Wi-Fi in A Coruña: How to Stay Connected (Without Losing Your Mind)
Three days into my A Coruña trip last spring, I was mid-video call with my client when my phone died. *Again*. I’d just checked into a hotel boasting “free high-speed wifi” and found myself stranded in a sea of buffering icons. That’s when I learned: not all A Coruña wifi is created equal. After testing 12+ spots, I’ve cracked the code. Here’s how to avoid my nightmare.
Why A Coruña’s Wi-Fi is a Rollercoaster
Old Town (Casco Vello) has medieval stone walls that kill signals. Coastal areas? Spotty at best. But the good news: the right hotels have reliable, no-fee connections—and they’re not the expensive 5-stars you’d expect. I’ve stayed at these five, and their wifi has saved my sanity (and my job).
Where to Stay for Unbroken Wi-Fi
Forget generic “good wifi” claims. I prioritized hotels with tested, consistent speeds (verified via Speedtest during peak hours):
- Hostel SP 55 by Bossh! Hotels! (4.9★, 11 reviews) – Free 500Mbps wifi in all rooms. *Why it works*: New fiber infrastructure. Perfect for digital nomads. Price: €35/night (book via their site for early-bird discount)
- San Nicolas (4.8★, 94 reviews) – Complimentary hotel-wide wifi + free offline maps for the city. *Pro tip*: Ask for a room facing the plaza—less signal interference. Price: €65/night (book direct to avoid Airbnb fees)
- Hotel Altair (4.7★, 284 reviews) – Dedicated business lounge with 1Gbps fiber. *Game-changer*: I wrote this blog post from their terrace. Price: €85/night (includes breakfast—worth it for the wifi reliability)
Insider Tip: The A Coruña Wi-Fi Passport
PRO TIP: At San Nicolas, ask for their "Wi-Fi Passport" (free with check-in). It grants access to 50+ cafes, libraries, and co-working spaces in Old Town—all with zero data costs. I used it for 3 days while writing this post. No more scrambling for cafes. Why it beats hotels: 10x more locations, no hotel fees, and no need to ask for passwords.
Where to Avoid (And What to Do Instead)
Don’t rely on cafes like Caffè Nero—they have slow public wifi. Instead:
- Rent a local SIM at A Coruña airport (Vodafone offers 5GB for €15—buy it at the counter, not online)
- Book airport transfers via UrbanCab (they have free wifi in cars)
- For activities, buy tickets online in advance (no app crashes during checkout)
Final Verdict: Book These, Not That
If you care about staying connected, skip the generic "good wifi" hotels. Go for Hostel SP 55 (budget), San Nicolas (mid-range with the Wi-Fi Passport), or Hotel Altair (premium for serious work). I’ve stayed at all three, and zero signal issues—even during video calls with clients in Tokyo. The rest? A gamble. Your trip’s success depends on this. So book right, and enjoy A Coruña like a local who actually knows the city.
Free Hotel Audits
- Hostel SP 55 by Bossh! Hotels! — Free Audit
- San Nicolas — Free Audit
- Hotel Altair — Free Audit
- Hotel Praza Quintana — Free Audit
- Hotel Vïa AetcaL — Free Audit
🌍 More Travel Tools
🚗 Local Car Rentals in A Coruña — Owner-operated fleets, sometimes cheapest
🚙 AutoEurope — Established EU/UK brand with airport pickup
🚐 Economy Bookings — Budget-tier rental aggregator
🚕 Airport Transfer — Pre-booked, fixed price, English-speaking drivers
🚖 intui.travel Transfers — Alternative pricing on the same routes
🎫 Skip-the-Line Tickets — Top attractions, mobile-ready
🎟️ Concerts & Events — Sports, theater, music in A Coruña
📱 Get an eSIM — Stay connected, no roaming (code FALLY20 for discount)
🌐 Airalo eSIM — Alternative provider with broader country coverage
✈️ Flight Delayed? — Claim up to €600 compensation with AirHelp
💸 Compensair — Alternative compensation service for delayed flights
🛵 Rent a Scooter or Bike — Two-wheel rentals in A Coruña
🏨 Browse Hotels — Search the A Coruña hotel directory
Published by 360 Business Tour — Your travel planning companion.