As businesses evolve – adapting hybrid work, shifting growth trajectories, and rising tenant expectations – you’ll often face a pivotal decision: Do you move to a fresh space, or refurbish your current one?
Each path has strength and tradeoffs. In 2025/26, here’s what to weigh carefully:
Refurbishing Your Existing Office
Pros
- Lower administrative overhead: You avoid new lease negotiations, relocation logistics, and site search.
- Continuity for staff: No change in commute or neighbourhood. Familiar surroundings reduce disruption.
- Targeted upgrades: You can modernise selectively (lighting, acoustics, flexibility) without redoing everything.
- Sustainability advantages: Reusing existing structure and materials reduces waste and embodied carbon.
Cons
- Limited space growth: If your current footprint is too small (or too big) for future needs, refurbishment cannot resolve that.
- Operational disruption: Even though you’re staying put, parts of the office may be unusable during works – careful phasing is needed.
- Hidden constraints: Existing columns, structural limits, or building services may restrict remodel options.
Moving Office
Pros
- Optimal size and layout: You get to choose a space that fits your current and future headcount, with efficient geometry from the start.
- Location advantages: Access to better transport, amenities, client proximity – all factors for employee satisfaction.
- Brand new building systems: New mechanical, heating, ventilation, air con (HVAC), IT, and infrastructure come ready or more flexible for upgrades.
- Fresh culture reboot: A move can energise staff, signal growth, and re-embody your brand in a new canvas.
Cons
- Higher cost and time: Lease deposits, landlord fit-out works, rent premiums, and the move itself all add up.
- Disruption to staff: New commute, unfamiliar layout, change fatigue.
- Adjustment period: Things like acoustics, lighting, or adjacency might not behave as anticipated until after occupation.
How to Choose
- Model growth vs fit: If you expect 20-30% growth over 5 years, pick a space that scales – refurbishment is only wise when your current shell has spare capacity.
- Total cost of ownership: Factor in energy, maintenance, HVAC, and infrastructure upgrades over 10 years – sometimes refurbishment becomes more expensive over time.
- Sustainability goals: Reuse, energy efficiency, and carbon budgeting often favour refurbishment if the core is good.
- Brand identity and user experience: For certain brands, a high-end, modern location is part of their narrative – sometimes a move gives more creative freedom.
- Phasing & hybrid work plans: If your new model needs flexible seating, mixed-use zones, or smart tech, design those into your decision from day one.
When planned properly, both routes deliver excellent outcomes. The key is aligning your decision with long-term vision, not just short-term convenience.