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El Paso workspace directory

El Paso coworking spaces, in one sortable worksheet.

Every space below is a real, currently-operating El Paso-area coworking location with a verified street address and a Google Maps link. Click any row to open its detail card. Sort by any column, search by name or neighborhood, or filter by region. Closed and renamed spaces are excluded or flagged; missing metrics are left blank rather than guessed.

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Map of El Paso coworking spaces — click a pin for the address and website. Open El Paso on the Texas directory →

Downtown / Sunset HeightsDowntownWest SideSunset HeightsCentral / Eucalyptus
# Space Region Address Loc. Sq. ft. Seats Offices Map

Click a row for the full detail card. Loc. = reported locations in the metro · Seats = open desks/seats · — = not reported.

How to use it

Start with footprint (square footage / locations) if you need scale, then check the fit note in the detail card. Large national operators tend to help distributed teams and enterprise users; smaller neighborhood spaces often win on community feel, founder access, creative focus, or specialized amenities. Use the region chips to narrow by part of the metro.

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Coworking in El Paso, Texas

→ Read our Best Coworking Spaces in El Paso guide

El Paso's coworking scene is compact but genuinely useful, anchored by a cluster of independently run spaces in and around Downtown rather than a wall of national chains. It serves a practical mix of the Sun City's economy: cross-border entrepreneurs working the El Paso–Juárez corridor, remote employees for out-of-state tech and defense contractors, Fort Bliss-adjacent consultants, UTEP-linked founders, and a steady base of freelancers, real-estate agents, and attorneys who want a professional address without a long lease. Because El Paso's commercial rents run well below Austin or Dallas, flexible workspace here tends to be a bargain by Texas standards.

Most of the activity concentrates Downtown and in the historic edge neighborhoods just north of it. Working Capitol, at 311 Montana Avenue on the seam of Downtown and Sunset Heights, is one of the more visible operators, offering single-day WorkSpot and WorkDesk passes alongside memberships in a restored building close to the county and federal courthouses. The Station Urban Offices and UrbanWork (310 N. Mesa Street) round out the Downtown core with private-office and shared-desk options, while Cowork Oasis extends the map into the Kern Place area near UTEP, handy for the university crowd and West Side professionals who want to skip the downtown drive.

On price, El Paso is friendly. Expect day passes to land roughly in the $25–$40 range (Working Capitol's day passes start around $39). Dedicated desks typically run about $100 to $400 a month depending on the building and whether it's 24/7, and private offices generally fall between $225 and $1,000 per month, with per-person chain pricing starting near the mid-$300s. Treat these as market ranges to sanity-check quotes, then confirm current rates directly with each space, since promotions and desk availability shift month to month.

Coworking in El Paso is overwhelmingly a Downtown story. The densest cluster sits in the central business district and its northern edge—along Mesa Street, Montana Avenue, and into Sunset Heights—where restored historic buildings put members within walking distance of the courthouses, city and county offices, banks, and the international bridges to Juárez. Spaces like Working Capitol, The Station Urban Offices, and UrbanWork all fall inside this walkable core. The main alternative pocket is the Kern Place / Cincinnati District area near UTEP on the West Side, where Cowork Oasis draws students, academics, and professionals who prefer the university neighborhood's cafes and easier parking over the downtown grid. Farther-flung executive suites and national-brand flex offices appear along the West Side and near the airport, but the true community-style coworking stays centered Downtown.

Frequently asked questions

Can I get a day pass for coworking in El Paso?

Yes. Several Downtown spaces sell single-day access rather than requiring a membership. Working Capitol on Montana Avenue, for example, offers day passes starting around $39, and El Paso day rates generally range from about $25 to $40 depending on the space and what's included. A pass typically covers a desk, Wi-Fi, coffee, and access to common areas for the day—call ahead to confirm same-day availability.

How much does a monthly coworking membership cost in El Paso?

El Paso is one of the more affordable Texas markets. A hot-desk or floating membership can start near $100/month, dedicated (reserved) desks usually run about $100 to $400/month, and private offices generally range from roughly $225 to $1,000/month depending on size, building, and whether 24/7 access is included. Always verify the current rate directly, since specials and desk availability change.

Which El Paso coworking spaces are best for startups versus freelancers?

Freelancers and solo remote workers tend to do well with flexible hot-desk or day-pass options at Downtown spaces like Working Capitol or UrbanWork, where you pay only for the days you show up. Startups and small teams that need a lockable room, a business address, and meeting space usually gravitate toward private offices at The Station Urban Offices or similar operators. Cowork Oasis near UTEP is convenient for university-linked founders on the West Side.

Do El Paso coworking spaces have meeting or conference rooms?

Most do. Downtown operators such as Working Capitol, The Station Urban Offices, and UrbanWork typically offer bookable conference and meeting rooms, often with a monthly allotment of included hours for members and hourly rates for drop-in or guest bookings. If client meetings are central to your work, ask each space about room capacity, A/V, and how booking credits are handled before you commit.

Is 24/7 access available at El Paso coworking spaces?

Around-the-clock access is common for dedicated-desk and private-office members, usually via a keycard or code, while day-pass and basic hot-desk users are generally limited to staffed business hours. If you work nights or irregular schedules, confirm 24/7 entry when you tour—it's often tied to the higher membership tiers rather than the entry-level plans.

What's parking like at El Paso coworking spaces?

For Downtown spaces near Mesa Street and Montana Avenue, expect a mix of on-street metered parking and nearby paid lots or garages; some buildings include or discount a parking spot for members, so ask. Spaces outside the core, like Cowork Oasis in the Kern Place area near UTEP, tend to have easier and often free street or lot parking, which is a real draw for anyone who'd rather avoid the downtown grid.