Co-Living vs Renting an Apartment in Vietnam: A Real Cost Comparison

The question comes up constantly in Vietnam nomad communities: is co-living actually worth it, or should I just rent an apartment?

The financial answer depends entirely on what you’re comparing. The better question is: what are you actually optimizing for?

This guide runs the honest numbers on both options in Da Nang, Hoi An, and Hanoi — and then covers the non-financial dimensions that most cost comparisons ignore.


The Financial Comparison

Da Nang

Monthly apartment rental (mid-range, comfortable):
– Furnished studio in Mỹ An / An Thương area: $280–400
– Utilities (electricity, water): $30–70 (electricity is the variable — air conditioning is expensive in summer)
– Internet: included or $10–15 additional
– Cleaning (twice monthly): $20–30 if you hire help
Total apartment: $340–515/month

Co-living (mid-range, includes workspace):
– Room + common areas + workspace + some meals or events: $400–650/month
– Utilities and internet: typically included
– Cleaning: typically included

Financial verdict for Da Nang: At the lower end, a good apartment is cheaper. At the mid-range, they’re comparable. At the higher end (premium co-living like NextU, when available), co-living costs more in raw housing terms — but what you’re buying is different.

Hoi An

Monthly apartment rental:
– Studio or 1BR in desirable area: $300–500
– Utilities: $30–80
– Internet: $10–15 additional (or included)
Total: $340–595/month

Co-living:
– Farmstay-style co-living with workspace and community: $500–800/month
– Utilities and internet included

Financial verdict for Hoi An: Similar to Da Nang — apartments are cheaper in raw cost terms, co-living includes more.

Hanoi

Monthly apartment rental:
– Studio in Tây Hồ: $300–500
– Studio in Hoàn Kiếm / Old Quarter: $250–400
– Utilities: $30–80
– Internet: $10–15 or included
Total: $340–595/month

Co-living:
– Hanoi co-living with community: $450–700/month
– Utilities and internet included


What the Financial Comparison Misses

The numbers above show that apartments are typically $50–200/month cheaper than co-living at comparable comfort levels. But this comparison only holds if you’re comparing the same things — and you’re not.

What co-living includes that apartments don’t:

Workspace. A good apartment may have a desk in the bedroom. A co-living space has dedicated workspace with the infrastructure (good internet, good lighting, ergonomic seating) for a full working day. If you’re also paying for a coworking membership ($50–80/month in Da Nang), add that to the apartment total. Co-living closes the gap significantly.

Community (infrastructure cost = $0). Meeting people in an apartment: you have to do all the work — finding groups, going to events, introducing yourself to strangers. In co-living, community happens in the building. The time and energy cost of building social infrastructure is real; co-living eliminates it.

Setup cost and decision fatigue. Moving into an apartment in a new country involves: finding the apartment, negotiating rent, shopping for basics, setting up utilities. Co-living: book, arrive, unpack. For people on shorter stays or frequent city changes, the friction elimination is worth something.

Flexibility. Most apartment leases require 1–3 months minimum, sometimes more, paid in advance. Co-living spaces typically offer more flexible minimum stays. If your plans are uncertain, this matters.

Maintenance. When the air conditioning breaks in your apartment, it’s your problem to negotiate with the landlord and potentially live without it for days. In co-living, it’s someone else’s.


When Apartments Win

Longer stays (3+ months). For genuine long-term residents planning to stay 3+ months in one place, a monthly apartment rental at $300–400 is hard to beat financially. You can also negotiate better rates the longer you stay.

Couples or small groups. A 2-bedroom apartment for two people is significantly cheaper per person than two co-living rooms. The value equation shifts.

Need for maximum privacy. If your work requires calls in total quiet, if you have a partner visiting, or if you simply prefer minimal shared space, an apartment gives you that cleanly.

When you already have community. If you’re arriving in a city where you already know people — returning to a place you’ve lived before, joining a company with a local team — you don’t need co-living’s community infrastructure. You already have it.


When Co-Living Wins

Shorter or uncertain stays. Less than 2 months, or unclear end date — the flexibility and zero-setup of co-living is valuable.

When you want community accelerated. Arriving in a new country, new to the nomad lifestyle, or going through a transition — the built-in social structure of co-living makes the first few weeks dramatically less lonely.

When the workspace is genuinely important. If your work requires more than a bedroom desk — reliable fast internet, separate workspace, meeting capabilities — and you’d be paying for coworking anyway, co-living with workspace included changes the financial calculation.

When the curation matters. The right co-living community — people aligned with your values and interests — is not a commodity. You can’t buy it by renting an apartment in a particular neighborhood. If the community quality matters to you, the premium is for something real.


The Hybrid Approach

Many experienced Vietnam nomads do a hybrid over a year-long stay:

  • Month 1–2: Co-living. Learn the city, meet people, find your neighborhood.
  • Month 3+: Move to a monthly apartment once you know exactly where you want to be and who you want to be near.

The co-living period is an investment in local knowledge and relationships that makes the apartment period better. You know which neighborhood, which landlord, which market, which café. You arrive with context.


The Bottom Line

Apartments are cheaper by $50–200/month at comparable comfort levels.

Co-living includes workspace, community infrastructure, flexibility, and zero setup — and for the right person at the right moment, these have real value that makes the premium worthwhile.

The question isn’t really “which is cheaper?” It’s: “What do I actually need, and what is the thing I’m buying actually worth to me?”

For a 6-month stay in a city where you already have community, the apartment is probably right. For a first month in a new country, or for someone who values community and workspace alongside accommodation, co-living often wins even when it costs a bit more.


→ Cost of Living in Vietnam
→ What Is Conscious Co-Living?
→ Remote Work Vietnam Guide

NextU’s co-living spaces in Vietnam include workspace, community, and cultural programming alongside accommodation. See what we’re building.

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