Start with requirements
Space type, size, priorities, and preferred geography shape the first analysis.
Finding the right commercial location starts with understanding where to look. Compare markets, understand the tradeoffs, and discover which areas are worth exploring before spending time touring the wrong buildings.
Enter the basics of the search. Rofo returns an initial location analysis with recommended starting areas, alternatives worth comparing, tradeoffs to understand, and representative buildings that give the market shape.
Space type, size, priorities, and preferred geography shape the first analysis.
See which districts or markets fit first, why they fit, and which alternatives deserve comparison.
Use representative buildings and leasing guidance before checking live availability or involving a broker.
Want to see what the result looks like? View an Example Location Brief
The first question is not which building is available. It is where the search should begin.
Receive recommended starting areas based on business type, space requirements, location intent, and priorities.
Review district tradeoffs, nearby alternatives, and questions to validate before spending time on spaces.
Use example buildings to understand commercial environments before checking current availability or scheduling tours.
Use market pages when the geography is already clear. They explain districts, comparisons, nearby markets, and example commercial buildings.
Search a city or market to explore districts, representative buildings, and local commercial real estate guidance.
No matching market found. Try another city.
Explore San Francisco districts, comparisons, leasing context, and example commercial buildings.
Rofo's prototype market experience
Explore commercial real estate in Austin, TX.
Fast-growing office and mixed-use market
Explore commercial real estate in Denver, CO.
Office, flex, and regional business districts
The handbook explains the decisions that shape a search: location strategy, lease types, costs, timing, tenant improvements, broker roles, and common mistakes.
Understand why geography usually comes before buildings in a commercial real estate search.
Use tours and building comparisons to test fit, cost, access, timing, and operational requirements.
Avoid wasting time on poor-fit spaces, misunderstood costs, weak timing assumptions, or unclear requirements.
Started in San Francisco with a mission to simplify commercial real estate discovery
Used by companies exploring office, retail, industrial, and flexible workspace markets
Recognized for innovation in digital product experience
Built some of the industry’s earliest search, mapping, and location-discovery experiences