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The Madrid Startup Quietly Reshaping Europe's Remote Work Infrastructure

Flexpoint, a hyperlocal workspace management platform born in Malasaña, is bridging the gap between corporate rigidity and freelance chaos—and it's spreading across the continent.

By Madrid Tech Desk · Published 30 June 2026, 8:51 am

2 min read

The Madrid Startup Quietly Reshaping Europe's Remote Work Infrastructure
Photo: Photo by Eduardo Valdes on Pexels

When Flexpoint launched from a converted loft above a café on Calle del Espíritu Santo last October, few outside Madrid's tech bubble noticed. Six months later, the workspace orchestration startup has secured €3.2 million in Series A funding and quietly become the infrastructure layer that corporate Europe didn't know it needed.

The company's insight is deceptively simple: while coworking spaces proliferated across the Salamanca and Chamberí districts, and remote work became normalized post-pandemic, no one solved the actual problem—helping distributed teams synchronize physical space without the overhead of traditional office leases or the chaos of unlimited coworking memberships.

Flexpoint's platform allows companies to book flexible workspace clusters across verified partner locations, from premium spots in the Financial District near Paseo de la Castellana to creative hotspots in Malasaña and Chueca. But its killer feature is the integrated team synchronization tool: employees can signal when they're commuting to a particular workspace, automatically reserving collaborative zones, meeting rooms, and even desk height preferences through AI-driven scheduling.

"Madrid's position as both a tech hub and a city attracting multinational talent made it the obvious testing ground," says the company's positioning. The platform now operates across 147 locations in Spain, Portugal, and Italy, with expansion into France and Germany announced for Q3. Pricing starts at €8 per day per employee for basic access, undercutting traditional office costs while exceeding pure coworking flexibility.

What sets Flexpoint apart in the increasingly crowded workspace-tech sector is its focus on the middle ground: companies with 30-500 distributed employees who need occasional collocation without commitment. Spanish tech firms like Holaluz and Typeform have become key early adopters, alongside growing interest from multinational finance and consulting operations setting up Madrid hubs.

The data backing the venture is compelling. According to internal metrics, companies using Flexpoint report 34% reduction in real estate spend and measurable improvements in team cohesion metrics—a crucial selling point as "hybrid" work remains the dominant model across Europe.

As remote work stabilizes from pandemic disruption into permanent structural change, Flexpoint represents the infrastructure play that could define the next decade of work. It's not flashy—no AI chatbots, no blockchain—but sometimes that's precisely what wins in enterprise software. Watch this quietly growing Madrid company closely; by 2027, its workspace synchronization model may become industry standard across the EU.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

Topic:#tech

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This article was produced by the The Daily Madrid editorial desk and covers tech in Madrid. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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