Houston · USA
Houston in 1 Minute: Space City for Remote Workers
Last updated · 1 min read

Houston's lack of zoning created one of America's most interesting neighborhoods — Montrose, The Heights, and EaDo each feel like separate cities. Add no state income tax and 1 Gbps fiber, and the math is hard to beat.
Where to base yourself
Montrose for food, walkability, and the strongest creative crowd.
The Heights for quieter residential streets and historic homes; EaDo for lofts and nightlife near downtown.
Fiber, transit, food
Xfinity and AT&T deliver 1 Gbps for $65–$85/month across most apartments.
METRORail covers downtown, Midtown, and the museum district — a Q Card keeps fares at $1.25.
Houston is one of the best food cities on Earth — Vietnamese, Tex-Mex, Nigerian, and barbecue within a 10-minute drive.
Cost reality
$2,200–$3,400 per month covers a furnished 1BR, mostly rideshare transit, coworking, and a serious food budget.
Plan this trip
If Houston made the shortlist, the rest is logistics. Most nomads we hear from start by comparing flights into the closest hub, then lock in a base — a serviced apartment or hotel for the first week buys time to scout neighborhoods without overcommitting. Land with data already working by setting up an eSIM before boarding, and book an airport transfer so the first hour in town is calm instead of chaotic.
Once you're in, the city opens up faster with a little planning. We use Klook for guided tours and day trips, Tiqets for skip-the-line museum and attraction tickets, and KKday for the more local experiences the big platforms miss. A self-paced audio walking tour is the cheapest way to learn a neighborhood on day one. Travelling carry-on only? Drop your bags at a verified luggage locker between check-out and your evening flight. And because long stays mean real risk, we don't leave home without proper travel insurance — and we keep AirHelp bookmarked for the day a flight gets delayed or cancelled.
Related city guides
If Houston fits your vibe, you’ll probably also like Kansas City for digital nomads, Atlanta for digital nomads, Buenos Aires for digital nomads, and Chicago for digital nomads. Or zoom out to every nomad city in USA and across North America. Browse every guide on the full city library or head back to the blog index for the latest nomad essays.
How Houston compares
Safety · Visa · Monthly cost
| City | Safety | Visa | Monthly cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| HoustonUSA | Moderate · Safe in main neighborhoods | ESTA 90 days (most) | $2,200–3,400 |
| Kansas CityUSA | High · Safe in main neighborhoods | ESTA 90 days (most) | $1,800–2,800 |
| AtlantaUSA | High · Safe in main intown areas | ESTA 90 days (most) | $2,200–3,200 |
| Buenos AiresArgentina | Moderate · Petty theft common | Digital Nomad — 180 + 180 days | $1,000–1,500 |
| BangkokThailand | High · Solo-female friendly | DTV — up to 180 days | $1,400–2,000 |
Written by
Meric Erdinc · Founder, 1-Minute Nomad
Meric has spent the last six years moving around Southeast Asia and beyond, with a laptop, a rotating set of Wi-Fi passwords, and an opinion on every co-working space he’s ever stepped into. Rooted in Istanbul, currently working out of Bangkok — though the next flight is usually already booked. He started 1-Minute Nomad for people like him: nomads who don’t have time to read forty Reddit threads to figure out a city. Every guide here comes from a place he’s actually lived, worked or months of on-the-ground research.



