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Why Remote Workers Are Choosing Makati Over Bali in 2026

For the past five years, Bali has been the default answer whenever a remote worker asked “where should I base myself in Asia?” The cafes in Canggu, the rice field views, the slow mornings with a coconut — it became a cliché for a reason. It works. But in 2026, something has shifted. A growing number of location-independent professionals are quietly swapping Bali for Makati, and once you understand why, it is hard to argue with them.

This is not about Bali being bad. It is about Makati being genuinely, surprisingly better for people who are actually trying to work — and live well while doing it.


The WiFi Problem Nobody Talks About in Bali

Ask any remote worker who has spent serious time in Bali and they will eventually mention the internet. Not with anger, but with the resigned sigh of someone who has rebooked a flight after missing three client calls in a row.

Bali’s connectivity is inconsistent. It has improved significantly over the years, but “improved” is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Depending on which part of the island you are in, which coworking space you chose, and whether it rained that morning, your connection can range from perfectly fine to completely unusable. For someone on a casual Instagram sabbatical, this is a minor inconvenience. For someone running client calls, submitting deliverables, or managing a team across time zones, it is a genuine professional risk.

Makati has no such problem. The Makati CBD runs on fibre infrastructure, and the condo buildings in the Ayala Triangle area — including The Gramercy Residences — offer dedicated fibre connections that are tested, consistent, and fast. We are talking 100–200 Mbps in a well-managed unit, available at 9 PM on a Friday the same as 9 AM on a Tuesday. For remote workers, this alone changes the equation.


The Cost Comparison Is Closer Than You Think

Bali has a reputation for being cheap. And it is — if you are comparing it to London or New York. But compare it properly to Makati, accounting for what you actually get, and the gap closes fast.

A mid-range villa or well-located condo in Canggu or Seminyak with reliable WiFi, a pool, and proximity to decent coworking now costs anywhere from USD 1,200 to USD 2,500 per month depending on the season and how much advance notice you gave. Add in the cost of a scooter or regular transport, eating out for most meals because cooking in a rented villa is impractical, and the occasional international-grade medical visit, and you are not living cheaply — you are living at a moderate cost in a beautiful place.

Makati’s short term rental market is comparable in price and significantly ahead in what you get for it. A fully furnished condo at The Gramercy Residences in the Ayala Triangle gives you a large pool, full gym, concierge, fast fibre WiFi, air conditioning, and walking-distance access to hundreds of restaurants, two major supermarkets, and the Ayala MRT Station — all in one of the safest and best-managed buildings in Metro Manila. The monthly cost for a Stay N Cee managed unit is competitive with a decent Bali setup, and the quality, reliability, and convenience are measurably higher.


Makati Is a Proper City. That Matters More Than You Expect.

One of the things remote workers discover after a few months in Bali is that it is, fundamentally, a resort island. It is magnificent at being a resort island. But if you need to do something that requires urban infrastructure — see a specialist doctor, handle a banking issue, get something couriered internationally, buy something specific, navigate a bureaucratic process — Bali makes it harder than it needs to be.

Makati is a fully functioning international business city. It has world-class hospitals within a 10-minute drive. It has every major international bank. It has a functioning international airport 20 minutes from the CBD. It has embassies, law firms, accounting offices, and the kind of support infrastructure that makes life genuinely easy when something goes wrong — because something always eventually goes wrong.

For remote workers who are serious about their work rather than just their lifestyle, this matters. The ability to see a good doctor quickly, to handle a banking issue in person, to receive an international package without it getting lost in a customs grey zone — these are not small things when you are living somewhere for two or three months.


The Gramercy Is the Ideal Remote Work Base in Makati

If you are going to base yourself in Makati for a month or longer, the neighbourhood and building you choose matters enormously. And the answer, consistently, is the Ayala Triangle — and specifically The Gramercy Residences.

Here is why it works so well for remote workers:

The WiFi is dedicated fibre. Not building-shared broadband, not the cafe down the road’s password. Your own connection in your unit, fast and consistent.

The pool is genuinely usable every day. One of the things that makes Bali appealing is the pool culture — the ability to break your day with a swim and return to work refreshed. The Gramercy’s pool deck gives you exactly this, without needing to leave the building.

The location eliminates logistics. Everything you need as a working professional — food, coffee, groceries, transport, coworking, banking — is within a 15-minute walk. When your environment removes friction, you work better and recover better.

The building is secure and professionally managed. This sounds basic but it matters when you are living somewhere alone, working odd hours, and receiving equipment or mail. The Gramercy’s 24-hour concierge and security operation runs like a hotel, not a residential block.

👉 View The Gramercy listing: https://www.stayinmakati.com/room/condo-with-pool-in-makati-the-gramercy


The Food Scene Is Wildly Underrated

Bali’s food scene is genuinely excellent. The smoothie bowls, the vegan cafes, the warung rice plates — it is one of the great eating destinations in Asia. But it is not diverse in the way that a city is diverse. After two months, you will have exhausted the rotation.

