India’s flexible workspace sector closed FY26 with its strongest financial performance to date, signaling a market that is moving beyond rapid expansion and proving its long-term commercial strength.
According to myHQ’s Q4 FY26 Indian Flex Office Operators Report, all five listed flex operators recorded double-digit revenue growth during the quarter, while occupancy remained resilient as enterprise demand continued to climb. The industry has now crossed 100 million square feet of flexible workspace capacity, supported by larger corporate contracts, longer client commitments, and growing demand for managed office solutions, according to The Realty Today.
Enterprise Demand Drives the Next Phase of Growth
Global Capability Centers (GCCs) have become one of the biggest forces behind India’s flex office boom, accounting for 45.5% of all office leasing in Q1 2026. Enterprise customers now represent the majority of revenue across all listed flex operators.
The market is also seeing a major change in how companies search for space. According to myHQ platform data, 73% of office searches now focus on flexible workspace, with coworking searches generating nearly five times the volume of traditional leasing inquiries. Demand for meeting rooms, virtual offices, and day passes has also increased in recent years.
Operators Post Record Results
Several operators reached significant milestones during FY26. Smartworks became the first listed Indian flex operator to exceed a 10 million-square-foot portfolio and recorded the strongest revenue growth at 45% year over year.
Awfis reported profits rising 66%, while WeWork India achieved a record quarterly profit increase of 292% from the previous quarter.
Outside the listed market, operators including BHIVE, DevX, CO-WORKS, and Table Space also continued expanding.
The outlook for FY27 remains positive as India’s GCC ecosystem expands and corporations continue seeking more flexible real estate strategies. Industry projections estimate India could host more than 2,400 GCCs generating USD $100 billion to $110 billion in revenue by the end of the decade.
The sector’s momentum suggests flexible workspace has become a permanent part of India’s commercial real estate market, with operators now competing less on expansion alone and more on profitability, services, and enterprise relationships.













