Shared coworking pass: You don't need two passes to both get work done
- Szilvia Németh

- Apr 23
- 2 min read

Recently, a couple came by for an office tour. They have a young child and both work from home. They told us the boundaries between work and personal life had completely blurred, and they couldn't keep going like that.
One of them had been relocated to the sofa, the other was trying to work from the kitchen table. They had to be productive in the same place where the toys live, and they weren't getting much work done but they were super exhausted by the end of the day.
They wanted to come into a coworking space a few times a week, but buying two separate passes felt unnecessary because they'd never both need the workspaces at the same time.
A shared pass as a flexible solution
This is exactly what a shared coworking pass is for. Our rental options don't have to be tied to a single person, if two people use the space in turns, one pass is enough.
The setup is simple: one pass, two users, just never at the same time. The space is always used by one person at a time – whether that's a couple, two friends, or two freelance colleagues.
Who benefits the most?
Parents of children who take turns being in the office and handling things at home
Part-time freelancers who don't need an office every day but need a consistent work environment
Entrepreneurial couples who manage their time – and their costs – flexibly
If you come in on Mondays, and your partner on Thursdays, one pass covers both of you. No double cost, no waste.
Why does this work better than home?
Home is flexible, but not always productive. A coworking space provides a structured work environment that's purely about work, no household distractions, no compromises on focus. Our meeting rooms can also be booked when a joint session is needed.
As we wrote in our post on hybrid working: flexibility isn't a luxury, it's an operating strategy. A shared pass is that logic applied to personal life. You only pay for the office you actually use.


