Revenue per Seat in Co-Working: Space Utilization and Pricing Leverage
Direct Answer
Why Co-Working Measures Differently
Co-working is not traditional office leasing. In a standard lease, revenue is locked in for 3–10 years per square foot. In co-working, revenue is variable per seat, and the asset is time-bound. This creates a unique KPI structure:
- No long-term revenue lock-in: A seat that sits empty for a month is lost revenue forever. You cannot backfill it retroactively.
- Utilization is the multiplier: A 1,000-seat space at 60% utilization generates 60% of potential revenue, but fixed costs (rent, utilities, staff) remain near 100%. The break-even utilization for most operators is 55–65%.
- Pricing is granular: You can charge $200/month for a hot desk in a common area and $1,200/month for a private office with a window. Traditional office leases price by square foot, not by seat value.
- Churn is high: Average member retention in co-working is 12–18 months (vs. 5+ years in traditional office). This forces operators to constantly acquire new members, making customer acquisition cost (CAC) per seat a critical metric.
The core difference: Co-working measures revenue per unit of time (seat-month) rather than per unit of space (sq ft). This shifts focus from occupancy cost to revenue velocity per seat.
The Most Important KPIs to Track
1. Revenue per Available Seat (RevPAS)
- Formula: Total monthly revenue / Total available seats (including empty ones).
- Benchmark: $350–$650/month for flexible seats; $700–$1,200/month for dedicated desks.
- Why it matters: This is the purest measure of asset productivity. A space with 100 seats generating $50,000/month has a RevPAS of $500. If you add a premium tier (e.g., $1,000/month corner office), RevPAS increases without adding seats.
- Real example: WeWork reported RevPAS of $580 in Q3 2023 (public filings). Industrious targets $750+ by focusing on enterprise clients.
2. Utilization Rate
- Formula: (Occupied seats / Total seats) × 100.
- Benchmark: 85%+ for dedicated desks; 70%+ for hot desks.
- Why it matters: Utilization directly drives RevPAS. A 10% drop from 80% to 70% on a 200-seat space at $500/seat costs $10,000/month in lost revenue.
- Real example: Knotel (now defunct) had utilization as low as 40% in some spaces, contributing to its bankruptcy.
3. Net Revenue Retention (NRR) per Seat
- Formula: (Starting monthly recurring revenue + expansion revenue – churn revenue) / Starting monthly recurring revenue.
- Benchmark: 110%+ is healthy (expansion from upgrades offsets churn).
- Why it matters: Co-working members often start with a hot desk ($300/month) and upgrade to a dedicated desk ($600/month) or private office ($1,200/month). NRR captures this expansion.
- Real example: Convene uses NRR to track enterprise clients who start with 10 seats and expand to 50 seats over 12 months.
4. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) per Seat
- Formula: Total sales & marketing spend / New seats sold.
- Benchmark: $500–$1,500 per seat for organic channels; $2,000–$4,000 for paid channels.
- Why it matters: If CAC exceeds the first 3 months of revenue, the unit economics break. A seat at $500/month with CAC of $2,000 takes 4 months to pay back. Most operators target a 6-month payback period.
5. Gross Margin per Seat
- Formula: (Revenue per seat – direct costs per seat) / Revenue per seat.
- Direct costs: Rent, utilities, cleaning, internet, coffee, front desk staff.
- Benchmark: 50–65% for mature spaces; 30–40% for new locations.
- Why it matters: Rent is typically 40–50% of revenue. If rent per seat is $300 and RevPAS is $500, gross margin is 40%. Operators like The Office Group (TOG) in London achieve 60%+ margins by owning buildings.
6. Churn Rate (Monthly)
- Formula: Members lost in month / Total members at start of month.
- Benchmark: 3–5% monthly (36–60% annual).
- Why it matters: High churn forces constant sales effort. A 5% monthly churn means you lose 60% of your base annually. Reducing churn from 5% to 3% increases lifetime value (LTV) by 40%.
7. Revenue per Square Foot (RevPSF)
- Formula: Total monthly revenue / Total square footage.
- Benchmark: $30–$60/sq ft annually (co-working) vs. $15–$30/sq ft (traditional office).
