Skip to content
CityAM
Main navigation
  • News
    • News
      • Latest Business News
      • Economics
      • Politics
      • Tech
      • Banking
      • FTSE 100 Live
      • Retail
      • Insurance
      • Legal
      • Property
      • Transport
      • Markets
    • From our partners
      • AON
      • Bayes Business School
      • Canada BIDs
      • Central London Alliance CIC
      • Destination City
      • Halkin
      • Olympia
      • Inside Saudi
      • Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
      • Santander X
      • YEAR SIX Dividend
    • Featured

      The next person to shop your store may not be a person at all

      AI shopping agents are rewriting the rules of online retail across North America

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Latest Sports News
      • Sport
      • Sport Business
    • From our partners
      • The Morning Briefing: SBS x CityAM
      • Aramco Team Series
      • LIV Golf
    • Featured

      Cohere's Aidan Gomez bets the house on 'sovereign AI' with Aleph Alpha merger valuing the group at $20bn

      Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez on stage discussing the Toronto AI lab's strategy

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Life&Style
    • Life&Style
      • Life&Style
      • Toast the City Awards
      • The Magazine
      • Travel
      • Culture
      • Motoring
      • Wellness
      • The RED BULLETiN
      • Do it with Shared Ownership
      • Media Speak Hub
    • Featured

      Moonvalley's Naeem Talukdar is selling Hollywood the one thing rival AI video tools cannot: legal cover

      Moonvalley's Marey AI video model produces Hollywood-grade footage trained on licensed data

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Investec
  • Events
  • Latest Paper
Friday 27 February 2026 10:45 am

Why serviced offices are still mispriced and why that’s starting to change

By: Freddie Bailey

Commercial Director - Halkin

Add as a preferred source on Google
Tower Bridge against a clear sky, viewed from Halkin with London skyline in the background, iconic architecture in focus.
Iconic view of Tower Bridge and the London skyline illuminated at twilight

As offices shift toward hospitality and operational value, a familiar tension is emerging in capital markets:
how do you value a building when the income looks more like a business than a lease?

For many investors, serviced and flexible offices still sit in an uncomfortable grey area. They don’t fit neatly into traditional valuation models, and as a result, buildings with serviced office providers are often priced at a discount. Not because they perform poorly, but because they are harder to underwrite.

At the heart of the issue is familiarity.

Conventional office valuation relies on long, predictable leases. Income is fixed, risk is framed around covenant strength, and value is expressed through yield. Serviced offices break that logic. Income is shorter-term, multi-line and operational. Occupiers are customers, not tenants. Costs sit closer to revenue. The asset behaves less like property and more like a platform.

For capital used to clean, bond-like cashflows, that complexity has historically meant caution, and caution translates into higher yields and lower values.

But that doesn’t mean the discount is always justified.

In many cases, serviced offices deliver stronger net income, faster leasing velocity and materially higher utilisation than traditional models. They also de-risk voids by spreading income across dozens or hundreds of occupiers rather than a single tenant. What they lack in lease length, they often make up for in resilience and adaptability.

The problem is that traditional valuation frameworks struggle to capture this.

Short income visibility is often penalised without sufficient credit given to operational upside, pricing power or retention. The operator is treated as a risk rather than a value driver. And service-led revenue is discounted because it doesn’t resemble rent, even when it behaves more predictably in practice.

So why does this persist?

Partly because many investors are not set up to underwrite operating businesses. Partly because lender frameworks still lag behind reality. And partly because the market spent years associating serviced offices with growth-at-all-costs models rather than disciplined, cash-generative operations.

Inmates escaping from a high-security prison during a dramatic breakout, showcasing tension and urgent law enforcement res...

That perception is now changing.

Read more

Google built the internet economy. AI is rewriting it.

Halkin conference room with modern decor, large meeting table, and cityscape view through floor-to-ceiling windows

The sector has matured. Operators are more institutional. Reporting is more transparent. Unit economics are better understood. And, crucially, the performance gap between high-quality serviced offices and secondary leased space has widened.

We’re already seeing capital respond.

Investors are increasingly differentiating between operators, not dismissing the model outright. Income is being assessed on sustainability, not lease label. Valuers are beginning to look through headline lease length and focus on cashflow quality, occupancy stability and operating margin.

In parallel, ownership structures are evolving. Management agreements, hybrid lease models and income participation structures are bridging the gap between real estate and operations. These allow investors to retain control of the asset while benefiting from operational upside, and they align incentives far more effectively than old-style leases.

Importantly, this shift aligns with occupier reality.

Demand is moving toward flexibility, service and experience. Buildings that ignore this may offer longer leases, but they risk obsolescence. Buildings that embrace it may look operationally complex, but they are often more relevant, more liquid and more defensible over time. 

It’s why operators like Halkin Offices continue to attract occupiers who prioritise service quality and adaptability, characteristics that increasingly underpin real, rather than theoretical, value.

The key question, then, is not whether serviced offices deserve a valuation discount.

It’s whether the market is correctly pricing the risk, or simply defaulting to outdated assumptions.

As the office market resets, valuation frameworks will need to follow. The next cycle will reward assets that perform operationally, not just contractually. Investors who can underwrite that nuance will find opportunity where others still see friction.

Serviced offices aren’t undervalued because they’re weaker. They’re undervalued because they don’t fit old models. That gap is closing.

Read more

Property giant Landsec bets on retail, claiming ‘no slowdown’ in consumer spending

Landsec building exterior with modern architecture, showcasing sustainable design in urban business district

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Halkin
  • Partner Content

Categories

  • Partner
  • Property

People & Organisations

  • Asset Obsolescence
  • capital markets
  • Halkin Offices
  • Income Sustainability
  • Serviced Offices

Trending Articles

  • Starmer agrees investment deal with Japan as EU deal questioned

  • Elon Musk becomes world’s first trillionaire after SpaceX mega float

  • US and Iran agree to peace deal’s text, negotiators say

  • Thames Water, energy grid, rent prices: Burnham drums up public control agenda

  • Trump ban on AI access to foreign users forces Anthropic to suspend models

More from CityAM

  • Google built the internet economy. AI is rewriting it.

    Partner
    Halkin conference room with modern decor, large meeting table, and cityscape view through floor-to-ceiling windows
  • ZayZoon, the Calgary fintech born on a fishing boat, posts 1,487% growth as earned wage access goes mainstream

    ZayZoon co-founder Tate Hackert built the Calgary fintech around earned wage access
  • CYNREN Launches Next Generation Advisory Firm Serving Family Offices, Funds and Institutions

    Business Wire
  • Smartstream Launches Smart Agents for Back-Office Operations, Proven Across Tier 1 Pilots

    Business Wire
  • Botpress raises $25m as Quebec's Sylvain Perron pitches his startup as the 'infrastructure layer' for AI agents

    Botpress product UI: the Quebec startup pitches itself as the infrastructure layer for enterprise AI agents
  • CoStar Data Shows Offices Leading UK Investment in Q1 2026

    Business Wire
  • FluidAI wins US FDA clearance for its surgical monitor as Waterloo's Youssef Helwa targets 100,000 operations

    FluidAI's Origin surgical monitor wins FDA clearance for use in US hospitals
  • Happy 170th birthday British Land – here’s to 170 more years

    Opinion
    AI-themed birthday cake celebrating British land, featuring intricate design and technology motifs, on a news business pla...
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • News
  • Markets & Economics
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Life&Style
  • Personal Finance

Follow us for breaking news and latest updates

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
Copyright 2026 CityAM Limited