OfficeSpace.com.au is a wide-ranging workspace broker that you can mostly judge from its own pages, which is a good thing, because looking it up from the outside is close to a dead end.

What you can find out before calling

Start with the reputation question and you hit a wall fast. Search the name and the results fill up with OfficeSpace Software, a United States workplace-management product with no connection at all to the Australian brokerage. Same words, different company on the other side of the world. So the usual habit of skimming a pile of opinions and forming a quick view is not on the table here. No Google review count attaches to the Australian business. No Trustpilot profile. No directory rating that clearly belongs to OfficeSpace.com.au.

For some services that blank would stop me cold. Here it stings less, and the reason is simple: the parts you would most want a stranger's opinion on are written down on the OfficeSpace.com.au site, not left to hearsay. The fee model is published. The inclusions are itemised listing by listing. The coverage claim can be checked in under a minute by searching your own target area. You can get most of the way to a yes or no without speaking to a soul. The things you genuinely cannot learn this way are response speed and how hard they fight for a client, and those are exactly what reviews would have told you. Walk in knowing that.

What it offers

The inventory runs broader than the plain interface lets on. Private office suites target small teams of roughly one to ten people, with short-term lease options for businesses not ready to commit to years. Shared and coworking desks cover anyone who wants a seat and a solid connection without a permanent base. Virtual offices get their own category, handing over a professional street address with no need to physically turn up. Sublease space speaks to companies sitting on more room than they use. Conventional leased space suits firms chasing something longer-term. And warehouse and industrial units push OfficeSpace.com.au past white-collar desks into storage and production, a category plenty of rival portals leave out entirely.

The site spells out who it serves: startups, freelancers, entrepreneurs, project teams, micro-businesses, and larger companies after conventional space. A freelancer hunting a hot-desk and a fifty-person firm hunting a leased floor want completely different things, and the spread of listings actually backs the language up. It is more honest than the broker who claims to cover every business size and then posts nothing but premium CBD suites.

Most listings break down what comes bundled, usually furniture, utilities, high-speed WiFi, and cleaning, with parking and business support services flagged as extras. Spelling that out up front cuts the back-and-forth that swallows the early days of any space hunt, and it lets you compare options on something closer to true monthly cost than a bare per-desk number.

On reach, OfficeSpace.com.au claims a national footprint across Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, and Adelaide, plus regional locations across states and territories. How deep the inventory really goes in a mid-sized regional town versus central Sydney is not easy to read off the site, and to its credit it does not pretend the depth is uniform. National coverage costs nothing to advertise. A quick search in the precise area you care about settles the question before you sink time into enquiries.

The brokerage setup is laid out plainly on the About page, and it is the kind of disclosure I wish more intermediaries managed. OfficeSpace.com.au owns and leases none of the spaces it lists. You describe what you need, they handle the calling, the scheduling, and the lease negotiating for you at no cost, and the providers cover the introduction fees instead. A free-to-the-client pitch can read like a trap you have not spotted yet, so putting the money flow in writing buys OfficeSpace.com.au some honest trust.

Contact

An Australian 1800 number sits clearly on the OfficeSpace.com.au site, and a contact form is reachable from the footer. No street address shows on the homepage. For a national intermediary with no shopfront that is ordinary, though a buyer who likes to confirm a physical base before talking will notice the omission.

The concierge angle has plain appeal if cold-calling a dozen building managers sounds miserable, or if you have just landed in a new city with no contacts in local commercial property. They do the legwork; you take the calls that survive it. What you give up is any outside record of how that goes in practice. Only dealing with OfficeSpace.com.au yourself will fill that in.

The published facts here do most of the work. A wide and truly varied inventory, an openly stated fee model, and proper inclusion detail at the listing level put OfficeSpace.com.au ahead of the bare-bones portals it competes with, and you can verify enough of that yourself to act on it. The missing outside record is a caution, not a deal-breaker. I would use it with both eyes open about what cannot be looked up.


Contact details
Phone: 02 9055 9335