Where does a growing company turn when it needs office space in a city it has never set foot in? Offices.co answers that with a search platform covering roughly 15,000 spaces across 108 countries, built around the promise that a broker handles the legwork and the client pays nothing for it. The pitch is brokerage: the company negotiates with building owners on a tenant's behalf, and the listing fee falls on the property side rather than on the person doing the looking.
The range of workspace types does the heavy lifting. A user can pull up serviced office suites, hot-desking arrangements, traditional leases, furnished offices, executive suites, coworking and shared space, virtual offices, and short-term or flexible terms when a long commitment makes no sense. That spread is where Offices.co is most useful, because the people who need commercial space rarely all need the same thing. A two-person startup wanting a desk for three months and a fifty-person team signing a multi-year lease are at opposite ends of the market, and Offices.co tries to hold both under one roof.
Navigation leans on geography. Browsing happens by region, so a visitor picks Asia-Pacific, Europe, North America, the Middle East and Africa, or Latin America and works down through interactive maps. The regional split is practical, not decorative: a tenant rarely searches the whole globe at once, and starting from a continent narrows roughly 15,000 spaces to a manageable shortlist before any phone call. Each property listing carries building amenities, services, photographs, and data about the surrounding area, which is the kind of context that decides whether a viewing is worth booking. A space-search site earns more trust when it shows the neighbourhood alongside the lobby, and that local-area layer is a sensible addition for someone weighing an unfamiliar district from another continent.
How the brokerage model shapes the experience
The economics explain a lot about how the site behaves. Because the building owner carries the listing fee, the platform has no reason to gate the inventory behind a paywall or to push a tenant toward whichever space pays the most, since the negotiating fee comes from the property regardless of which deal closes. A client who walks in with a clear brief gets a negotiator working the same side of the table, and the absence of a charge removes the usual friction of signing up before seeing what is on offer. That structure is common across the serviced-office trade, but Offices.co states it plainly rather than leaving a prospective tenant to guess about where the catch sits.
On the commercial side, the no-cost model is the clearest selling point. Because the building owner pays, a tenant gets a negotiator without adding a line to the budget, and that aligns the platform's interest with closing a deal the client is happy with. Offices.co also runs an affiliate and partner program for anyone who wants to refer business or plug the inventory into their own channels. None of this is exotic in the serviced-office world, but it is laid out plainly, and the international footprint is wide for a single platform to maintain.
Credibility is where a more guarded note belongs. Contact comes down to a single UK phone number, +44 20 3998 2883, with no street address shown anywhere on the site and no obvious physical location for the firm itself. For a brokerage that asks clients to trust it with a commercial property decision, a visible office address would steady things, and its absence is worth flagging even though a phone line does give a direct route in. Offices.co describes itself as UK-based, which fits the dialling code, but a visitor cannot pin down much more than that from the page alone.
The outside reputation picture is similarly hard to read. A search for independent feedback on Offices.co turns up little that is specific to this platform; results tend to drift toward unrelated names like Microsoft Office, the Office shoe retailer, and office.co.uk. That is not evidence of anything bad. It simply means there is no stack of third-party ratings a prospective user can lean on to gauge how the brokerage performs once a deal is in motion.
Set against a name like Instant Offices, which runs the same serviced-office brokerage model with a similarly broad global reach and a longer public track record, Offices.co holds its own on inventory and on the no-fee structure, though it has less outside reputation to check before picking up the phone. A business scouting space in a foreign market, or several markets at once, gets the most out of Offices.co, because the breadth of countries and the free brokerage are exactly the things that are awkward to arrange solo from another continent. A company hunting purely in its home city may find a more conventional route just as quick. The inventory is broad enough to warrant a search; the near-absence of independent reviews means the specific building should be verified directly with its operator before any lease is signed.
Business address
United Kingdom
Contact details
Phone: +44 20 3998 2883