First In Denver
Move20 June 2026

The Best Coworking Spaces in Denver (2026) — A Local's Guide

The Best Coworking Spaces in Denver (2026) — A Local's Guide

The Denver coworking market shifted hard in 2024–2026 — the WeWork-style operators got more polished, the local independents differentiated harder on community and design, and a new wave of trendy "neighborhood work club" concepts (led by Switchyards) reshaped what membership even means in the category. The list below is the working set of premium and boutique coworking spaces operating in Denver, sorted with the trendiest design-forward picks at the top.

Editorial note: No space on this list paid to be featured. Researched independently. If that changes, we'll say so.


1. Switchyards · @switchyards

4 Denver Locations · 24/7 Neighborhood Work Club · $129/mo

The trendiest coworking concept in Denver in 2026 and the one that's reshaping what membership means in the category. Switchyards calls itself "the world's first neighborhood work club" — small, boutique-hotel-lobby aesthetic, no offices, no conference rooms, just beautifully designed spaces for focused individual work surrounded by other high-performers. Four Denver clubs (Baker, Five Points, LoHi at 3222 Tejon, and Sloan's Lake at 3610 W. Colfax) — every one sold out in minutes when they opened. 24/7 access, locally roasted coffee, complimentary phone booths, single national membership ($129/mo) that works across every current and future Switchyards in the country. The default answer for anyone under 40 looking at modern coworking right now.

2. TARRA · @_tarraco

9+CO District, Denver · Design-Forward Coworking

Self-described as "Denver's most beautifully designed workspace" — and the marketing isn't wrong. TARRA sits in the heart of the 9+CO mixed-use district, surrounded by Postino, Cava, Le French, and Cloud 9 Park (which has Denver's first padel court). The space leans into the boutique-hotel hospitality aesthetic with serious depth on the workspace side: dedicated desks, private offices, meeting rooms, fast Wi-Fi, complimentary coffee, and a community events program. Memberships start at ~$139/mo. Strong fit for the design-conscious professional who wants the trendier alternative to WeWork or Industrious.

3. Green Spaces · @greenspaces

RiNo Art District · Solar-Powered, Creative-Focused

The nation's first eco coworking space — a 100% solar-powered building in the heart of RiNo Art District, dog-friendly, zero-waste focused, with an in-house café and a member marketplace for showcasing local artists. The community skews creative-and-mission-driven: artists, sustainability-focused founders, designers, small businesses. 8K Instagram followers reflects the brand reach. The right pick if your work has a creative or community-impact angle and you want a workspace that matches.

4. Strive Workspaces LoHi

2563 15th Street, LoHi · Premium Design + Neighborhood Energy

The newest premium coworking entry in LoHi, surrounded by Michelin-starred dining and boutique retail. Strive's positioning is explicitly aspirational — sophisticated design, premium private offices, surface parking for members (rare in LoHi), and an on-site coffee shop in development. Private offices from $682/mo; coworking from $150/mo. The luxury alternative to the more corporate WeWork tier, for professionals who care about the neighborhood and the room.

5. Industrious Denver · @industriousoffice

Multiple Denver Locations · Premium Coworking Tier

The premium coworking brand of choice for serious professional offices. Multiple Denver locations including a 24th-floor downtown space with the best mountain views of any coworking operator in the metro. Ultra-fast WiFi, phone booths, conference rooms, wellness room, premium coffee program, onsite staff, and a fitness center bundled into membership. The aesthetic feels more like a private office club than a typical coworking space — which is the point and the reason Fortune 500 satellite teams use it. Highest price point on this list; you get what you pay for.

6. WeWork Denver · @wework

10 Denver Locations · National Premium Coworking

WeWork operates one of the largest Denver coworking footprints with 10 locations across the metro — LoHi, LoDo, RiNo, Cherry Creek, Union Station, Tech Center. The LoHi flagship occupies two floors of a new brick building with industrial-modern interiors. The national network is the actual value — your membership works at any WeWork globally, which matters if you travel or have business in other markets. Strong design language across locations. Programming includes member events, networking, and "The Lab" collaborative spaces.

7. Thrive Workplace · @thriveworkplace

4 Denver Locations · Family-Owned, Founded 2011 · 500+ Members

The Denver-grown answer to the national brands. Founded as a 3,000 sq ft LoDo space in 2011, Thrive has scaled to four Denver locations and 500+ members while remaining family-owned and locally rooted. Strong programming around professional development, mentorship, and collaboration. The community-first positioning is real — Thrive members tend to know each other across locations in a way the larger brands don't replicate. Day passes, dedicated desks, and full memberships available.

