Office Relocation vs Refurbishment: How to Make the Right Decision.
The decision to relocate to a new office or refurbish your existing space is one of the most consequential workplace choices an organisation will make. Get it right and you deliver a workspace that serves the business for the next five to ten years. Get it wrong and you lock the organisation into either an unsuitable space or a building that cannot meet its operational needs. This guide provides a structured framework for making the decision well, including a direct comparison of the two approaches, a cost framework, and a decision matrix based on common organisational scenarios.
Relocation vs Refurbishment: A Direct Comparison
The table below compares relocation and refurbishment across the eight factors that most consistently determine which approach is the better fit for a given organisation. Coloured badges indicate which option has the advantage on each factor.
| Factor | Relocation to New Space | Refurbishment in Place |
|---|---|---|
| Total cost | HIGHER Includes fit-out of new space, moving costs, IT migration, dual running costs, and possible reinstatement of the existing space. | LOWER No lease event costs, no moving costs, no dual running. However, phased delivery adds management overhead. |
| Business disruption | CONCENTRATED Disruption at move-out and move-in only. Minimal disruption once relocated. Employees experience a clean break. | PROLONGED Construction noise, dust, and temporary arrangements affect staff over weeks or months. |
| Design freedom | FULL Entire floor plate designed and delivered as a coherent scheme without legacy constraints. | CONSTRAINED Limited by existing structure, M&E positions, and phasing. Some design aspirations may not be achievable without vacating. |
| Programme duration | SHORTER Full floor plate available from day one. 12 to 18 months from brief to move-in is typical. | LONGER Phasing constraints and restricted working hours extend construction. 40 to 70 per cent longer than equivalent full fit-out. |
| Lease timing | REQUIRES EVENT Needs a lease expiry, break clause, or early surrender. Cannot be initiated without a lease trigger. | FLEXIBLE Can be initiated at any time during the existing lease. No lease event required beyond standard fit-out approval. |
| Staff morale | POSITIVE New environment delivered as a single reveal. Strong morale impact when location and design are right. | AT RISK Sustained morale risk without strong communication. Construction fatigue is common in long phased programmes. |
| Sustainability | HIGHER IMPACT Generates more waste through reinstatement of old space and new fit-out from scratch. Higher embodied carbon unless materials are reused. | LOWER IMPACT Lower waste and embodied carbon through retention of existing structure and base building services. |
| IT migration | SINGLE EVENT Single IT migration managed as part of the move programme. Complex but concentrated. | PHASED Phased IT migration. Temporary infrastructure adds cost and complexity. Detailed IT planning required from the outset. |
Green = advantage on this factor
Amber = broadly comparable
Red = disadvantage on this factor
Neither option is universally superior. The right answer depends entirely on the organisation’s lease position, headcount trajectory, budget, building quality, and strategic priorities. A decision made primarily on cost, or primarily on design aspiration, without weighing all factors, consistently produces regret.
The Full Cost Picture
The most common mistake in the relocation vs refurbishment decision is comparing only the direct fit-out construction costs. Relocation carries a range of additional cost categories that are easily underestimated or omitted from the initial analysis. Refurbishment has its own cost implications that are less visible but equally real.
| Cost Category | Relocation | Refurbishment |
|---|---|---|
| Fit-Out Construction | HIGH Full new fit-out from scratch. Demolition, M&E, finishes, and all installations. | MEDIUM Phased works on existing space. May reuse some existing M&E, flooring, or ceiling systems. |
| Professional Fees | MEDIUM Full design and PM team required. Typically 10 to 15% of construction cost. | MEDIUM Design and PM still required, but scope may be narrower. Phasing complexity increases PM overhead. |
| FF&E | HIGH Full FF&E procurement for new space. Some items may be relocated from the existing office. | LOW Partial FF&E replacement only. Higher reuse rate reduces cost but limits design consistency. |
| Moving Costs | HIGH Move management, IT migration, physical removal and reinstallation of equipment. Significant cost item. | LOW Internal churn moves required between phases but no full office move. |
| Reinstatement of Existing Space | HIGH Full reinstatement of existing premises required at lease expiry or surrender. Can be significant. | DEFERRED No reinstatement until lease expiry. Refurbishment may even reduce eventual scope. |
| Dual Running Costs | HIGH Overlap period between old and new lease generates double rent and service charge. | NONE No dual running. Only one lease throughout. |
| Disruption & Productivity Loss | MEDIUM Concentrated disruption period. Manageable with strong change management. | HIGH Ongoing productivity impact over the full programme. Harder to quantify but real. |
| Swing Space | CONDITIONAL May be required if new space is not ready at lease expiry. High cost in major markets. | NONE Not required. Works proceed in the occupied space. |
⚠ The construction-only trap
A complete total cost of occupancy analysis, covering all categories above over the full remaining lease term, consistently produces different conclusions from a comparison of construction costs alone. An independent project manager can develop this analysis before the decision is made, not after.
