What is wrong with renting a 2BHK as a startup office?

Shyam Nagarajan / Reading Time: 4 mins


You just started out a business and are looking at getting an office for your start-up. This is such an emotional and critical decision for your start-up. It is also a financial decision that you need to take. Options that you may be exploring will include the below:

All the options are right for different types and sizes of companies. I strongly believe that the last option of rent out a home and converting that to an office is not the best option for an early stage start-up. I submit my argument as below.

At the outset rent a 2BHK as an option sounds the cheapest of the lot. You should be able to get a 2BHK say at 15K as rent a month. You should be able to have a team of 10 work comfortably in a 2BHK. This comes to just Rs 1500 per employee. Hey that is cheap. What's wrong with that you ask? I just say your equation is flawed in a few ways. Rent that you pay is just a small part of the cost of running your office. Below are the few other things that you are not accounting for.

Onetime expenses:

  • Rs 90,000 (6 months deposit at the minimum) of working capital that you are locking up as security deposit
  • Rs 60,000 fitting out cost for furniture (We are assuming that the space already has fans, ACs & lights)
  • Rs 5,000 Wiring cost for WiFi and plug points for your set up
  • Rs 10,000 for setting up UPS

Monthly recurring cost:

  • Rs 15,000 monthly rent
  • Rs 2,000 internet charges
  • Rs 5,000 EB charges (more the Air Conditioning you may see a bigger bill)
  • Rs 3,000 for a maid to clean the place
  • Rs 10,000 for consumables (like coffee & tea, cleaning liquids etc) and maintenance

Above all, the cost that founders underestimate is the opportunity cost when you spend time on the office space that you have created rather the business that you want to build. Founders end up spending time in looking into and addressing situations like AC not working, maid did not turn up, maid quit, internet connection down etc. Let us say on an average 5 hours of such time is spent every month.

  • Rs 10,000 of opportunity cost (assuming Rs 2000 / hr is the value of founders time)

If you just add all the recurring costs then you get a staggering Rs 45,000 monthly for your 2BHK office that initially looked very cost effective at Rs 15,000 a rent. This means that you are spending Rs 4,500 per employee per month. We have not even included the upfront costs that you have to take care. If you account for it then you are looking at a number not less than Rs 5,500 per employee per month.

The below infographic illustrates the data points and proves the point.

2bhk-infographic-02-575x1024

(Click the image to view and download a high-resolution version.)

So, in effect, if you get a space in your city at a per seat cost of less than Rs 5,500 per month then that option is going to be more cost effective than taking up a 2BHK house on rent and converting it into your start-up's office. You can increase this number based on what you can afford.

Is cost the only factor? Cost is just one factor but many a times the most important factor in the whole decision process. You must consider all other factors comprehensively before you choose the right office for your start-up.

The pandemic also has proven to us that we need to be frugal with our startup spending. A regular office of a rented house converted into an office is a drain on your startup’s resources. It is also ideal to provide your team members the choice to work from anywhere. While the conventional office is not necessary for a startup, you do need a physical space that you can use to come together say once or twice a week to be together and to norm together.

Here are a few ways in which you can get access to physical spaces without ending up blocking your money in security deposits and high monthly rent.

  • Use meeting spaces at coworking spaces to conduct your brainstorming meeting
  • Book hot desks on a daily basis at coworking spaces, sit together and work for a few days. Have lunch and tea breaks together.
  • Take a coworking pass from your neighbourhood coworking space to get your startup some discounts
  • You can also meet in more informal spaces like malls, cafes, parks and even beaches to bond with each other.

All the best with your start-up journey!



Category: Office space