8. Spaces (Denver Locations)

Multiple Denver Locations · Design-Forward Coworking

The design-forward sibling brand of Regus, operating multiple Denver locations including downtown and the Tech Center. The aesthetic is meaningfully more boutique than the parent Regus locations — exposed brick, modern furniture, considered lighting — and the membership tiers scale from day passes through dedicated offices. Strong fit for the design-conscious professional who finds WeWork too corporate and Thrive too neighborhood-feel.

9. Enterprise Coworking

Multiple Denver Locations · Boutique Independent

Denver-founded independent coworking operator with multiple metro locations. The brand positioning is more boutique and less corporate than the national chains — smaller member communities per location, more bespoke service, and a programming calendar that emphasizes the local entrepreneurial network. Strong fit for founders and freelancers who want the curated community feel.

10. Shift Workspaces · @shiftworkspaces

Denver Boutique Coworking

Independent Denver coworking brand with a distinct boutique feel — smaller footprint than the national brands, considered design language, and a member base that skews creative-professional. Less of the "amenity arms race" of the larger brands; more focus on the quality of the workspace itself and the community within it.

11. Galvanize Denver · @galvanize

Platte Street · Tech-Focused Coworking

The tech-and-startup focused coworking option, with the original Denver Galvanize on Platte Street operating as both a coworking space and a tech education campus. Heavy concentration of software engineers, data scientists, and startup founders. The membership comes with access to the broader Galvanize tech community — events, hiring boards, alumni network — which matters for tech professionals specifically.

12. Boutique Independents (RiNo + LoHi)

Various Denver Neighborhoods · Smaller Independent Operators

Beyond the named brands, Denver has a layer of smaller independent coworking operators — typically single-location, 2,000–5,000 sq ft, owner-operated. These tend to skew toward specific industries (creative, consulting, tech) and produce the tightest member communities. The trade-off is fewer amenities than the national brands, but the depth of relationship among members is meaningfully different. Search "[neighborhood] coworking Denver" for the current operators in your area.


How to Pick the Right One

For the trendiest, most aesthetic neighborhood work club: Switchyards. Four Denver locations, sold out in minutes when they opened, $129/mo single membership across the network. The "I want to look like I belong in a boutique hotel lobby" pick.

For the most beautifully designed coworking workspace: TARRA in 9+CO. Genuinely the design-forward play in Denver; surrounded by the most polished neighborhood retail.

For creative, sustainability-focused community: Green Spaces in RiNo. Solar-powered, dog-friendly, mission-driven member base.

For premium, professional, fully-amenitied workspace: Industrious. Highest price, highest service, most professional aesthetic.

For a national membership that works across cities: WeWork. The global network is the actual differentiator if you travel.

For a local, community-first membership: Thrive Workplace. Family-owned, Denver-rooted, strongest community programming on the list.

For tech-focused community: Galvanize. The Platte Street campus is where Denver's startup community physically clusters.

For boutique design with strong service: Spaces or Enterprise Coworking. Both deliver a more design-forward experience than the corporate brands.

For small-community feel: Shift or one of the neighborhood boutique independents. Fewer members per location, more relationship density.


Frequently Asked Questions

How much do Denver coworking memberships cost?

Day passes: $30–$60. Open coworking (hot desk) memberships: $250–$500/month. Dedicated desk (your own spot): $400–$750/month. Private offices: $800–$3,500+/month depending on size and operator. Premium brands (Industrious, WeWork) price at the upper end; local independents (Thrive, Shift) tend to price 15–30% below the chains for comparable membership tiers.

What amenities should I expect at premium coworking?

Standard at premium tier: ultra-fast WiFi, conference rooms (with booking system), phone booths, kitchen with coffee + beverages, printing, mail/package handling, networking events. Higher-tier premium: fitness facility, wellness room, premium coffee program, onsite staff, partner restaurant credits, hot desks at other locations. The chains compete on amenities; the boutiques compete on community and design.

WeWork vs. Industrious — which is better?

Different positioning. WeWork optimizes for scale (10 Denver locations, global network, more raw amenities, lower per-location community feel). Industrious optimizes for quality (fewer locations, premium aesthetic, more professional clientele, stronger per-location experience). WeWork is the right answer if you travel and want one membership that works across cities. Industrious is the right answer if you want a single premium home base and the network reach doesn't matter to you.

Are there coworking spaces with childcare or family-friendly programming?

The dedicated parent-focused coworking spaces that opened in 2018–2022 mostly closed during the pandemic. As of 2026, no Denver coworking space has integrated childcare. Some Thrive locations and a few boutique independents have hosted parent-focused programming or networking events, but these are event-based rather than ongoing services.

How do I trial coworking before committing to a membership?

Every operator on this list offers either a day pass ($30–$60) or a free trial day. Try 2–3 different operators across 2–3 weeks before deciding. The vibe and member mix differ meaningfully across operators in ways the marketing doesn't capture — the right space is the one where you actually want to spend your days, which you can only assess by being there.


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See you out there, Denver.