Makati’s food scene is one of the most underrated in Southeast Asia. Within walking distance of the Greenbelt area you have Japanese, Korean, Italian, Filipino, Vietnamese, Middle Eastern, Indian, Mexican, and American options — at every price point from a ₱150 tapsilog breakfast to a proper omakase dinner. The Legazpi Sunday Market and Salcedo Saturday Market add another layer of artisan and local produce options that rival anything in the region.

For remote workers who cook sometimes and eat out often, Makati’s food ecosystem is genuinely superior to Bali’s for long-term living.


English Is Not a Barrier — It Is an Advantage

The Philippines has one of the highest English proficiency rates in Asia. In Makati specifically, English is the default language of business, services, and daily life. Every landlord, every customer service representative, every doctor, every building concierge speaks English fluently.

This is not the case in Bali, where daily life requires at least functional Bahasa Indonesia or heavy reliance on translation. For remote workers on calls all day who do not want to navigate a language barrier on top of everything else, this is a genuine quality-of-life advantage.


The Time Zone Works

Makati runs on Philippine Standard Time — UTC+8. This is the same time zone as Singapore, Hong Kong, Beijing, and Perth. For remote workers serving Asian clients or working for companies with Asia-Pacific operations, this is ideal. For those working with European clients, the overlap is manageable in the early morning. For US-based clients, late evening calls are the norm — but this is true of almost every Asian base.

The difference from Bali is minimal (one hour), but the practical infrastructure around it in Makati — the reliable internet, the 24-hour city services, the professional building environment — makes working odd hours far more sustainable.


All Stay N Cee Properties — Your Remote Work Base in Makati

Every Stay N Cee property is set up for remote workers: fast WiFi, pool access, gym, and a central Makati location. Here are all four options:

1. Condo with Pool — The Gramercy Residences ⭐ Top pick for remote workers The best address in Makati. Dedicated fibre WiFi, large pool, full gym, 24hr concierge. In the Ayala Triangle, 8 minutes walk to Greenbelt. 👉 https://www.stayinmakati.com/room/condo-with-pool-in-makati-the-gramercy

2. 50F Sunset View — Fast WiFi, Pool, Own Balcony 50th floor with a private balcony and panoramic sunset views. Fast WiFi and full building amenities. Great for long focused work days with a spectacular end-of-day view. 👉 https://www.stayinmakati.com/room/50f-sunset-view-fast-wifi-pool-own-balcony

3. Condo Living — Pool, Balcony, Gym, Fast WiFi Spacious and well-equipped. Pool, private balcony, gym, and fast WiFi. Ideal for longer stays where space matters. 👉 https://www.stayinmakati.com/room/condo-living-pool-balcony-gym-fast-wifi

4. Stay in Makati — Cozy 1-BR, Gym, Pool, WiFi, Netflix Perfect urban setup. Private balcony, Netflix for downtime, pool, gym, and fast WiFi. Great for solo remote workers who want a complete home feel. 👉 https://www.stayinmakati.com/room/stay-in-makati-cozy-1-br-gym-pool-wifi-netflix


Frequently Asked Questions

Is Makati good for remote workers? Yes — Makati is one of the best cities in Southeast Asia for remote work. It has fast fibre internet, English as the daily language, world-class hospitals, excellent food, and a safe, walkable CBD. The Ayala Triangle and Greenbelt area in particular offer everything a working professional needs within walking distance.

Is Makati cheaper than Bali for long term stays? When you compare like for like — a well-located unit with fast WiFi, a pool, gym, and proximity to good food and transport — Makati is comparable in cost to Bali and significantly ahead in reliability, infrastructure, and overall city quality. Monthly rental rates for a Stay N Cee condo in Makati are competitive with decent Bali setups.

What is the best area to stay in Makati for remote workers? The Ayala Triangle and Greenbelt area is the best base for remote workers in Makati. The Gramercy Residences in particular offers dedicated fibre WiFi, a large pool, full gym, and 24-hour concierge — all within walking distance of the MRT, supermarkets, cafes, and hundreds of restaurants.

How fast is the WiFi in Makati condos? In Stay N Cee managed units, WiFi runs on dedicated fibre at 100–200 Mbps. This is consistent throughout the day and evening, making it reliable for video calls, large file transfers, and anything else a remote work setup requires.

How long can I stay in the Philippines as a remote worker? Most nationalities receive a 30-day visa on arrival in the Philippines, extendable up to 36 months through the Bureau of Immigration. The Philippines does not yet have a formal digital nomad visa but the extension process is straightforward and widely used by long-stay visitors.


Get in Touch

Ready to book your remote work base in Makati? We will help you find the right unit for your dates, budget, and setup.

🌐 Book or enquire: https://www.stayinmakati.com/contact 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stayinmakatibystayncee 💬 WhatsApp: https://wa.me/639279652985