Flexible workspaces are moving from optional to essential in India’s office market.
A report from CBRE Group India Research found that 65% of office occupiers plan to integrate flexible space into their portfolios by 2027. Today, 55% already use flex within their existing setups, according to The Tribune.
The growth has been rapid. Total flexible workspace stock has tripled between 2020 and 2025, reaching roughly 110 to 114 million square feet. About half of that supply has been added since 2021. Flex space now makes up 10 to 12% of India’s total office inventory.
Demand is no longer limited to startups. Large corporations, global capability centers, and mid-sized businesses are driving adoption, using flexible space as part of long-term portfolio planning rather than short-term overflow.
The market remains concentrated in major cities. Bengaluru leads in total supply, followed by Delhi-NCR, while Pune has the highest penetration relative to overall office stock. Mumbai’s growth is largely tied to financial services and large corporate occupiers.
At the same time, institutional capital is entering the sector. Public listings and an estimated $2.0 to $2.2 billion in market capitalization are pushing operators toward more structured, large-scale expansion.
Flexible space is increasingly being used to manage uncertainty, scale operations, and support evolving work models, positioning it as a permanent layer in the future of office portfolios.