- Why it matters: This aligns with real estate valuation. A space generating $50/sq ft is worth 2x a space generating $25/sq ft on a cap rate basis.
Real Operators
WeWork (public, NYSE: WE)
- RevPAS: $580 (Q3 2023).
- Utilization: 72% (post-restructuring, down from 80% in 2019).
- Pricing leverage: WeWork uses dynamic pricing via its app—seats in high-demand locations (e.g., Midtown Manhattan) cost $800/month, while suburban locations are $300/month.
- Failure: Over-expansion with $40 billion in lease liabilities led to bankruptcy in 2023.
Industrious (private, backed by CBRE)
- RevPAS: $750+ (estimated).
- Utilization: 85%+ on dedicated desks.
- Pricing leverage: Targets enterprise clients with 3–5 year contracts for private offices, achieving $1,200/seat in prime markets.
- Tool: Uses OfficeRnD for space management and Salesforce for CRM.
The Office Group (TOG) (UK-based, owned by L&G)
- RevPAS: £600–£800 ($760–$1,010).
- Utilization: 90%+ in London locations.
- Pricing leverage: Owns buildings, so rent is a fixed cost. Charges £1,000/month for a private office with a window in Soho.
- Tool: Uses Essensys for access control and Xero for accounting.
Knotel (defunct)
- RevPAS: $400 (estimated).
- Utilization: 40% in some locations.
- Failure: Over-leveraged with $1.4 billion in debt, no dynamic pricing, and 60%+ churn.
Failure Modes
1. Treating All Seats as Equal
- The problem: Pricing a hot desk at $300 and a corner office at $400 ignores 2.5x value difference. Corner offices with windows command $1,000+ in Manhattan, but many operators price them at $500.
- Fix: Use value-based pricing by seat type. A window desk should be 1.5–2x the price of an interior desk. Tools like LiquidSpace and OfficeRnD allow tiered pricing.
2. Ignoring Utilization by Time of Day
- The problem: A space may be 90% full at 10 AM but 30% full at 2 PM. Operators count seats as "occupied" if someone is there at any point, missing peak vs. Off-peak utilization.
- Fix: Track hourly utilization using access control data (e.g., Kisi or Brivo). Offer part-time memberships at $150/month for 2–3 days/week to fill off-peak hours.
3. Over-Reliance on Hot Desks
- The problem: Hot desks have lower RevPAS ($200–$400) and higher churn (8–10% monthly) vs. Dedicated desks ($600–$1,200, 2–3% churn).
- Fix: Convert 30–40% of hot desk inventory to dedicated desks or private offices. WeWork shifted from 50% hot desks in 2019 to 30% hot desks in 2023, boosting RevPAS by 15%.
4. No Dynamic Pricing
- The problem: Fixed pricing leaves money on the table. A seat in San Francisco in January (low demand) is priced the same as in September (high demand).
- Fix: Use dynamic pricing based on utilization. Tools like LiquidSpace adjust prices in real-time—a hot desk in a 95% full space can be $50/day vs. $30/day in a 50% full space.
5. Underestimating Churn Cost
- The problem: A 5% monthly churn on 100 seats at $500/seat costs $2,500/month in lost revenue. Over 12 months, that's $30,000—enough to hire a part-time community manager.
- Fix: Implement retention programs: member events, referral bonuses (e.g., $200 per referral), and loyalty discounts for 12-month commitments.
Reporting Cadence
| Metric | Frequency | Who Reviews | Tool |
|---|---|---|---|
| RevPAS | Weekly | Revenue Manager | Excel or Tableau |
| Utilization Rate | Daily | Operations Manager | OfficeRnD or LiquidSpace |
| Churn Rate | Monthly | CEO/CFO | Salesforce or HubSpot |
| CAC per Seat | Monthly | Sales Director | HubSpot or Salesforce |
| Gross Margin per Seat | Quarterly | CFO | QuickBooks or Xero |
| RevPSF | Quarterly | Real Estate Team | Argus or Excel |
Best practice: Run a weekly RevPAS dashboard in Tableau or Looker that pulls data from OfficeRnD (occupancy) and QuickBooks (revenue). Review utilization daily via Kisi access logs.
