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Workspace Geek - Coworking Management Made Simple
Home Coworking

Coworking Was Once Where Startups Began, Now It’s Where They Scale

From San Francisco to Philadelphia and Austin, the fastest-growing startup markets are also fueling demand for flexible workspaces that can grow alongside young companies.

Emma AscottbyEmma Ascott
July 9, 2026
in Coworking
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Coworking Was Once Where Startups Began, Now It’s Where They Scale

Startups are increasingly choosing flexible offices that can expand as quickly as their teams, reducing the need for long-term leases.

For years, coworking spaces were often viewed as the office solution for companies that weren’t ready to commit to a lease.

Today, it is becoming something more strategic.

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As AI fuels company creation, venture investment spreads beyond Silicon Valley, and startups scale across multiple cities earlier than ever, flexible workspace is increasingly becoming part of the infrastructure that helps young companies grow. The office has become another business decision that can either create flexibility or limit it.

New data from WeWork suggests that many startups are choosing the first option.

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Across more than 9,000 active startups and small businesses using WeWork’s U.S. locations, 96% have either maintained or expanded their office footprint since joining, while average team size has increased by more than 50% over the past three years. Rather than graduating out of coworking as they grow, many companies appear to be growing inside it.

That trend says as much about today’s startup economy as it does about flexible workspace.

Startups Don’t Scale the Way They Used To

A startup might hire 15 engineers after closing a funding round, freeze hiring six months later, then suddenly expand into another city after landing a major customer. Signing a conventional five- or ten-year lease before any of those decisions are known has become increasingly difficult to justify.

Flexible workspace removes much of that risk. Teams can add desks, reduce space, or open in another market without renegotiating an entirely new real estate strategy; that flexibility is becoming particularly valuable as founders try to preserve cash while remaining ready to grow quickly.

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It’s no coincidence that coworking is expanding fastest in the same markets where startup formation remains strongest.

Innovation Hubs Are Still Leading — But They’re Changing

San Francisco and New York continue to dominate startup activity, but they’re no longer telling the whole story.

Austin continues attracting founders looking for lower operating costs. Philadelphia posted the fastest coworking growth among the country’s leading startup markets. Chicago recorded one of the strongest increases in startup team growth, while San Diego saw major occupancy gains tied to its expanding life sciences ecosystem.

The common denominator is that successful startup markets create continuous demand for flexible office space, because new companies rarely know exactly what they’ll need twelve months from now.

Coworking Is Startup Infrastructure

The coworking industry’s biggest opportunity is being a core part of the startup ecosystem itself.

Universities produce talent. Investors provide capital. Accelerators offer mentorship. Flexible workspace increasingly provides the physical platform where those businesses hire their first employees, meet customers, collaborate with investors, and eventually expand into multiple markets. That role becomes more valuable as startup activity accelerates.

For coworking operators, those companies represent potential long-term customers whose workspace needs grow alongside their business.

Growth That Extends Beyond the Office

For years, flexible workspace was often described as a stepping stone before companies moved into permanent headquarters. Now, it looks more like an operating model.

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As technology clusters continue growing across the U.S., coworking operators that establish themselves within those ecosystems may be positioned to capture companies at their earliest stages — and continue serving them long after they stop calling themselves startups.

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Tags: Career GrowthCollaborationCoworkingSpace-as-a-Service
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Emma Ascott

Emma Ascott

Emma Ascott is the Associate Editor for Allwork.Space, based in Phoenix, Arizona. She covers the future of work, labor news, and flexible workplace trends. She graduated from the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University, and has written for Arizona PBS as well as a multitude of publications.

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Workspace Geek - Coworking Management Made Simple
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