Side-by-side: what you actually control
Control and flexibility trade off. Managed trades some bespoke design freedom for speed; lease maximises long-run customisation if you can fund and staff the programme.
Lease: you pick every finish, vendor, and SLA—but you own delays and cost overruns.
Managed: design within operator palettes and building constraints; faster standardisation.
Hybrid: lease core shell + operator fit-out package—common for larger GCC floors; watch interface risk between parties.
Cash and accounting lens
Managed often improves near-term cash flow by converting capex to opex; leases spread cost via amortisation but spike cash during build. Indian GST treatment and TDS on rent differ from operator service invoices—model with your CA.
Compare security deposit and bank guarantee formats—not just headline rent.
Indexation: leases may expose you to explicit escalations; managed may bundle smaller step-ups—read both.
Make-good: leases can sting at exit; managed contracts should cap restoration if you did not alter base build.
Speed, hiring, and Hyderabad commute
If you must hire fifty engineers this quarter, managed near ORR talent gravity often beats waiting twelve months on interiors. If you are a stable captive with predictable density, lease economics can pull ahead by year three to five.
Run a 24-month and a 60-month TCO with the same seat assumptions.
Include parking, shuttle, and attrition risk from commute changes.
For client-facing floors, compare reception optics and visitor parking honestly.
Risk register differences
Leases expose you to landlord capex disputes and society approvals; managed exposes you to operator solvency and substitution clauses if they lose the building. Neither is “low risk”—different risk vectors.
Ask managed operators for substitution rights, landlord chain visibility, and prior building handover stories.
On leases, scrutinise handover condition, CAM true-up, and power backup scope.
Practical recommendation path
Pilot managed or flex adjacent to your preferred micro-market while lease negotiations finish—some teams keep the managed node as overflow or client floor even after partial lease go-live.
Shortlist two managed and one lease comparable in the same pin code band.
Use one scorecard for internet, BCP, and meeting SLAs across both paths.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes—competitive tension and committed seat counts move pricing. Bring comparable quotes; ask for waived setup or lower deposit in exchange for sensible lock-in.
Often. GCC-style programmes may take a lease floor and outsource fit-out and ops to a partner—treat interfaces as a first-class risk with RACI clarity.
Managed usually offers more contraction language than a long lease, but not always—read true-down and notice clauses carefully.
No—you still validate building chain, substitution if the operator moves suites, and society or tower rules that affect access and branding.