Working from home in Manchester eventually hits a wall. The sofa stops being comfortable, the fridge is too close, and your housemate’s started taking Teams calls in the kitchen. You need a desk that isn’t your dining table. Here’s where to find one.
1. WeWork Spinningfields
No.1 Spinningfields, the big glass tower. WeWork is WeWork — you know what you’re getting. Slick interiors, free coffee (decent, not great), phone booths, meeting rooms, and a community of people who say “synergy” without irony. Hot desks from around £220/month, dedicated desks from £350+. The WiFi is rock solid. The crowd skews startup-to-corporate. It’s not cheap but if you need a professional address in the city’s business district, this does the job. Day passes available through the app.
2. Colony — Jactin House (Ancoats)
Colony has multiple Manchester locations and they’re all good, but Jactin House in Ancoats is the standout. Converted textile warehouse with high ceilings, loads of natural light, and that industrial-meets-modern thing that Manchester does better than anywhere. Hot desks from £150/month, day passes around £20. WiFi is reliable. The on-site cafe is proper. Good mix of freelancers, creatives, and small agencies. Feels like Manchester, not a generic office.
3. Colony — Piccadilly
Their spot near Piccadilly station. Handy if you’re commuting in by train. Similar setup to Jactin House but slightly more compact. Useful for meetings when clients are coming from out of town — two minutes from the station. Hot desks from £150/month. The breakout areas are comfortable and there’s decent lunch options within a five-minute walk.
4. Huckletree
In the XYZ Building on Hardman Boulevard, Spinningfields. Huckletree is aimed squarely at startups and scale-ups. The space is well-designed with plenty of breakout areas, a podcast studio, event space, and meeting rooms. Hot desks from £250/month. It’s more expensive than Colony but you’re paying for the programming — regular events, workshops, introductions. If you’re building something and want to be around other people building things, this is the play. WiFi is excellent.
5. Bruntwood Works
Bruntwood are a Manchester-based property company and they run co-working across multiple buildings in the city. The spaces vary — some are dated office blocks, others are beautifully renovated. Neo on Charlotte Street is one of their better ones. Flexible terms, hot desks from £100/month which is competitive. WiFi quality varies by building. The advantage is choice: if one space isn’t working for you, you can often switch to another on the same membership.
6. Society1 (MediaCityUK)
Out at MediaCityUK in Salford, which is technically not Manchester but the Metrolink gets you there in 15 minutes from the city centre. Society1 is in the media district, surrounded by BBC, ITV, and production companies. If you’re in media, digital, or creative industries, the location makes sense. Hot desks from £130/month. Modern space, good WiFi, and the waterfront is nice for a lunchtime walk. Can feel isolated from the city though.
7. WorkSmarter
On Bridge Street near Deansgate. Smaller, independently run co-working space that’s been quietly doing its thing without the marketing budgets of the bigger names. Monthly hot desks from £120, day passes £15. The WiFi is solid, the coffee is free, and the community is friendly without being forced. Good option if the WeWork-style spaces feel too corporate and you want something with a bit more personality.
8. SpacesWorks
Part of the IWG/Regus family but positioned as the cooler younger sibling. The Peter House location on Oxford Street is their Manchester flagship. Modern design, good meeting rooms, decent coffee bar. Hot desks from £200/month. The advantage is the global network — your membership works in Spaces locations worldwide, which is handy if you travel for work. WiFi is enterprise-grade.
9. Ziferblat
Edge Street in the Northern Quarter. Ziferblat’s model is unique: you pay by the minute (currently around 8p/minute) and everything inside is free. Coffee, tea, cake, biscuits, WiFi, use of the space. If you’re doing a focused three-hour session, that’s about £14. Longer days get expensive. The space is more living room than office — mismatched furniture, books, board games. WiFi is decent but not blazing fast. Best for creative work or a change of scenery rather than all-day every-day use. Power sockets can be a hunt.
10. Foundation Coffee House
Not a co-working space officially, but Foundation on Lever Street in the NQ has been Manchester’s unofficial freelancer HQ for years. Big space, plenty of tables, good WiFi, excellent coffee, and an unspoken agreement that laptop workers are welcome. A flat white and a seat costs you £3.50 for the coffee, no time limit. Power sockets along the back wall and by the window. Gets busy at lunch. The upstairs is quieter. Don’t be the person who buys one coffee and sits there for eight hours — buy lunch too.
11. Takk
On Tariff Street, Northern Quarter. Scandinavian-inspired cafe with some of the best coffee in Manchester. Smaller than Foundation so fewer seats, but the WiFi is solid and the atmosphere is calm. Good for a focused morning session. Expect to spend £6–8 on coffee and maybe a pastry. Not somewhere you’d camp for a full day but brilliant for a productive three-hour block. The cinnamon buns are exceptional and potentially worth the trip alone.
12. Cafe Cotton
In Ancoats on Jersey Street. A proper neighbourhood cafe that welcomes laptop workers without making it their whole identity. Good coffee from a local roaster, simple food done well, and enough tables that you don’t feel guilty taking one for a couple of hours. WiFi is reliable. Power sockets are available but limited — bring a full battery just in case. The Ancoats location means you’re near Colony Jactin House if you decide you need a proper desk.
Quick Comparison
For a proper office setup: WeWork, Huckletree, or Colony. For budget: Bruntwood Works or WorkSmarter. For a creative change of scenery: Ziferblat. For a cafe desk with great coffee: Foundation or Takk. For MediaCity workers: Society1. Every option on this list has reliable WiFi — we’ve tested from each one. Manchester’s remote working infrastructure is genuinely strong now. You just need to find the space that matches how you work.