Five metrics that define whether a flex conversion is working. Each connects to a phase in the repositioning model and provides a clear basis for comparing flex performance against the traditional leasing baseline.
| Metric | Directional Benchmark | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Current occupancy rate | Baseline vs. market average | Quantifies the gap being addressed and frames the urgency of repositioning. |
| Breakeven occupancy | 65–75% for most flex conversions | The floor that determines whether deployment is financially viable before capital is committed. |
| Revenue-per-occupied-desk (RevPOD) | $500.59/month global Q2 2025 benchmark | Sets the income-per-SF target for underwriting. Translates desk revenue into leasable SF economics. |
| Flex space as % of total asset | 10–30% is the planning range for most repositionings | Limits capital risk while activating underperforming floors. Sets the scope of phased deployment. |
| NOI impact at stabilized occupancy | Project vs. traditional lease scenario | The clearest measure of whether the flex strategy is improving asset performance versus the status quo. |
Vacancy Is a Structural Problem, Not a Leasing Problem
Why Waiting for the Market to Return Is a Strategy with Diminishing Returns
National office vacancy rates reached 19.8% in Q1 2024, the highest level recorded since before the 2008 financial crisis. For commercial property owners, the immediate instinct is to reduce rents and wait for tenants. That strategy is increasingly ineffective against a structural demand shift.
Why Traditional Approaches Are No Longer Sufficient
Rent reduction is a pricing response to a product problem. When the underlying issue is that your asset does not match what modern occupiers need, lowering the rate does not resolve the mismatch. It compresses NOI while the building continues to sit vacant.
- Rent reduction without demand shift does not move occupancy when the product itself is the obstacle.
- Large-floor-plate tenants are consolidating, not expanding. The era of 50,000 SF enterprise commitments is contracting.
- Long-term leases are structurally unpopular among the occupier categories that are currently growing.
- Buildings without flex capacity are losing to buildings that have it, regardless of rent differential.
"The office market has not simply contracted. It has bifurcated. Buildings with flexible options are absorbing demand. Buildings without them are being passed over regardless of rent."
The 30% projection is not a ceiling. It is a planning floor. Markets with high hybrid work adoption and constrained new supply are tracking above that figure. For asset owners in those markets, the question is not whether to introduce flex capacity; it is when and at what scale.
The vacancy problem in commercial office is not a short-term leasing gap that patience will close. It is a mismatch between what the asset offers and what modern occupiers demand. Repositioning the asset to offer flexibility is the structural response to a structural problem.
The Financial Case for Flex Outperforms Traditional Leasing at Scale
NOI Comparison, Breakeven Underwriting, and Pro Forma Discipline
Asset owners instinctively compare flex space revenue to what a traditional long-term tenant would pay per square foot. That comparison usually undersells flex space. The correct comparison is full-cycle NOI, which includes vacancy cost, tenant improvement allowances, leasing commissions, and re-leasing risk.
The NOI Comparison Framework
The financial case for flex conversion becomes clear when you compare three scenarios against one another rather than evaluating flex in isolation.
- Scenario 1: Traditional lease at current vacancy. NOI is suppressed by carrying costs on vacant floors, including debt service, operating expenses, property taxes, and deferred maintenance. The asset is also subject to cap rate compression as vacancy persists, reducing its perceived value to buyers and lenders.
- Scenario 2: Flex conversion at 65% occupancy. Revenue per SF exceeds the traditional lease equivalent, even at breakeven occupancy. CapEx is front-loaded, but the absence of tenant improvement allowances and leasing commissions on each new occupant materially improves the comparison over a 3-year horizon.
- Scenario 3: Flex at stabilized 80% occupancy. At stabilization, flex operations typically generate NOI per SF that outperforms mid-market traditional leasing when the full-cycle cost of re-leasing is incorporated. The asset also gains a more defensible market position against competing supply.
Breakeven Underwriting
Breakeven underwriting for a flex conversion requires modeling the point at which monthly revenue covers operating costs without drawing on reserves or management fee subsidies. Key variables that determine this threshold are consistent across most conversions, though the inputs differ by market and asset quality.
Typical breakeven occupancy for professionally-managed flex operations falls in the 60–70% range. Below 60%, most models require a capital reserve draw. Above 70%, the operation moves toward positive NOI contribution and begins outperforming the vacancy scenario it replaced.
Before committing to a conversion, model each of the following inputs against two scenarios: a conservative case and a base case.
Fit-out CapEx (per SF): Varies significantly by build quality, market, and whether you are partitioning open floor plates or converting existing offices.
Operating cost (per desk per month): Covers staffing, utilities, consumables, software, and maintenance. This is the variable that management agreements shift from the owner's P&L to the operator's.
Management fee (% of revenue, if applicable): Typically 8–15% of gross revenue for a management agreement structure. Models must be run with and without this line item to evaluate the owner-operated alternative.
Stabilized desk count: Derived from the floor plan, product mix decisions, and target density.
Target occupancy rate: Model at 65%, 75%, and 85% to establish the range of NOI outcomes.
Monthly RevPOD target: Set against market comps and the OfficeRnD FlexIndex benchmark as a sanity check.
NOI at breakeven vs. current state: The core comparison that determines whether the conversion makes financial sense relative to the vacancy it replaces.
The financial case for flex conversion does not depend on optimistic projections. It depends on an honest comparison against the actual economics of continued vacancy, which includes carrying costs, deferred maintenance, and the cap rate compression that comes with an asset perceived as distressed. When that comparison is modeled correctly, flex conversion outperforms continued vacancy across the majority of scenarios.
