Hong Kong Office Market: Q1 2026 Update

Vacancy rates are shifting in Wan Chai and Quarry Bay as occupiers renegotiate post-pandemic leases. Our independent view on where pricing is heading.

Market Reports

28 January 2026

6 min read

Hong Kong

3.2%Overall vacancy
HK$5,800Avg desk / mo
14K ft²New supply
71%Lease renewals

Hong Kong's flexible workspace market entered Q1 2026 in a state of measured stability. Overall vacancy across Grade A serviced and co-working product held at 3.2% — a marginal improvement on Q4 2025 — while average desk rates nudged upward for the first time in three quarters, driven by tightening supply in Admiralty and Central.

Market at a Glance

3.2%Overall vacancy−0.4pp vs Q4 2025
HK$5,800Avg desk rate / mo+2.1% QoQ
14,200 ft²New supply added2 new openings
71%Expiring leases renewedvs 64% in Q3 2025

The renewal rate of 71% is the highest recorded since 2022, reflecting occupier hesitancy to relocate in an environment of moderate but persistent economic uncertainty. Teams that secured favourable rates in 2023–24 are opting to hold rather than renegotiate elsewhere, which has compressed available inventory in mid-market buildings.

District-by-District Pricing

Pricing dynamics vary significantly across districts. Central and Admiralty continue to command a premium, while Quarry Bay and Wan Chai present the strongest value for growing teams — particularly those indifferent to a Grade A address.

Flexible workspace desk rates by district, Q1 2026

DistrictDesk rate range / moVacancyTrend
CentralHK$7,200 – HK$11,0002.1%↑ Tightening
AdmiraltyHK$6,800 – HK$9,4002.6%↑ Tightening
Wan ChaiHK$4,800 – HK$7,2004.1%→ Stable
Sheung WanHK$5,200 – HK$7,8003.8%→ Stable
Causeway BayHK$4,400 – HK$6,6004.7%↓ Softening
Quarry BayHK$3,800 – HK$5,6005.2%↓ Softening
Kowloon (TST)HK$3,200 – HK$5,0006.0%↓ Softening

What's Driving Demand

Professional services firms — legal, advisory, and financial — account for the largest share of new enquiries in Q1, concentrated in Central and Admiralty. Technology and media companies, by contrast, have continued their migration eastward toward Quarry Bay and North Point, where newer buildings offer larger contiguous floor plates at 30–40% lower cost.

Mainland-connected businesses seeking a Hong Kong base remain active, with a notable preference for Kowloon — TST in particular — where proximity to the high-speed rail terminus and Cantonese-speaking operator staff is valued. Enquiry volume from this segment is up 18% compared to Q1 2025.

The gap between what occupiers expect to pay and what's actually available in Central has widened. Teams with flexibility on address are being rewarded with meaningfully better terms.

Bobby Sodeiri, My Office Asia

Outlook: Q2 2026

Two new flex openings are scheduled for Q2 in Wan Chai and Sheung Wan, adding approximately 18,000 ft² of supply. In the near term this will ease pressure on mid-market product and likely provide more negotiating leverage for incoming tenants — particularly those targeting 6–20 desk requirements on sub-12-month terms.

Central and Admiralty are unlikely to see meaningful relief before Q3 at the earliest, as no new supply is expected in those districts and demand from professional services shows no sign of abating. Occupiers with expiring leases in premium locations should begin the process early — available inventory at the top end of the market moves quickly.

Key Takeaways

  • Overall vacancy tightened to 3.2% — the lowest since Q2 2022.
  • Central and Admiralty supply is constrained; expect limited negotiating room until Q3.
  • Quarry Bay and Wan Chai offer the strongest current value for growing teams.
  • Renewal rates are at a 4-year high — if you secured good terms in 2023–24, hold them.
  • Mainland-connected enquiries are up 18% YoY, concentrated in Kowloon.
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