Best Places to Work with a Laptop in London (2026 Guide)
Five confirmed, wifi-ready spots across London for remote workers and freelancers who need somewhere decent to actually get things done.
You’ve got your laptop, your headphones, and a to-do list longer than the Central line. What you need now is somewhere to actually sit down and get things done. London has no shortage of cafés. Finding one that won’t kick you out after 45 minutes, has wifi that actually works, and won’t make you feel guilty for nursing a flat white through a two-hour Zoom call? That’s a different mission entirely.
Here are five confirmed, laptop-friendly spots across London worth making the trip for in 2026. You can find even more on the Cafés to Work From app, built exactly for this kind of search.
Gecko Coffeehouse, Shoreditch (East London)
- Address: 49 Bethnal Green Road, E1 6LA
- Wifi: Yes, free. Passwords are clearly signposted.
- Outlets: Yes, extension cords throughout the basement co-working space
- Vibe: Bali-meets-Shoreditch, warm lighting, plants everywhere
- Price range: £
- Best for: Dedicated work sessions, plant-based brunch
This is arguably the most intentionally laptop-friendly café in London. The basement level at Gecko is set up like a co-working space, with extension cords on every table, “Laptop Friendly” signs on display, and a quietly buzzing atmosphere that hits the right note between productive and pleasant. The menu is 100% plant-based, with açaí bowls, protein pancakes, and excellent coffee. Open Monday to Friday 9am to 5pm, weekends until 6pm.
Redemption Roasters, Covent Garden (Central London)
- Address: Drury Lane, WC2
- Wifi: Yes
- Vibe: Warm, social, ethically driven
- Price range: ££
- Best for: Central London base, laptop work with purpose
Redemption Roasters is a social enterprise that trains and employs people with experience of the justice system, so your flat white is doing some good. The Covent Garden location on Drury Lane is well-regarded among the remote-working crowd for its inviting atmosphere and solid wifi. It draws a mix of regulars and visitors, which keeps the energy up without tipping into chaotic. If you’re based in or passing through central London, it’s a reliable option.
If you’re scoping out other central London spots, the Cafés to Work From app lists verified laptop-friendly cafés with details on wifi, noise level, and what the working setup is actually like.
The Wren Coffee, City of London
- Address: St Nicholas Cole Abbey, 114 Queen Victoria Street, EC4V 4BJ
- Wifi: Yes, free — holds up well for video calls
- Outlets: Some sockets dotted around
- Vibe: Soaring ceilings, stained glass, hushed and focused
- Price range: ££
- Best for: Deep focus work, City-based remote workers, a genuinely memorable setting
The Wren is a coffee shop inside St Nicholas Cole Abbey, a Christopher Wren church near Cannon Street. It’s one of those spots that makes replying to emails feel oddly meaningful. The space is tall-ceilinged and surprisingly quiet for its location, with pew-like benches, stained glass windows, and Caravan coffee. Wifi is free and reliable enough for calls. Open Monday to Friday from 7am, with a brief Thursday closure around lunchtime for a church service.
FWD:Coffee, Clerkenwell (East Central London)
- Address: 161A Whitecross Street, EC1Y 8JL
- Wifi: Yes, free
- Outlets: Yes, available throughout
- Vibe: Exposed brick, vintage touches, spacious and light-filled
- Price range: £
- Best for: Solo work, all-day sessions, great cold brew
FWD:Coffee is so openly welcoming of laptop workers that they post about it on Instagram. The Whitecross Street location is roomy and well-lit, with a laid-back atmosphere that makes it easy to settle in for hours. Coffee is taken seriously here, with beans from Climpson’s and a rotating seasonal menu of drinks worth exploring beyond your usual order. Open Monday to Friday until 5pm, with the Shoreditch location staying open until 7pm if you need a late afternoon run.
Foyles Bookshop Café, Soho (Central London)
- Address: 107 Charing Cross Road, WC2H 0DT
- Wifi: Yes, free
- Vibe: Book-lined, calm, perfect for a change of scene
- Price range: ££
- Best for: Writers, creatives, solo workers who need inspiration nearby
The café on the top floor of Foyles is one of London’s more underrated work spots. It’s quieter than it has any right to be given the location, surrounded by shelves of books with a pleasant view over the street. Wifi is free and reliable, the seating is comfortable, and there’s enough ambient noise to keep you from feeling isolated. When productivity stalls, the answer is one floor down and usually involves a cookbook or a novel you weren’t planning to buy.
How to Find More Spots
These five will keep you going, but London has hundreds of laptop-friendly cafés across its neighbourhoods. If you’re planning a work trip, trying a new part of the city, or just want to mix up your regular spot, there are plenty more verified options out there.
Find laptop-friendly cafés across London
Download the Cafés to Work From app — verified spots with details on wifi, noise level, and what the working setup is actually like. Designed by remote workers, for remote workers.
Whether you’re a freelancer in Shoreditch, a remote worker commuting into the City, or just someone who can’t write a single decent email in a home office, London has your next workspace. Go explore.