About
A city guide for people who work from cafés.
Remote workers, freelancers, founders, and laptop-first people in Bangkok spend too much time guessing where to work from. Generic café lists tell you which place has the best matcha. They do not tell you whether the WiFi holds up for a video call, whether outlets exist at all, whether you can stay for three hours, or whether staff are friendly to people opening laptops at 11am.
workspots.city is a work-specific guide. Every venue gets a single headline number from 0–100 and nine sub-scores covering the unglamorous stuff: WiFi, outlets, calls, AC, seating, crowding, value, and laptop tolerance. Bangkok is the first city. Others come when contributors are ready.
What this is
- A map-first discovery tool for where you can actually work today.
- A structured database of work-friendly venues, hand-verified by people who showed up.
- A freshness-driven community resource — recent data wins over old data.
- An editorial brand. Honest verdicts. Respectful tone. No clickbait.
What this is not
- Not a generic café review site. Coffee quality is its own thing.
- Not a coworking-only directory.
- Not a static blog list. Conditions change, ratings reflect that.
- Not a social network. You don't need an account to use it.
How scoring works
Every Work Score is a weighted average of nine sub-scores derived from real visits. Read the full breakdown of weights, methodology, and freshness model on the methodology page.
Trust before monetisation
We may introduce sponsored placements eventually — labeled clearly, subject to a quality floor, never affecting the organic Work Score. Community ratings stay independent. If a sponsored venue starts showing up in “best for calls,” that's because the community said so, not because somebody paid.
How to help
The contribution loop is the product. If you worked from a great (or bad) spot we're missing, a 60-second submission shapes the rankings:
Submit a workspot