30-60-90 Plan
Days 1–30: Audit and Baseline
- Week 1: Pull last 12 months of data: RevPAS, utilization, churn, CAC. Use Excel or Google Sheets.
- Week 2: Segment seats by type (hot desk, dedicated desk, private office) and location. Identify top 20% of seats (highest RevPAS) and bottom 20%.
- Week 3: Interview 5–10 members on pricing satisfaction. Use SurveyMonkey or Typeform.
- Week 4: Set baseline RevPAS and utilization targets. Example: RevPAS from $450 to $500 in 90 days.
Days 31–60: Implement Pricing Leverage
- Week 5–6: Introduce tiered pricing for premium seats. Use LiquidSpace or OfficeRnD to set $800 for window desks, $500 for interior desks.
- Week 7–8: Launch dynamic pricing for hot desks: $30/day on low-utilization days (Monday, Friday), $50/day on high-utilization days (Tuesday–Thursday).
- Week 9: Run a referral program offering $200 credit for each new member. Track in HubSpot.
- Week 10: Measure impact. Expect 10–15% RevPAS lift.
Days 61–90: Optimize and Scale
- Week 11–12: Convert 20% of hot desks to dedicated desks. Monitor utilization—target 85%+ on dedicated.
- Week 13: Implement churn reduction: send automated check-in emails at month 3, 6, 9 via HubSpot workflows.
- Week 14: Review RevPAS against target. If $500 achieved, plan expansion. If not, adjust pricing tiers.
- Week 15–16: Present results to board. Use Tableau dashboard with RevPAS trend, utilization heatmap, and churn waterfall.
Mermaid Diagrams
FAQ
Q: What is the difference between RevPAS and RevPSF? A: RevPAS measures revenue per seat, while RevPSF measures revenue per square foot. RevPAS is more actionable for operations (pricing, utilization), while RevPSF is used for real estate valuation. Example: A 10,000 sq ft space with 200 seats at $500/seat has RevPAS of $500 and RevPSF of $12.50/month ($500 × 200 / 10,000).
Q: How do I calculate break-even utilization? A: Break-even utilization = Total fixed costs / (RevPAS × Total seats). Example: Fixed costs = $50,000/month, RevPAS = $500, seats = 100. Break-even = $50,000 / ($500 × 100) = 100%.
If RevPAS is $600, break-even = 83%. Most operators target 55–65% break-even utilization.
Q: What is a good monthly churn rate for co-working? A: 3–5% monthly is average. 2% or less is excellent (e.g., enterprise-heavy operators like Industrious). 8%+ is dangerous and signals poor retention or pricing issues.
Q: How do I price a premium corner office? A: Use value-based pricing: take the base desk price (e.g., $500) and multiply by 1.5–2.5x for window access, corner location, and natural light. In Manhattan, a corner office can be $1,200–$1,800/month. Test with A/B pricing in OfficeRnD—offer two prices to different segments for 30 days.
Q: What tools do operators use for dynamic pricing? A: LiquidSpace (real-time pricing for day passes), OfficeRnD (tiered subscriptions), and Optix (usage-based billing). Enterprise operators use Salesforce with custom pricing logic.
Q: Can RevPAS be negative? A: Yes, if total costs exceed revenue. Example: Rent = $40,000/month, staff = $15,000/month, utilities = $5,000/month → total costs = $60,000. If revenue is $50,000, RevPAS (based on 100 seats) is $500, but net loss per seat is -$100.
This is common in new locations for the first 6–12 months.
Sources
- WeWork Q3 2023 Earnings Release (RevPAS $580)
- Industrious Revenue Model and Enterprise Focus (CBRE)
- OfficeRnD Co-Working Benchmark Report 2023
- LiquidSpace Dynamic Pricing for Flexible Workspace
- Knotel Bankruptcy Analysis (The Real Deal)
- Gartner: Co-Working Space Utilization Metrics
- Forrester: Revenue per Seat in Flexible Office
- Essensys Access Control and Utilization Data
- HubSpot CRM for Co-Working Member Management
- Tableau Dashboard for RevPAS Tracking
