Office brokerage in the UK has always had a landlord-pays model underneath it: the tenant searches for free, the broker earns a commission from the landlord side. Prime Office Space is built on exactly that structure, which is worth stating upfront because the "no fee to the searcher" pitch sometimes reads as marketing copy when it is in fact just how commercial property brokerage works.

What the service covers

Seven office categories are on the table: serviced, managed, shared, furnished, turn-key, temporary, and conventional. That spread is not arbitrary. A startup hunting a hot-desk arrangement and a corporation looking at a ten-year conventional lease are genuinely different procurement problems, and Prime Office Space carries listings for both. Geography is divided into Central London, Greater London, the South, the North, and UK-wide, so a firm comparing offices in Leeds and Bristol can run the whole search through Prime Office Space without splitting it across multiple regional agents.

The situations explicitly targeted include expansion, downsizing to cut overheads, relocation, and opening a branch. Named client types run from startups and SMEs through to corporations, charities, and educational institutions. For a charity counting every pound, not paying a search fee has practical value. For a corporation, the draw is a single point of contact covering a national shortlist instead of managing a roster of local agents.

Prime Office Space describes its database as one of the UK's most comprehensive available-space lists. That claim cannot be tested from a listing page. The regional structure at least avoids the single-city constraint that clips most specialist brokers, and seven product categories is more range than the average office search portal carries.

Content and contact

The site includes a UK commercial property news and blog section. This is worth checking directly: blog sections on broker sites frequently stop updating after the first year, and a stale date trail is a reliable indicator of a reduced or dormant operation. Whether that applies here requires looking at the post dates. A phone number is displayed and a contact form handles written enquiries, with no email address on the front page, which is standard practice for volume control. The core offer is personal matching advice, so a phone call is the natural way in anyway.

The reputation picture

Yelp UK carries a London entry for Prime Office Space. RecommendedCompany.co.uk lists Prime Office Space under Leeds and West Yorkshire with a description. Neither source shows a star rating or a review count. The Facebook page sits at approximately 95 likes with modest engagement. No Trustpilot or Google review totals surfaced.

Commercial property brokerages commonly run on referrals and repeat instructions from business clients rather than public review platforms, so the absence of crowd-sourced ratings is not unusual for this sector. What it does mean is that there is no independent third-party signal to anchor a shortlisting decision. The claim of comprehensive national coverage, the quality of the matching advice, and the accuracy of the database all rest entirely on self-reporting at this point.

Prime Office Space has a legible offer: seven product types, five geographic bands, a free-to-use model, and a defined client audience. The structural breadth is genuine. The advisory quality, the freshness of the database, and whether the broker relationship translates to good outcomes for the client are not visible from outside, and with no published reviews to draw on, those questions simply stay open. A brokerage with this much scope and no public record of client outcomes is asking for a degree of trust it has not yet earned in any form the outside world can examine.


Business address
International House
24 Holborn Viaduct,
London,
London
EC1A 2BN
United Kingdom

Contact details
Phone: +44 20 3970 9731