The Operating Model You Choose Determines Your Risk and Return Profile
Owner-Operated vs. Management Agreement vs. Hybrid
One of the most consequential decisions in a flex conversion is who operates the space. The three primary models, owner-operated, management agreement, and hybrid, carry meaningfully different cost structures, revenue upside, and operational demands. The choice is not primarily a financial calculation. It is a question of where your organization's comparative advantage sits.
Operating Model Comparison
| Model | Capital Requirement | Revenue Upside | Operational Burden | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Owner-Operated | High (fit-out plus operating costs fully retained) | Highest; full revenue captured by owner | High; requires internal team or dedicated management hire | Owners with scale, operational experience, or an existing management team |
| Management Agreement | Moderate (fit-out capital retained; operating risk shifted) | Moderate; revenue minus management fee and operator incentive | Low; operator manages daily operations under structured agreement | First-time flex conversions; owners without operational infrastructure |
| Hybrid | Moderate to high (varies by partnership structure) | Variable; depends on which functions are outsourced | Moderate; owner controls asset, partners for specific services | Owners with partial operational capacity seeking targeted expertise |
Owner-Operated: Maximum Upside, Maximum Requirement
The owner-operated model retains all revenue and full asset control. It requires either an internal team with flex workspace operations experience or the willingness to build one. Community management, sales, member services, tech stack configuration, and space programming all fall under the owner's operational responsibility. For owners with scale across multiple assets, the economics of building this capability in-house improve significantly. For single-asset owners entering flex for the first time, the execution risk is substantial.
Management Agreement: Structured Delegation of Operational Risk
Under a management agreement, the owner provides the space and fit-out capital while a professional flex operator manages daily operations under a revenue-share or base fee plus incentive structure. The owner retains asset control and strategic direction while the operator absorbs the day-to-day operational complexity. Management fees typically range from 8–15% of gross revenue, with performance incentives layered on top for occupancy or NOI targets.
Hybrid: Selective Outsourcing for Specific Capabilities
The hybrid model keeps the owner in control of the asset while outsourcing specific functions, typically tech stack implementation, community programming, or marketing. It is the most flexible arrangement but requires clear vendor selection and defined accountability for each outsourced function. Owners who have some operational capability but lack depth in a specific area are the best candidates for this model.
"A management agreement is not an abdication of asset control. It is a structured delegation of operational risk, appropriate when the owner's comparative advantage is capital and real estate, not workspace operations."
There is no universally correct operating model. The right choice depends on your asset's scale, your team's operational capacity, and your return expectations. Most first-time flex conversions benefit from a management agreement, not because it maximizes return, but because it minimizes execution risk while the strategy proves itself. The management agreement can be restructured or internalized once the model is stabilized and the asset's flex performance is established.
A Phased Deployment Reduces Risk Without Sacrificing Market Position
From First Floor to Full-Building Strategy
The most common mistake in flex conversion is treating it as a binary decision: either convert the whole building or do nothing. A phased approach starts with 10–20% of the asset, validates the model, and expands from a position of proven performance rather than projected performance.
The Phased Deployment Roadmap
Phase 1 (Months 0–3): Fit out 10–20% of the asset. Configure the tech stack, including access control, booking systems, and member management software. Hire or contract operations, whether through an internal hire or a management agreement structure. Establish your RevPOD target and breakeven threshold before the first desk is sold.
Phase 2 (Months 4–6): Go to market. Target SME and hybrid enterprise demand as the primary occupier categories. Measure RevPOD weekly from the first month of operation. Set a 90-day occupancy milestone of 50% as the minimum threshold for the model to be on track. Capture demand source data from every inquiry, not just every conversion.
Phase 3 (Months 7–12): Optimize pricing and desk mix based on occupancy and RevPOD data gathered in Phases 1 and 2. If a specific product type is converting faster than projected, re-evaluate the desk mix on the initial floor. Assess the economics of adding a second floor. This decision should be driven by data, not by the original pro forma.
Phase 4 (Month 12+): Evaluate full-building conversion or a hybrid lease-flex split based on stabilized NOI comparison. At this stage, you have real performance data rather than projected data. The decision to expand, hold, or restructure should be made from that position of knowledge.
Key Demand Segments to Target
The occupier categories most likely to fill a newly converted flex floor are consistent across most U.S. office markets, though the relative weight of each varies by submarket and asset quality.
- Startups and SMEs: Need flexibility and cannot commit to long-term leases. Prefer private offices over open desks. Represent the fastest-filling occupier category in most flex operations entering the market.
- Enterprise satellite offices: Hybrid work has created demand for touchdown space near employee populations. Enterprise clients bring higher RevPOD and longer average tenure than SMEs, but they require a more polished product and a structured sales process.
- Independent professionals: Premium coworking demand from lawyers, financial advisors, consultants, and other solo practitioners who need a professional environment and occasional conference access. This segment tends to favor dedicated desks and day passes in the early months before an operation reaches critical mass.
"The first 90 days of a flex operation are a market intelligence exercise as much as a revenue exercise. What you learn about local demand will improve every subsequent deployment decision."
A phased deployment contains risk without limiting upside. The first floor is not the final answer; it is the test that validates the model before you commit capital to the full conversion. Asset owners who treat the initial phase as a data-collection exercise as much as a revenue exercise make materially better expansion decisions than those who treat the pro forma as the plan.
Office vacancy at structural levels is not a problem that corrects itself through patience or price reduction. It corrects through a repositioning strategy that matches the asset to where occupier demand has moved. Flex conversion, executed with financial discipline and the right operating model, is that strategy.
Start With a Flex Feasibility Scan
The Free Flex Feasibility Scan evaluates your asset's conversion potential: vacancy profile, demand signals, operating model fit, and a directional pro forma, all before any capital commitment.
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