Here's what a month actually costs a solo remote worker in Greece's main nomad base — Athens — covering rent, food, transport and everyday spending. Read it alongside the income your visa requires and the tax you'll owe.
| City | Comfortable solo budget / month | 1-bed rent (centre) | Meal | Transit pass |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Athens | €1,100–€1,800 | ~€624 | ~€15 | ~€27 |
Athens — what the figures mean +
Athens is one of the more affordable EU capitals for nomads: budget roughly EUR 1,100-1,800/month including rent. A central one-bedroom averages ~EUR 624 (EUR 527 outside) and a monthly transport pass ~EUR 27. Rents have risen sharply due to short-term-rental pressure.
What a comfortable budget covers
The "comfortable solo budget" above assumes a mid-range lifestyle. Roughly, it folds in:
- 🏠A one-bedroom flat (the single biggest line, and the one that swings most by neighbourhood)
- 🍽️Groceries plus eating out a few times a week
- 🚇Local transport — a transit pass, the odd taxi
- 📶Mobile data and home internet
- 💻A coworking pass or regular café work
- 🎒A buffer for leisure, fitness and weekend trips
Budget-minded nomads (a room or outside-centre flat, cooking at home, public transport) land near the bottom of each range; a central flat with frequent dining out and travel pushes toward the top — or past it. Health insurance for your visa and any income tax sit on top of these figures.
Cost of living in Greece: FAQ
Cost of living in Greece: FAQ
Is Greece affordable for digital nomads?
On these aggregated figures, a comfortable solo month in Athens runs roughly €1,100–€1,800 including central rent, food, local transport and everyday spending. Where Greece sits versus other destinations is easiest to see on the cost-of-living index, which compares every city we cover side by side.
What is not included in these budgets?
The ranges cover ongoing monthly living costs. They exclude one-off and irregular costs: flights, the visa application fee, a rental deposit (often one to a few months' rent), furnishing an unfurnished flat, health insurance for the visa, and any income tax you owe. Short-term and furnished rentals — what most nomads actually book — also tend to cost more than the long-lease rent figures shown here.
Does my visa income cover the cost of living?
The DNV sets a minimum income around €3,500/month. Comparing that to the comfortable-budget range above tells you how much headroom you'd have — but remember the income figure is a qualifying threshold, not a recommended budget, and tax can reduce your take-home. See the taxes page for Greece.
Sources
- Aggregated index Numbeo — Cost of Living in Athens (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-14