NEW YORK, NY — December 15, 2025 — WeWork, a leading global real estate platform, today released its annual Member Year in Review. The report reveals how 60,000 companies of every size that make up its 550,000 member base — from solo founders to global enterprise firms — are reshaping the way work gets done across WeWork’s global network. Backed by proprietary data and real space usage patterns, the findings highlight how flexibility, service, and hospitality-driven environments are essential to how businesses operate and how people choose to work in today’s hybrid environment.
A Structural Shift
“Our analytics give us a clear view into how the world of work is evolving and help us directly shape the experiences we are building for members around the world,” said John Santora, Chief Executive Officer, WeWork. “The data that makes up our Member Year in Review report shows a decisive shift: businesses of every size – from emerging startups to Fortune 100 companies – are seeking flexibility, whether that means freedom to work where and how they’re most effective, to scaling quickly with ease. What we’re seeing isn’t a trend, it’s a structural change in how businesses of all sizes operate.”
Who Worked From Our Spaces

In 2025, more than 19 million unique visitors walked through the doors of our 600 locations across 36 countries. That’s more than the combined populations of New York City, Paris and Singapore. And our members didn’t come alone: 1.7 million guests joined them, marking a record year for in-person collaboration.
Our members are also traversing the globe with us. We identified a group of power users who tapped into their WeWork All Access membership to work from more than 30 unique locations this year, with some visiting over 50—almost one a week, reinforcing WeWork’s purpose: delivering flexible workspace that supports expansion, mobility and efficiency.
WeWork continues to serve a wide spectrum of businesses, from those needing a single desk to those requiring satellite offices or custom headquarters. In 2025, almost 60,000 companies experienced and contributed to our global community. That’s over seventeen times the number listed on the American Nasdaq Stock Exchange. Of these, 32% — nearly 20,000 — were companies new to WeWork, and 5,110 of our member base expanded and scaled their footprints with us.
A small but lively part of daily activity included our members’ pets: approximately 900 pets (mostly dogs, plus a cat or two) regularly visited WeWork this year, enhancing the energy in our spaces.
London Set the Standard

London remained the global leader as our members’ most favored market. Anchoring the region is 10 York Road in Waterloo, a 290,000+ square foot flagship that was our most popular destination for the third consecutive year. With world-class design, a rooftop terrace overlooking the London Eye and Big Ben, a full-service restaurant, and ample fitness and wellness amenities — including a meditation room — it continues to define excellence across our global portfolio.
123 Buckingham Palace Road and Moor Place followed closely, offering accessible, amenity-rich environments that exemplify WeWork’s best-in-class workspace experience.
The Cities Powering our Global Community

Looking at total membership, the cities with the most WeWork members span multiple continents, highlighting the global demand for premium, flexible solutions. New York City leads as a financial and innovation hub, hosting companies across technology, financial services, consumer packaged goods, and health and life sciences. London follows, with its rich history and extensive global connections, it remains a key international business center. Mexico City rounds out the top three as a newer addition, emerging as a strategic gateway to Latin America’s rapidly expanding economy.
WeWork’s data converges with broader industry trends, with external sources showing strong performance across these same global hubs. In New York City, Manhattan achieved its highest annual leasing total since 2014 in Q3 2025, while monthly office visits throughout the year remained significantly above nationwide patterns. As of September 2025, office visits were up 83%, outpacing the nationwide increase of 70% and fully closing the city’s post-pandemic visit gap first identified in July.
In London, at the end of H1 2025, active demand across central submarkets was approximately 50% above the long-term average and 15% higher than the same period last year.
And in Mexico City, the market posted the largest increase in office demand nationwide in Q3 2025, with leasing volume doubling year-over-year and returning to pre-pandemic levels, alongside a steady decline in vacancy.
Members in Action

Businesses come to WeWork for more than a desk — they come for an experience. Our spaces combine work, community, hospitality and entertainment under one roof.
Coffee fueled the year: members consumed nearly 23 million cups, enough to serve every resident of Belgium twice (with a little extra to spare!).
Members logged 2.6 million meeting hours, with Tuesdays consistently ranked as the peak day for meetings, underscoring WeWork’s role as a hub for focused, in-person teamwork.
Engagement and community are a cornerstone of the WeWork experience. Our Community team — WeWork’s in-house hospitality staff — hosted 51,940 member events, ranging from curated food tastings to global sports watch parties. To contextualize this scale, it would take New York City’s Madison Square Garden more than a century to host the same volume of events that WeWork held in 2025 alone.
Flight to Quality (Space)

Flight to quality is reshaping workspaces, reflecting the growing demand for amenity-rich environments that foster collaboration and productivity.
In 2025, WeWork reinvested more than $80 million in capital improvements across our global portfolio. This included refreshed interiors, optimized office layouts, upgrades to critical building systems and significant technology enhancements — from improved connectivity to smarter, more automated workspace features. Together, these updates ensure our spaces meet the evolving needs of today’s workforce.
The Year Ahead
“After a year of transformation, we’re entering 2026 by doubling down on the elements that define the WeWork brand of today,” said Santora. “We’re introducing new spaces, expanding our product offerings and elevating every aspect of the workplace experience — guided by the data, performance metrics and hospitality principles that deliver measurable impact for our members.”
About WeWork
WeWork is a leading global real estate platform, purpose-built to empower businesses of all sizes with flexible workplace solutions, hospitality-driven experiences, best-in-class services, and innovative technology. With a curated portfolio of over 600 thoughtfully designed locations, spanning 45M square feet worldwide, WeWork helps more than half a million members — from emerging startups to Fortune 100 companies — perform their best work, today and tomorrow.
To learn more, visit wework.com.
*Numbers are estimated based on facilities and internal data for the period January 1 – October 31, 2025.