Our Palermo Gascón coliving is a beautifully located shared apartment steps from the corner of Cabrera and Gascón, right at the beating heart of Palermo. This is the ideal base for international students, exchange students, digital nomads, and expats who want to be close to Buenos Aires' best restaurants, bars, parks, and cultural scene — without paying Palermo's premium hotel prices.
The apartment accommodates up to five flatmates, the majority of them internationals from Europe, North America, and Latin America. The community feel is real: flatmates share meals, explore the neighbourhood, and help each other navigate city life. Whether you're enrolled at a Buenos Aires university, attending a language school, doing an internship, or working remotely, you'll find company here.
The rent includes absolutely everything: high-speed WiFi, electricity, gas, water, a fully equipped kitchen, weekly cleaning of common areas, sheets and bedding, and your own set of keys with no curfew. Move in with your bags — there's nothing else to set up.
All prices are per person, per month, with all utilities included. Contact us for current availability and exact rates.
Minimum stay: 1 month. Prices are quoted in USD and remain stable regardless of peso fluctuations. Upgrades from shared double to single are possible when availability allows.
All bills included: electricity, gas, water, and WiFi are all covered in your monthly rent. No separate accounts, no surprises. You receive your own set of keys with no curfew — come and go freely at any hour.
We also have rooms available in Palermo Soho, San Telmo, and Almagro. If Palermo Gascón is full on your dates, we'll find the best alternative for you.
The Gascón corridor in Palermo is one of the most coveted addresses in the neighbourhood — and in the city. Located between the leafy, residential calm of the treetops and the energy of Palermo's bar and restaurant strip, this part of Buenos Aires offers the best of both worlds for internationals arriving to study or work.
Palermo is the largest of Buenos Aires' 48 neighbourhoods, and its northern sector — where Gascón runs — is particularly well served. Within a few minutes' walk from the apartment you'll find dozens of excellent restaurants and wine bars on Cabrera, Thames, and Armenia streets, weekend craft fairs at Plaza Serrano, independent bookshops, design studios, and some of the city's most respected language schools.
The Bosques de Palermo — the great green lungs of the city — are a 15-minute walk away, offering lakes, cycling paths, the Galileo Galilei Planetarium, a Japanese garden, and rose gardens. Two subway lines (subte) and dozens of bus routes connect this corner of Palermo to the rest of the city, and Buenos Aires' Ecobici public bike stations are right outside the door.
Palermo is also widely regarded as the safest area for expats and students in Buenos Aires — a neighbourhood you can walk confidently at night, full of other young internationals who've made it their home.