Choosing the right platform matters. Here's how we stack up — honestly.
| Seek | Office Hub | |
|---|---|---|
| Coverage | 15,000+ spaces globally | UK + Australia |
| Tenant fees | None — ever | None to tenant (but broker earns 10% of deal) |
| Broker commission | £0 — operators pay flat subscription | 10% of annual rent — broker commission on closed deals |
| Direct-to-operator | Yes — every enquiry goes direct | No — routed via broker team |
| Reverse marketplace | Broadcast — operators pitch you | No — you search, they match |
| Spaces available | 15,000+ globally | UK + Australia |
| Time to shortlist | 60-sec quiz → operator proposals within hours | 1–3 business days via consultant |
We're not going to pretend they're not good at some things. They are.
Office Hub operates in both the UK and Australia — useful if you need to search both markets simultaneously.
Workspace consultants walk you through the process — hands-on for teams that want someone to manage the search.
From hot desks to entire floors, Office Hub covers a broad range of workspace types across both markets.
These aren't arguments. They're structural differences you can verify yourself.
Seek lists 15,000+ buildings globally. Office Hub covers the UK and Australia. Different inventory scale.
Office Hub earns when you sign. Their consultant's incentive, at some level, is a longer or larger deal. Seek charges operators a flat monthly subscription — nothing from your deal.
Every enquiry goes straight to the operator. You negotiate with the person who owns the building, not a intermediary who earns a percentage of the result.
Broker fees are typically 10% of the annual rent — sometimes 15%. The figures below show what that actually means on a lease. Seek charges operators a flat monthly subscription. There's nothing equivalent.
60 seconds. Tell us your team size, location, and move-in date. Operators whose spaces match will pitch you directly — no broker, no commission.
Take the quiz →No account creation required.