A private office in BGC can cost a young Manila team more than its first two hires combined. That math is why Quezon City keeps winning startups and small businesses that need a real office without a Makati or BGC price tag. QC has quietly built a deep bench of coworking spaces — affordable, flexible, and close to transport and talent. This guide is for the founder or office manager who wants a workspace that fits a growing team and a careful budget, and who would rather spend the difference on the business.
Why Quezon City works for cost-conscious teams
QC is the largest city in Metro Manila by population, and its commercial property runs cheaper per square metre than the prime CBDs to the south. For a coworking tenant, that shows up directly in the monthly rate.
An emerging hub, not a compromise
The number of coworking providers in QC has grown steadily, clustered around Quezon Avenue, the Triangle area, Eastwood, and the university belt near UP and Katipunan. The result is genuine choice — you are picking from a real market, not settling for whatever is left.
Coworking versus the home office and the traditional lease
Working from home costs nothing in rent and quite a lot in focus, client credibility, and team cohesion. A traditional lease fixes those but locks you into years of commitment, a fit-out bill, and utilities you manage yourself. Coworking sits in between: a professional address, meeting rooms for clients, and a month-to-month exit if plans change.
Where to look in Quezon City
QC is large, so the district matters as much as the building.
Quezon Avenue and the Triangle
Close to MRT stations and well-suited to small startups that need transit access for a commuting team. Rates here are among the most reasonable in the city.
Eastwood City and Libis
Slightly higher cost, better facilities. Eastwood's self-contained mix of offices, retail, and dining suits creative and tech teams that value a livelier setting for staff and visitors.
UP and Katipunan
Budget-friendly and close to a steady stream of university talent. A practical base if you hire interns, junior developers, or part-time staff from the nearby campuses.
Match the space to your team size
|
Team size |
Best fit |
What to expect |
|---|---|---|
|
1–5 (solo, freelancers) |
Hot desks, shared facilities |
Lowest cost, networking, no commitment |
|
5–15 (small teams) |
Dedicated desks, small private offices |
A fixed home base, shared meeting rooms |
|
15–30 (growing teams) |
Flexible private offices |
Room to scale, access to event and meeting space |
As a working guide for QC, hot desks commonly fall around PHP 10,000 to 15,000 a month, while small private offices range roughly PHP 25,000 to 50,000 depending on headcount and inclusions. Confirm current rates per venue before you budget — operators price differently.
Amenities that actually matter
Glossy photos sell desks; daily reality is decided by a shorter list.
- Internet and IT — reliable, backed-up connectivity is non-negotiable. Ask about redundancy, not just headline speed.
- Meeting and event rooms — check whether hours are included or billed, especially if you host clients.
- Community and networking — events and a tenant mix can become a real source of partners and referrals.
- Accessibility — proximity to the MRT and to food keeps a commuting team productive and on time.
Coworking or serviced office?
The two overlap, but they are not the same buy. Coworking wins on cost and flexibility — shared amenities, short contracts, easy scaling. A serviced office wins when you need a private, dedicated space, more infrastructure, and tighter control over access and branding. A five-person startup testing its market usually wants coworking; a fifteen-person team handling client data may be ready for a serviced office.
How to choose without overpaying
- Set your monthly budget and read contract terms before you fall for an interior.
- Plan for growth — a space you outgrow in six months is a false saving.
- Separate client-facing needs from internal ones; only pay for the address if clients will see it.
- Match the contract to your horizon — short-term for uncertain plans, longer only when you are confident.
Common mistakes
- Choosing on price alone and ignoring commute time, which costs you in staff hours and morale.
- Signing a long contract before you understand how the team will actually use the space.
- Overlooking accessibility for a slightly cheaper rate further from transport.
Key takeaways
- QC offers Metro Manila coworking at a meaningful discount to BGC and Makati.
- District choice — Quezon Avenue, Eastwood, or the university belt — shapes both cost and fit.
- Decide by team size, growth plan, budget, and commute, not by the photos.
Shortlist a budget-friendly office in minutes — see what's available now in Quezon City at flyspaces.com.

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