr, May, Sep, Oct, that's when climate, crowds and inventory typically align best. No US digital-nomad visa. Standard work-visa routes (O-1, L-1, H-1B, F-1/OPT) apply; ESTA/B-1 visitor stay prohibits employment.
Coliving in Los Angeles creates the community and social connections that can be hard to find in such a spread-out city. It offers furnished living in walkable neighborhoods with included amenities and social events.
Best areas, cost of living, coworking, transportation, lifestyle, and more.
Estimated single-person budget for a coliving resident, USD. Coliving rent already bundles utilities and Wi-Fi.
Los Angeles scores 75 on the Numbeo CoL Index (NY = 100), so day-to-day spending is roughly 25% cheaper than NYC.
How most remote workers and digital nomads legally stay in United States.
Strongest window for a coliving stay: Apr, May, Sep, Oct.
Coliving spaces in Los Angeles offer private furnished rooms with shared kitchens, lounges, and coworking areas, all included in one monthly payment with no hidden utility bills or broker fees. Most residents stay 1-6 months on their first visit. The community aspect, shared meals, skill exchanges, weekend trips with housemates, is what keeps people coming back even when their working schedule could let them base anywhere. We currently list 18 verified coliving spaces in Los Angeles; browse above to compare prices, amenities, and locations.
Venice and Santa Monica have the most beach-creative coliving — walking distance to ocean, Silicon Beach tech employers, surf culture. Silver Lake and Echo Park are the cooler indie / writer / musician belt on the east side. West Hollywood is corporate-relocation and entertainment-industry tilted. Hollywood proper is touristy but has affordable coliving inventory. Downtown LA is the up-and-coming option with the newest purpose-built spaces.
Co-living is a modern form of shared housing where residents have private bedrooms but share common spaces like kitchens, living rooms, and coworking areas. It combines affordable rent with built-in community, events, and amenities — perfect for digital nomads, students, and young professionals.
Unlike traditional flatshares, coliving spaces are professionally managed with curated communities, regular events, included utilities and WiFi, cleaning services, and flexible lease terms.
Most co-living spaces include utilities (water, electricity, gas), high-speed WiFi, regular cleaning of common areas, fully furnished rooms, access to shared amenities (kitchen, lounge, coworking), and community events. Some premium spaces also include gym access, breakfast, and laundry services.
Browse listings by city or community type, filter by your budget and preferences, then send an enquiry directly to the operator. They'll respond with availability and next steps.
All-inclusive coliving rooms in Los Angeles typically run between $900 and $2,800 per month, with the median around $1,600. Rent usually covers furnishing, utilities, Wi-Fi, cleaning of shared areas, and access to coworking-style amenities.
Apr, May, Sep, Oct are the strongest window for a stay in Los Angeles, balancing climate, crowds, and coliving inventory. Book 6-8 weeks ahead during peak windows since most operators stay 80-95% occupied year-round.
No US digital-nomad visa. Standard work-visa routes (O-1, L-1, H-1B, F-1/OPT) apply; ESTA/B-1 visitor stay prohibits employment.
Average fixed-line download speeds in Los Angeles are around 200 Mbps, which is well above what most video-call, code-deploy, and large-file-transfer workflows need. Most coliving operators run fiber connections and back them up with mobile hotspot fallbacks.
Los Angeles scores 75 on the Numbeo Cost of Living Index, where New York City is the 100 baseline. So day-to-day spending here is roughly 25% cheaper than NYC, which most coliving residents notice most in groceries, transit, and eating out.
Los Angeles works best for digital nomads on a formal DN visa, first-time-to-the-country expats, founders attending local startup events. Most coliving residents stay 1-6 months on their first visit; longer-term residents commonly transition into a regular lease afterwards.