Cost Savings: How Shared Office Spaces in Africa Cut Startup Overheads
- September 15, 2025
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Africa is in the middle of a startup revolution. From fintech hubs in Lagos, to agritech innovators in Nairobi, and e-commerce disruptors in Cape Town, entrepreneurs are reshaping how the continent does business. With over 1.4 billion people, the youngest workforce in the world, and increasing digital adoption, Africa is widely seen as the next frontier for innovation.
But alongside these opportunities lies a persistent challenge: the cost of doing business. One of the greatest barriers for startups across Africa is not finding talent or building technology, but managing overheads like rent, utilities, and infrastructure. In cities such as Lagos, Nairobi, Johannesburg, and Kigali, traditional office space is expensive, rigid, and out of step with the unpredictable growth paths of startups.
This is where coworking and shared office spaces are stepping in to change the narrative. They are cutting costs, boosting flexibility, and creating collaborative ecosystems that give African entrepreneurs the space to thrive. In Lagos, OfficePhase has become a prime example of how coworking is not just an alternative, but it is becoming the preferred model for startups and SMEs across the continent.
Across Africa’s commercial capitals, renting traditional office space presents four major challenges:
High upfront costs – Landlords often demand 12–24 months of rent upfront, with annual costs in prime locations reaching tens of thousands of dollars.
Hidden utilities – Electricity is unreliable in many African cities, forcing tenants to invest in costly diesel generators or backup solar. High-speed internet is often a separate bill.
Furniture and fit-out – Startups must furnish their own offices, install infrastructure, and hire staff for cleaning and security.
Long, inflexible leases – Standard contracts lock businesses into 3–5 years, even though many startups pivot or grow unpredictably.
For instance:
In Lagos, small office leases in Victoria Island or Lekki can cost ₦5–10 million annually, excluding utilities.
In Nairobi, prime office rents average KES 100–130 per sq ft annually, with long leases as the norm.
In Johannesburg, Grade-A space exceeds ZAR 200 per sq m, plus separate payments for amenities.
Even in smaller markets like Kigali, startups face long leases and must fund infrastructure upfront.
For early-stage companies that raise modest seed rounds or bootstrap entirely, such costs can consume up to 70% of available capital, leaving little room for growth activities.
Coworking is no longer a novelty; it is a structural shift in how Africans work.
In 2013, there were fewer than 30 coworking hubs across Africa.
By 2022, there were more than 295 active coworking spaces.
The African coworking market is projected to reach $1.56 billion by 2030, growing at nearly 20% annually.
Globally, there are 20,000+ coworking spaces serving over 5 million members—and Africa is catching up fast.
This rise is fueled by three forces:
The startup boom – More entrepreneurs are leaving corporate jobs to launch businesses.
Remote and freelance work – Africa has a growing gig economy with millions of independent professionals.
Economic volatility – Inflation, currency risks, and unstable infrastructure make flexible models far safer than rigid long leases.
At the centre of this movement in Nigeria is OfficePhase Lagos, a shared office provider that combines cost savings with strategic value.
Here’s how OfficePhase helps startups cut overheads:
All-inclusive pricing – Rent, internet, backup power, cleaning, and security are bundled into one transparent monthly fee.
No upfront capital – Offices come fully furnished, eliminating the need for startups to buy desks, chairs, or infrastructure.
Flexible memberships – Options include hot desks, dedicated desks, and private offices that can be scaled up or down monthly.
Prime locations – Startups gain prestigious addresses in central Lagos at a fraction of traditional leasing costs.
Savings of 40–60% – Entrepreneurs redirect funds away from rent and utilities toward product development, hiring, and scaling.
In Lagos’ volatile economy, where inflation exceeds 20%, diesel prices rise unpredictably, and rents are among the top five most expensive in Africa, these savings are not a luxury they are a survival strategy.
Unlike traditional office spaces that demand long-term commitments, OfficePhase gives startups agility. A company can start with two desks in January and expand to a private office for 15 employees by July or scale back if necessary.
This flexibility allows startups to:
Adjust quickly during funding delays or economic downturns.
Test new markets or products without being tied to a fixed overhead structure.
Extend their financial runway critical in African markets where fundraising cycles are unpredictable.
In essence, OfficePhase is de-risking entrepreneurship by removing the burden of inflexible leases.
One of the greatest advantages of coworking is community. OfficePhase is not just a workspace; it is an ecosystem where entrepreneurs collaborate, share knowledge, and access opportunities.
Networking: Freelancers, startups, and SMEs meet daily, often leading to collaborations and partnerships.
Investor access: Coworking hubs across Africa increasingly host events that attract venture capitalists and accelerators. OfficePhase is positioned as part of this movement.
Professional image: Startups meeting clients in fully equipped meeting rooms project credibility and trust.
Productivity: Structured, modern environments improve focus compared to coffee shops or working from home.
This combination of cost savings and growth support makes OfficePhase a strategic partner for African entrepreneurs.
Shared office spaces are no longer temporary solutions; they are the future of work in Africa. As remote work rises, as startups multiply, and as economies demand leaner business models, coworking will only expand.
In Nairobi, hubs like Nairobi Garage and Ikigai support Kenya’s “Silicon Savannah.”
In Kigali, Westerwelle Startup Haus connects entrepreneurs directly to investors.
In Cape Town and Johannesburg, Workshop17 and Spaces are redefining premium flexible workspaces.
And in Lagos, OfficePhase is leading the way, showing how coworking can cut startup overheads by more than half while fostering innovation.
For Africa’s startups, overhead costs are more than a financial challenge; they are often the deciding factor between survival and failure. Traditional office leasing locks entrepreneurs into long-term risks in economies that demand agility.
OfficePhase in Lagos proves that there is a better way. By offering affordable, flexible, and collaborative work environments, it helps entrepreneurs save costs, stay adaptable, and focus on scaling their businesses.
As coworking continues to expand across Africa, OfficePhase stands as a model of how shared office spaces can fuel the continent’s innovation economy. For African entrepreneurs, coworking is not just a place to work, it is a growth enabler, a network builder, and a strategic ally in building the businesses of tomorrow.

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