Facing a relocation or refurbishment decision?
As an independent project management firm, Facilitate provides structured decision support, total cost of occupancy analysis, and full delivery capability for both relocation and refurbishment programmes. Contact our team to discuss your situation.
Decision Matrix: What Does Your Situation Indicate?
The matrix below maps common organisational scenarios to a directional indicator. No single signal is determinative, but the pattern across multiple signals provides a clear steer.
| If this describes your situation… | Indicator |
|---|---|
| Your lease has a break clause or expiry within 18 months | RELOCATE |
| Your headcount has grown by more than 30% since the last fit-out | RELOCATE |
| The building no longer meets your technical requirements (floor loading, ceiling height, power supply) | RELOCATE |
| Your location no longer serves your workforce or client base effectively | RELOCATE |
| Your lease has more than 3 years remaining with no break clause | REFURBISH |
| The building meets your technical requirements but the layout and design are outdated | REFURBISH |
| Budget is a primary constraint and swing space is expensive or unavailable | REFURBISH |
| Your headcount is stable and the floor plate size is still appropriate | REFURBISH |
| The lease is approaching expiry but the building and location still suit the organisation | NEGOTIATE & REFURBISH |
| Staff morale is a primary concern and a new environment would have strong symbolic value | CONSIDER RELOCATING |
| ESG targets require improved building performance that the existing building cannot deliver | RELOCATE (HIGHER ESG) |
| The organisation is undergoing a significant culture or strategy change requiring a visible reset | STRONG RELOCATE |
Relocate ·
Refurbish ·
Hybrid / Negotiate ·
Lean toward relocation
No single signal is determinative. The decision should be based on the full picture of lease position, operational requirements, budget, and strategic priorities. An independent PM can facilitate a structured decision-making process.
The Role of Lease Timing
Lease timing is often the single most important factor in the decision. The options available to an organisation depend entirely on where it is in the lease cycle.
If the lease has more than three years remaining with no break clause, the default position is refurbishment. A relocation requires either negotiating an early surrender with the landlord, which is costly and not always achievable, or committing to a new lease whilst still paying rent on the existing one.
If the lease has a break clause approaching or an expiry within 18 months, relocation becomes a genuine option. The lease event creates a natural decision point, and the organisation should begin the assessment process at least 18 months before that event to allow sufficient time for building selection, design, and fit-out delivery.
If the lease is mid-term but the space is genuinely no longer fit for purpose, the options are a negotiated surrender, sublet of part of the space, or a phased refurbishment within the existing premises. Each of these has different cost and operational implications that require careful analysis before commitment.
Market-Specific Considerations
The economics and practicalities of the relocation vs refurbishment decision vary by market. Key differences across Facilitate’s primary markets include:
| Market | Key Local Considerations |
|---|---|
| New York City | High reinstatement obligations and limited swing space availability raise the cost and complexity of relocation. Strong TI allowances in a tenant-favourable market can make relocation more attractive. |
| Singapore | Limited availability of well-specified Grade A space and competitive market conditions make the lease timing decision particularly critical. Building quality in converted industrial buildings can make refurbishment more complex. |
| Hong Kong | High density and limited floor plate availability mean that suitable relocation options are sometimes unavailable at the required size. The cost of reinstatement in Grade A CBD buildings is significant. |
| Australia | Flexible market conditions and a wide range of building stock create genuine choice. Sustainability requirements are increasingly influencing building selection decisions. |
| United Kingdom | Dilapidations obligations at lease expiry can add materially to relocation costs. Green lease provisions and EPC ratings are becoming important factors in building selection. |
When to Seek Independent Advice
The relocation vs refurbishment decision benefits from independent advice at the earliest possible stage. An independent project manager brings three things to this decision that internal teams and leasing agents typically cannot:
- Technical assessment of the existing space, including an honest evaluation of whether refurbishment can deliver the required outcome or whether the building’s inherent constraints make relocation the better answer
- Total cost of occupancy modelling covering all cost categories over the full lease term, enabling a comparison based on genuine economics rather than headline construction costs
- No commercial stake in the outcome. A leasing agent earns commission from a transaction completing. An independent PM’s only interest is in advising the organisation correctly
Conclusion
The relocation vs refurbishment decision is not a simple cost comparison. It involves lease timing, operational requirements, building quality, staff experience, sustainability, and strategic intent. Organisations that invest in a structured analysis before committing to either path consistently make better decisions and deliver better outcomes.
The decision framework in this guide provides a starting point. Every organisation’s situation is different, and the right answer for one will not be the right answer for another. What is consistent is that the decision made with complete information, early in the process, and with independent advice, is almost always better than the one made under time pressure with incomplete data.