What even is an “office” anymore? A cubicle? A corner room with a view? A Zoom background?
Whatever the answer was five years ago, it’s changed now.
The idea of fixed desks and static leases is starting to feel… outdated.
Flexible workspaces are becoming the new standard.
For many companies, flexible workspaces have quietly replaced traditional meeting rooms - not because they’re trendy, but because they make business sense.
India’s flex workspace market is growing fast.
You can see it in the numbers.
From 61 million square feet in 2023 to 126 million square feet by 2028 - that’s the kind of footprint expansion you usually associate with infrastructure, not office rentals.
The industry’s on a serious upward curve and was valued at $2.3 billion in 2025; it’s projected to reach $3.24 billion by 2030, growing at a 7.05% CAGR.
And over the last five years, more than half a million seats have been consumed.
Look at leasing: 2.2 lakh seats leased in 2024, a 44% spike from the year before.
But zoom out, and the story goes deeper - 85,234 seats in 2021, 155,000 by 2023, and 224,000 seats booked in 2024.
Currently, flex offices make up about 13% of Grade A office leasing.
And where’s the heat concentrated?
Bangalore leads with 31% of the total stock. Delhi NCR follows with 16%, then Pune and Hyderabad at 14% each, and Mumbai holds 11%.
The hubs are expanding, and fast.
Now, let’s zoom in on what sectors are driving this demand.
IT firms are the heavyweight champs here, absorbing 40–50% of total flex seats.
But it’s not just tech - Engineering and Manufacturing (14-18%), Professional Services (11-12%), and BFSI (9-12%) are all booking seats at speed.
But none of this comes cheap, especially in prime spots.
Mumbai leads the pricing charts at ₹142/sq ft/month, while the national average sits at ₹96.
And if you’re operating in Tier I hotspots, expect desk costs to be 50% higher than elsewhere.
Premium convenience comes with a price tag.
Who’s raking in the numbers? Two giants stand tall.
WeWork India operates 91,000 desks across 7 million sq. ft, pulling in ₹14,228 million ($170 million) in revenue.
Meanwhile, Smartworks commands 110,000 desks in an identical 7 million sq. ft, bringing in ₹7,441 million ($89 million).
Of course, scaling flex spaces isn’t all smooth sailing.
Getting quality real estate in Tier I cities at favourable rates is a challenge.
Larger players are already positioned, flexing early-mover advantages and locking down better leases.
Now, a quick look at what’s happened lately in this industry.
WeWork India just leased 1.43 lakh sq. ft in Bengaluru’s Embassy Golf Links, with clients like IBM and OpenText taking up residence.
Meanwhile, IndiQube launched a 25,000 sq. ft experience centre called IndiQube Canvas - also in Bangalore.
And the sector is buzzing on the market side too.
Smartworks recently got listed, and its IPO was subscribed 13.9 times, becoming the second flex-space player to go public after Awfis Space Solutions.
IndiQube Spaces also made its debut in 2025 with a ₹700 crore IPO. Even We Work India has SEBI’s approval to launch its own IPO this year.
The bottom line is that we’re not just witnessing a shift in how companies rent office space, but how the entire commercial real estate model gets rewritten.
Not because it’s fashionable - because it’s functional.
Also Read:
Page Industries: The Silent Force Behind Jockey in India
Sources:
Avendus
GII Research
Cushman & Wakefield
Business Standard
India Briefing
Economic Times
5paisa
SEBI
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